Breaking
A Newport Coast technology executive has been arrested on federal charges after prosecutors accused him of illegally supplying American computer technology to Iran, including equipment allegedly intended for customers connected to the regime’s nuclear and military establishment. The defendant, Jamshid Ghomi, is a dual U.S.-Iranian national and the chief executive of a Tehran-based technology company, according to the U.S. attorney’s office as reported by the Los Angeles Times.
Federal authorities say Ghomi is charged with conspiracy to violate the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. Prosecutors allege he used procurement channels, online accounts, freight forwarders, intermediaries, and foreign companies to move networking, security, and encryption equipment into Iran without the required license from the U.S. Department of the Treasury. The charge remains an allegation, and Ghomi is presumed innocent unless proven guilty in court.
Details & Background
According to prosecutors, Ghomi allegedly used his own eBay and PayPal accounts to make hundreds of purchases of computer-networking equipment and route those goods through intermediaries in the United Arab Emirates. Federal authorities also allege that he personally negotiated the purchase of U.S.-origin networking equipment from suppliers in Minnesota and Nebraska, then used a UAE front company to move the equipment onward to his company in Iran.
The government’s allegations describe a long-running operation that prosecutors say involved more than 275 tons of networking equipment. Authorities allege Ghomi and others used freight forwarders and intermediaries in Dubai to hide Iran as the true destination. Prosecutors further claim Ghomi made millions of dollars while the equipment was allegedly sent into a country under strict U.S. sanctions.
Reactions
Federal investigators framed the arrest as part of a broader national security effort to stop American technology from reaching hostile regimes. Darren Lian, acting special agent in charge of IRS Criminal Investigation’s Los Angeles bureau, said, “Today’s arrest reflects our commitment to disrupt the illegal flow of American technology to foreign nations, especially our adversaries.”
Lian also said the alleged conduct involved hiding behind international channels and falsified documents. “As alleged, Mr. Ghomi spent years exploiting United States financial systems and procurement channels to move controlled equipment to Iran while hiding his activities behind front companies and falsified documentation,” he said. Prosecutors also allege Ghomi directed associates to keep his name off shipping paperwork, omit invoices from shipments bound for Iran, and hide U.S.-origin equipment inside larger shipments.
Why This Matters to You
For American families, the stakes are national security, economic sovereignty, and the basic question of whether U.S. technology can be protected from regimes that threaten American interests. Networking, security, and encryption equipment are not ordinary consumer items when prosecutors say they are being routed into Iran’s military and nuclear ecosystem. These tools can strengthen communications, harden networks, and support sensitive operations if they reach the wrong hands.
The government is responding through sanctions enforcement, criminal prosecution, financial investigation, and export-control oversight. That response must be aggressive and consistent. When American technology is allegedly moved through front companies, foreign intermediaries, and disguised shipments, the danger is not abstract. It is a direct test of whether the United States can defend its own innovation from adversaries determined to turn it against us. If convicted, Ghomi could face up to 20 years in federal prison, according to prosecutors.