Italy Frees Iranian US Sought in Drone Attack

Iran had freed an Italian journalist this week
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Jan 12, 2025 11:40 AM CST
Italy Releases Iranian Arrested on US Warrant
Cecilia Sala, an Italian journalist who was detained on Dec. 19 as she was reporting in Iran walks on the tarmac as she landed at Rome' Ciampino airport after being released on Wednesday.   (Filippo Attili, Italian Government Office via Ap)

Italy on Sunday released an Iranian citizen wanted by the US over a drone attack in Jordan that killed three Americans a year ago, after the Italian justice minister asked a court to revoke his arrest. Mohammad Abedini has already returned to Iran, Iranian state TV said on Sunday afternoon, the AP reports. He was arrested on a US warrant on Dec. 16, three days before Italian journalist Cecilia Sala was detained while on a reporting trip to Iran. Sala, who was widely thought to have been held as a bargaining chip for Abedini's release, returned home last week. Italy and Iran said that it wasn't a prisoner exchange, per the Washington Post.

Abedini was scheduled to appear at a Milan court on Wednesday in connection with his bid for house arrest pending extradition to the US. The US Justice Department has accused him of supplying the drone technology to Iran that was used in a January 2024 attack on a US outpost in Jordan that killed three American troops. An official note on the case released by the Italian Justice Ministry on Sunday said that under Italy-US extradition treaties, "only crimes that are punishable according to the laws of both sides can lead to extradition, a condition which, based on the state of documents, can't be considered as existing."

The ministry said that the potential charge against Abedini—criminal association for violating the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, a US federal law—"did not correspond to any conduct recognized by Italian law as a crime." Iranian state TV said the release and return of Abedini came after Iran's foreign ministry pursued the case, as well as talks between Iran's intelligence ministry and the Italian intelligence service. Italian Premier Giorgia Meloni described a "diplomatic triangulation" with Iran and the United States as being key to securing Sala's release, per the AP, confirming for the first time that US interests entered into the negotiations.

(More detainees stories.)

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