Man accused in Iranian’s death depicted as violent

JUAN A. LOZANO
Associated Press

HOUSTON (AP) — A Jordanian-born man facing a state murder charge in the 2012 shooting death of an Iranian student and women’s rights activist also played a role in his son-in-law’s death 11 months later, a federal prosecutor alleged Thursday.

During a detention hearing on federal fraud charges, a federal agent testified that Ali Irsan’s daughter was afraid of her father after she left home and married Coty Beavers. Irsan, who did not approve of the marriage, violated a restraining order in trying to find his daughter and Beavers, authorities said.

“He tracked down Coty Beavers and killed him,” said prosecutor Jim McAlister.

Irsan, 57, has been charged by Harris County prosecutors in Houston with the slaying of 30-year-old Gelareh Bagherzadeh. She was gunned down near her parents’ Houston home in January 2012.

Mark Diaz, Irsan’s attorney, declined to comment on the murder charge or on the allegations related to Beavers’ death. Irsan has not been charged in the November 2012 shooting death of Beavers, 28. Harris County District Attorney’s Office spokesman Jeff McShan said Thursday that Beavers’ death is still being investigated.

Irsan, a naturalized U.S. citizen, is in federal custody on fraud charges for his alleged involvement in a welfare and Social Security benefits scheme. His wife, Shmou Ali Alrawabdeh, 37, and daughter, Nadia Alia, 30, have also been charged.

Gary Dickens, a special agent with the Social Security Administration’s Office of the Inspector General, testified Thursday that Bagherzadeh had been close friends with Nesreen Irsan, who was married to Beavers.

Dickens said Nesreen Irsan, who is in her 20s, left home in July 2011 and married Beavers. A month after leaving home, she got a protective order against her father.

“Nesreen was in hiding and afraid of her father,” Dickens said.

Ali Irsan as well as Alrawabdeh, his wife and Nesreen Irsan’s stepmother, were seen in Beavers and Nesreen Irsan’s neighborhood, passing out flyers that offered up to $100 for information on the couple.

Cory Beavers, Coty’s identical twin, has told the Houston Chronicle he believed Ali Irsan thought Bagherzadeh’s influence had made Nesreen Irsan leave her parents’ home.

Dickens testified that on the night of Bagherzadeh’s killing, a witness saw a silver vehicle leave the scene of the killing. Then, 44 minutes later, Irsan and his wife were stopped for speeding as they drove back to Conroe, a town north of Houston where they lived. The couple was in a silver vehicle, Dickens said.

Authorities also found Bagherzadeh’s name and phone number on Alrawabdeh’s phone. Alrawabdeh’s attorney, Marina Douenat, said it was not unusual for someone to have the name and phone number of a friend of her stepdaughter.

U.S. Magistrate Judge Nancy Johnson ordered Ali Irsan be held without bond pending his federal trial.

McShan said Ali Irsan will first be tried on the murder charge. He is expected to be transferred into state custody within the next two weeks.

Ali Irsan was not charged in the 1999 death of another son-in-law, Amjad H. Alidam. Dickens said Irsan claimed he shot him in self-defense.

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Follow Juan A. Lozano on Twitter at https://twitter.com/juanlozano70

Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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