Audio By Carbonatix
A Pakistani man with ties to Iran has been found guilty of plotting to assassinate US politicians and officials.
Asif Merchant, 47, hired a hitman in New York to kill prominent American officials and targeted US President Donald Trump in 2024.
After a week-long trial in Brooklyn amid the US-Israel war with Iran, a federal jury convicted him of murder for hire and attempted terrorism transcending national boundaries.
A lawyer for Merchant, who could face life in prison, said there are still "complex and significant legal issues yet to be decided".

According the US Department of Justice, Merchant was a trained operative of the Iranian government's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and was in the US to look for potential IRGC recruits.
Merchant arrived in the US from Pakistan in April 2024 after having spent time in Iran. In June of that year, he contacted a person who he believed could help with the assassination plot and that contact later reported him to the police.
He met with undercover US law enforcement officers who were posing as hitmen in New York, according to the US Attorney's Office in the Eastern District of New York, and law enforcement foiled the plot before any attack could be carried out.
He was arrested that July before leaving the country.
At trial, Merchant admitted that the IRGC sent him to the US to arrange for political assassinations and that his IRGC handler directed him to kill Trump, former US president Joe Biden and Trump cabinet official Nikki Haley, according to the BBC's US partner, CBS News.
The plot was meant to avenge the 2020 death of top Iranian general Qasem Soleimani, he said.
But Merchant argued that he "had no other option" than to go along with the plot because his handler indicated that he knew who Merchant's Iranian relatives were and where they lived.
He said he had anticipated being arrested before anyone was killed and intended to cooperate with the US government, CBS reported. He had hoped that would help him obtain a green card.
The jury deliberated for less than two hours before returning its verdict on Friday, US media said.
"Iran's terrorist regime sent Asif Merchant here to sow mayhem and murder," US Attorney Joseph Nocella Jr said.
"Thanks to the vigilance of our law enforcement partners, his scheme ended in failure. Today, with Merchant's conviction, that failure is complete."
In a statement to the BBC, Merchant's lawyer Christopher Neff said he was "disappointed in the result" but grateful for the jury's careful attention and hard work.
"Nevertheless, as Judge Komitee noted, there are complex and significant legal issues yet to be decided. We remain confident that we will ultimately achieve a favorable result for Mr Merchant," he said.
Latest Stories
-
Karpowership Ghana empowers female engineering students at UG to mark International Women’s Day
14 minutes -
Government weighs options on Ghanaian troops in Lebanon after missile attack
17 minutes -
Dumelo commits to supporting UG’s School of Engineering Sciences at during IWD engagement
22 minutes -
Ghana’s tax system from a gender lens: Why women-entrepreneurs are integral to tax revenue mobilisation
29 minutes -
Mahama to embark on 5-day working visit to South Korea
40 minutes -
When women lead, mining thrives…the story of Newmont’s Abena Acheampomaa Ankomah
41 minutes -
COPEC urges creation of strategic fuel reserve fund to shield Ghana from supply shocks
44 minutes -
Empowering women key to national prosperity – Mahama marks International Women’s Day
52 minutes -
Brogya Genfi rejects claims of leadership gap at Defence Ministry
2 hours -
Explosion reported outside US embassy in Oslo, police say
4 hours -
Trump accuses UK PM of seeking to ‘join wars after we’ve already won’
4 hours -
See the areas that will be affected by ECG’s planned maintenance today, March 8
4 hours -
First Lady champions ‘Give to Gain’ spirit for International Women’s Day
5 hours -
Ghana@69: Ghana mission in Canada promotes investments and partnerships
5 hours -
Lebanon condemns ‘grave breach’ as missiles strike Ghanaian UN base
6 hours
