New York, New York - A Pakistani man accused of plotting to kill US politicians including President Donald Trump reportedly claimed Wednesday he had been pressured by Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps to devise the murder-for-hire scheme.
Asif Raza Merchant was charged in September 2024 with seeking to hire a hitman to assassinate unidentified lawmakers. He pleaded not guilty to the charges.
The Revolutionary Guards have allegedly sought to kill top US officials following the 2020 assassination of one of their commanders, Qasem Soleimani on Trump's orders.
During his trial Wednesday, Merchant testified that he was forced into the plot to protect his family in the Iranian capital Tehran from the IRGC, adding that he thought he would get caught before anyone was killed, multiple media outlets reported.
He said he was never ordered to kill a specific person but noted his Iranian contact had mentioned three people in connection with the plot: Trump, former President Joe Biden, and former UN ambassador Nikki Haley.
"My family was under threat, and I had to do this," Merchant told the court through an Urdu interpreter, according to the Washington Post. "I was not wanting to do this so willingly."
Justice Department points finger at "Iranian regime's playbook"
Merchant's trial comes as the US and Israel unleashed an unprovoked war on Iran, killing its supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
US officials previously said Merchant had "close ties to Iran" and described his alleged plot as "straight out of the Iranian regime's playbook."
Merchant said this week he began working with a member of the Guards about 2022, when the man asked him if he was "interested in doing some work with the Iranian government," the New York Times reported.
He was eventually instructed to orchestrate a plot that involved arranging protests, stealing documents, laundering money and potentially having someone killed.
The Times reported that Merchant said he had been worried about what would happen to his wife and adopted daughter in Iran, so he agreed to the operation.
He was arrested after reportedly trying to hire hitmen that turned out to be undercover FBI agents.