Trial Begins Of Iranian Man Accused Of Using U.S. Nuclear Plant Info in Tehran

By Jane McEntegart, published on May 14, 2008 at 9:50 AM
Source: Tom's Guide | Keywords: , , , | Themes: Business, Software
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The trial of Mohammad Reza Alavi, the man accused of illegally taking software from the nation’s biggest nuclear plant in Arizona and using it while in Iran, began this week and it looks as if he may have just been using the software to show his family what he did while he worked for the U.S. plant.

Alavi began working at the Palo Verde plant in 1989 and resigned in 2006 to return home to his family in Iran. While in Iran, Alavi downloaded codes that would allow him to open the software. Prosecutors allege that in doing this, Alavi broke the U.S. embargo on trade with Iran. He was arrested a year ago in Los Angeles upon returning to the U.S.A.

The former engineer’s attorney said that while Alavi took the software to Iran, he never intended to break the law. In fact he only opened the software while in Iran because he was proud of his job in the States.

The authorities believe that Alavi, an Iranian born naturalized U.S. citizen never intended to use the training software, which was used to simulate the control room at the plant and contained detailed plant information to provide details to terrorists. The plant has also said the unauthorized use of the software did not pose a security risk because it contained no information on plant security.

Furthermore, according to The Arizona Republic, the plant actively encourages employees to download the software to their laptops and work on it at home.

"We encourage them to use it at home. . . .What (Alavi) was doing with software was not unusual and certainly not limited to him," An Arizona Public Service spokesman Jim McDonald said.

When Alavi resigned in 2006, the company shut down his access to the software but the engineer later used his log-on to get onto a website run by the software vendor. The company allegedly did not know Alavi had left the country with the information until the software manufacturer recorded that attempts had been made to access the system from an address in Iran’s capital, Tehran.

The trial is scheduled for July 3rd and if convicted, Alavi could face up to two years in prison.

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Comments

Christopher1 05/14/2008 4:15 AM
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Christopher1

Two years in prison for just showing your relatives what you work on? Something has gone SERIOUSLY wrong in this country. And judging by how much software is available online illegally.... I am sure that Iran could have gotten this software in numerous other ways, if they really wished to.

sandmanwn 05/14/2008 6:05 AM
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sandmanwn

The first problem is the guy resigned and his access wasn't restricted at every point of entry instead of just the obvious ones. Negligence on the technical staffs part of both the nuclear site and the vendors site for not communicating to each other better.

The second problem is why does this site even allow access to anyone living in Iran or any other hostile government? All IP addresses from Iran should be blocked to begin with. This is again poor decisions on the technical staff that run the site where the codecs were downloaded.

Third, this guy new better obviously. Showing designs of anything inside a nuclear facility is just dumb and unfortunately under the law ignorance isn't an excuse for stupid behavior.

lopopo 05/15/2008 1:11 AM
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lopopo

Christopher1 :
Two years in prison for just showing your relatives what you work on? Something has gone SERIOUSLY wrong in this country. And judging by how much software is available online illegally.... I am sure that Iran could have gotten this software in numerous other ways, if they really wished to.



True Iran could have gotten this information some other way. That being said all persons in all fields where they are considerd professionals have to consider ethical implications of their actions(especially an engineer). I agree with you but.. I think other responsible goverments would have done the same times baeing what they are.

lopopo 05/15/2008 1:11 AM
Hide
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lopopo

Christopher1 :
Two years in prison for just showing your relatives what you work on? Something has gone SERIOUSLY wrong in this country. And judging by how much software is available online illegally.... I am sure that Iran could have gotten this software in numerous other ways, if they really wished to.



True Iran could have gotten this information some other way. That being said all persons in all fields where they are considerd professionals have to consider ethical implications of their actions(especially an engineer). I agree with you but.. I think other responsible goverments would have done the same times baeing what they are.

Note You are going to post a comment as anonymous.



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