Iranian man and two Hells Angels accused in murder-for-hire plot in U.S. - Tools for Investors | News
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Iranian man and two Hells Angels accused in murder-for-hire plot in U.S.



Two Canadian members of the Hells Angels motorcycle gang plotted with an Iranian drug trafficker to kill a pair of dissidents who were living in Maryland, the Department of Justice and federal officials said Monday.

Naji Sharifi Zindashti, aka “Big Guy,” who has ties to Iran’s intelligence services, had been communicating with Damion Patrick John Ryan for a month about various “jobs” when, in January 2021, he brought up “a specific job in the United States,” according to a federal grand jury indictment.

Ryan, who was contacting Zindashti through an “encrypted communication service,” said it would be “challenging” but he “might have someone to do it,” the indictment states.

That day, the indictment states, Ryan reached out to Adam Richard Pearson who said he’d need two to three people, including a driver, and “may charge over $100,000 for the job.”

Ryan replied he would “get u what you want” but stressed that this needed to be “over kill lol,” U.S. officials said.

According to the indictment, Pearson promised to deliver that gruesome message, allegedly stating that he would encourage the recruits for the job to “shoot [the victim] in the head a lot [to] make example,” and “We gotta erase his head from his torso.”

In the end, neither of the Iranian dissidents lost their heads or lives.

“As alleged, Mr. Zindashti and his team of gunmen, including a Minnesota resident, used an encrypted messaging service to orchestrate an assassination plot against two individuals,” U.S. Attorney Andrew Luger for the District of Minnesota said in a statement. “Thanks to the skilled work of federal prosecutors and law enforcement agents, this murder-for-hire conspiracy was disrupted and the defendants will face justice.”

Zindashti, who officials think is in Iran, Ryan and Pearson are each charged with conspiracy to use interstate commerce facilities in the commission of murder-for-hire.

Pearson, who was living illegally in Minnesota at the time of the alleged plot, is also charged with one count of possession of a firearm by a fugitive from justice and one count of possession of a firearm by an alien unlawfully in the United States.

Both Pearson and Ryan have been identified by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police as members of the Hells Angels, which has Canadian chapters that the DOJ and other law enforcement agencies consider an organized crime organization.

Both are in prison in Canada “on unrelated offenses,” the DOJ said.

The men used a service called SkyECC to communicate, the feds said.

Sometime around Jan. 30, 2021, Zindashti messaged Ryan for an update in the alleged murder-for-hire plot, the indictment states. Ryan allegedly responded that he was getting “things in order” and that he would need money.

Officials say that several days later, Zindashti told Ryan that his organization was ready to move forward and they agreed on a $350,000 payment for the “job,” plus another $20,000 to cover expenses. 

It was at that point, U.S. officials allege, that Zindashti introduced Ryan to Co-Conspirator 1, who is identified in the indictment only as “a resident of Iran.”

“We have a 4 man team ready,” Ryan responded, according to the document.

In a separate news release, the U.S. Treasury Department identified the Iranian who worked with Ryan as a Zindashti associate named Nihat Abdul Kadir Asan “who has played a pivotal role in logistical planning for many of the network’s operations, including the network’s plot to assassinate individuals in the United States.”

Over the next few days, Co-Conspirator 1 supplied Ryan with information and photographs of the targets, who are a man and a woman, and discussed the price for the double hit, according to the indictment.

“When RYAN told Co-Conspirator 1 that two targets would cost more than one, Co-Conspirator 1 assured RYAN that this was not a problem,” the indictment states.

In March of that year, Ryan got a first payment of $20,000 “for the purpose of covering travel expenses associated with the plot to murder the victims.”

The U.S. Treasury Department has taken “action against Zindashti’s criminal network that targets Iranian dissidents and opposition activists for kidnapping and assassination at the direction of the Iranian regime.”

“Zindashti and several of his key associates are prohibited from engaging in any transaction or dealing that involves a U.S. person or occurs in the United States,” the DOJ said in a statement.

Iran’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs did not immediately return a request for comment Monday.

Iran has a history of assassinations and abductions around the world, and has, at times, recruited local criminals to carry out the killings, according to U.S. and European governments.

In 2018, an Iranian man who had lived a quiet life as an electrician for…



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