Abdorrahman Boroumand Center

for Human Rights in Iran

https://www.iranrights.org
Omid, a memorial in defense of human rights in Iran
One Person’s Story

Abdolreza Shafi'i

About

Age: 45
Nationality: Iran
Religion: Islam (Shi'a)
Civil Status: Married

Case

Date of Killing: March 15, 2022
Location of Killing: Central Prison (Adelabad), Shiraz, Fars Province, Iran
Mode of Killing: Hanging
Charges: Drug related offense

About this Case

He was making ends meet for his family of five with great difficulty, going door to door in villages around Shiraz to sell blankets and mattresses. He was the victim of poverty and a corrupt and ruthless judiciary.

Information about the execution of Mr. Abdolreza Shafi'i was drawn from Twitter posts and information, including court documents sent to Abdorrahman Boroumand Center for Human Rights in Iran (ABC) by Mehdi Hajati, a lawyer who had practiced in Shiraz. (March 15, 2022) Additional information was drawn from Boroumand Center's interview with a person familiar with Mr. Shafi'i’s case. (March 28, 2022)

Mr. Shafi'i was a Shia’ Muslim and resident of Bavanat in Fars Province and had a high school education. He was married and had three children. He earned a living with difficulties by selling blankets and mattresses in villages around Shiraz. He liked soccer and was a good soccer player. (ABC interview, March 28, 2022)

Arrest and Detention

At 2 AM on December 18, 2022, Akbarabad Police arrested Mr. Shafi'i's car after being tipped off regarding transport of synthetic drugs from Yazd Province to Fars Province. He was arrested after the police discovered two containers containing 20 liters of liquid in his car. (Branch 46 of the Supreme Court judgment)

Mr. Shafi'i was detained and interrogated in Shahzdeh Qasem police station for 40 days without access to a lawyer before being transferred to Pirbano Prison, some 20 km outside Shiraz. Pirbano is a prison with limited amenities dedicated to drug offenders. (ABC interview March 15, 2022)

Trial

Based on the information in the Supreme Court judgment and information obtained by Abdorrahman Boroumand Center, Mr. Shafi'i trial was held in several stage due to the lack of sufficient information regarding the content and concentration of the liquid contained in the two containers found in his car. Branch 2 of Shiraz Revolutionary Court tried Mr. Shafi'i sometime before June 28, 2020. Mr. Shafi'i was present in court as well as a court assigned lawyer and in the absence of his family members. The other individuals involved in his case were not present in court.

Branch 46 of the Supreme Court reviewed the appeal of Mr. Shafi'i in October 2020 without the presence of the defendant or his attorney.

Charges

Based on the Supreme Court judgment dated September 29, 2020, Mr. Abdolreza Shafi'i was accused of manufacturing and transporting "21.2 kilos of methamphetamines [dissolved in water] and having transported it in the form of liquid to mislead agents."

The validity of the criminal charges brought against this defendant cannot be ascertained in the absence of the basic guarantees of a fair trial. International human rights organizations have drawn attention to reports indicating that the Islamic Republic authorities have brought trumped-up charges, including drug trafficking, sexual, and other criminal offences, against their opponents (including political, civil society activists, as well as unionists and ethnic and religious minorities). Thousands of alleged drug traffickers have been sentenced to death following judicial processes that fail to meet international standards. Scores of them were executed based on a 1989 law imposing mandatory death sentences on drug traffickers found in possession of specified amounts of prescribed narcotics (5 kg of hashish or opium, and more than 30 grams of heroin, codeine or methadone). The exact number of people convicted based on trumped-up charges is unknown.

Evidence of Guilt

The evidence in Mr. Shafi'i's case as enumerated in the Supreme Court judgment was "the police report, the manner of recovery of drugs from the defendant’s vehicle; the defendant’s admission that the drugs were discovered in his vehicle; his unjustifiable [assertion and] statements of defense to the effect that he had transported the same, [thinking] it was alcohol; the laboratory’s multiple conclusions regarding the nature of the discovered narcotics and the manner of obtainment thereof; the Defendant’s contradictory statements regarding the manner of [accepting], loading, and delivery of the drugs; and other available evidence..."

The judgment mentions the laboratory's written conclusion that “all the chemical reactions on the recovered liquid, as well as the process of converting the liquid to crystal meth were performed by the defendant. He transported the same in liquid form in order to deceive the police. After the liquid was recovered, it was converted into solid form without any further actions by the officers, whereupon the net weight of the crystal meth was determined to be 21.2 kilograms (47 pounds). All the stages of chemical conversions from liquid to crystal meth had already been performed by the defendant and it was not precursor crystal meth”.

Defense

In his defense, Mr. Safi'ee stressed that he transported the containers, which he had been told, were filled with home-made drinking alcohol. The Supreme Court judgment also acknowledges that at the time of arrest, Mr. Shafi'i had told the police that the containers did not belong to him: “I am a traveling salesman of blankets and mattresses. A little while ago, a person purchased a blanket(s) from me and then asked me to bring homemade alcoholic beverages to Shiraz. He said his name was Amir Mehdi; I gave him my phone number. He called me and came to Abarkuh yesterday accompanied by another individual. They put two 20-liter (approximately 5.3 gallons) containers of a liquid in my car, and even helped me to put my mattresses and equipment in the car. I then proceeded to travel toward Shiraz; they were driving in front of me. The plan was for them to take the 20-liter containers from me when we got to the beltway, but I was arrested at the Akbarabad Road Police Station. I’m the owner of the vehicle.”

Mr. Shafi'i had provided the same explanation to the investigative judge, acknowledging that he had accepted to transport the containers for a fee: "… My final defense is simply that I did not know [what was in the containers] and I was duped; he lied to me.”

Mr. Shafi'i's court appointed lawyer limited his defense to reiterating the defendant's claim that he didn't know regarding the content of the containers containing dissolved methamphetamine and questioning the nature of the liquid. The court did not take into consideration Mr. Shafi'i's statements or the fact that he had no criminal record. The judgment did not clarify how a door to door salesman who had to provide for a family of five and lived in financial hardship, could purchase more than 21 kilograms of methamphetamine. Further, the judgment relies on the laboratory's written conclusion asserting that “all the chemical reactions on the recovered liquid, as well as the process of converting the liquid to crystal meth were performed by the defendant," but does not explain how the lab has determined that the defendants had produced the crystal meth.

There is no mention in the court's judgment of any witnesses testifying in favor of the defendants nor of the presence and testimony of the defendant’s family members who, according to him, had received the 150 thousand Tomans agreed upon for the transportation and delivery of the two containers from the owners of the drugs. More importantly, the individual named by Mr. Shafi'i as the owner of the drugs and those who helped load the container in his car are not cited as defendants or witnesses in the trial. 

Judgment

On June 28, 2020, Branch 2 of the Islamic Revolutionary Court of Shiraz sentenced Mr. Abdolreza Shafi'i to death and expropriation of the vehicle used in the transportation of the narcotics for the benefit of the government in accordance with Article 8(6) and Paragraph (d) of Article 45 of the Law on Combating Narcotic Drugs and Article 30 of the Law on the Amendment of the same law. “Having taken into consideration the Police report; the manner of recovery of drugs from the defendant’s vehicle; the defendant’s admission that the drugs were discovered in his vehicle; his unjustifiable [assertion and] statements of defense to the effect that he had transported the same, [thinking] it was drinking alcohol; the laboratory’s multiple conclusions regarding the nature of the discovered narcotics and the manner of obtainment thereof; the defendant’s contradictory statements regarding the manner of [accepting], loading, and delivery of the drugs; and other available evidence, the court found that the charges against the defendant had been proven,”

Branch 46 of the Supreme Court reviewed the defendant’s attorney’s appellate brief, without the presence of the attorney or the defendant and denied the appeal pursuant to Article 469(a) of the Law on the Rules of Criminal Procedure, and confirmed the sentence. The judgment stated that: “the appealing attorney has not offered any effective [and relevant] issues or defects that would be able to put a dent into the bases and rationale of the trial court’s reasoning. Furthermore, the court decision was successfully rendered from the standpoint of proving the commission of the crime and its attribute ability to the Defendant, the fact that the commission thereof corresponds with the requirements of the law in assessing punishment, and the fulfillment of the requirements of due process.”

Mr. Abdolreza Shafi'i and two other men were executed on March 15, 2022 in Shiraz Adelabad Prison. The execution was not reported by official sources or Iran's media.

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