Harsh sentence urged for Turkish banker whose case strained US-Turkey relations

Mehmet Atilla was convicted in January of conspiring to launder $1 billion.

Mehmet Atilla was convicted in January of conspiring to launder a billion dollars in Iranian oil revenue in violation of US sanctions.

Defense attorneys said a harsh sentence would be unfair and urged the judge to be lenient.

“Unlike prosecutions involving massive frauds and staggering victim losses, here there are no victims who suffered a financial loss,” defense attorneys wrote in their sentencing submission.

The defense also portrayed Atillah as a “functionary” in a conspiracy led by Reza Zarrab, a Turkish-Iranian gold trader who pleaded guilty on the eve of trial and agreed to cooperate with the government.

Whatever Atilla’s role prosecutors said his “offenses are in some respects without parallel and the immense risks that he and his co-conspirators created to the national security of the United States and to the safety and stability of the entire globe are similarly without ready comparison.”

Atilla is scheduled to be sentenced April 11.