Saturday, December 10, 2011

Bob Levinson Proof of Life Video - Missing Since 2007 - From Iran


Earlier this year, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton dropped a diplomatic bombshell, revealing in a cautiously worded statement in March that the United States had received evidence that Bob Levinson, a former FBI agent who went missing in 2007, was alive and being held in "southwest Asia." In her statement, Clinton asked "respectfully" for Iran's assistance in facilitating Levinson's safe return.
Levinson's family shortly thereafter received a batch of photos of Levinson in an orange jumpsuit, but apart from that, his trail has lately grown cold, with no diplomatic breakthrough apparently poised to secure his release. As a result, Levinson's family has released a video of him that they received from his captors last November to the Associated Press. They have also issued their own video pleading for his release.
In the 54-second hostage video, "Levinson pleaded with the U.S. government to meet the demands" of the group holding him for the past three and a half years, the Associated Press's Matthew Apuzzo and Adam Goldman reported late Thursday.
"I have been treated well," Levinson, now 64, says on the video. "But I need the help of the United States government to answer the requests of the group that has held me for three and a half years."

Speaking of "my beautiful, my loving, my loyal wife, Christine," and their seven children and grandson (apparently he is unaware he now also has a granddaughter), Levinson said: "I am not in very good health. I am running very quickly out of diabetes medicine."
The video contained a tantalizing clue about the case. When Levinson went missing in 2007 from the Iranian resort town of Kish Island, diplomats had assumed Iranian captors had seized him. (Immediately before his disappearance, he had met with a controversial U.S. fugitive Dawud Salahuddin, now living in exile in Iran.) But the 2010 video suggests that Levinson's captors may be Pashtuns, who predominantly live along the Pakistani and Afghan border area.
"Investigators determined that the video was routed through an Internet address in Pakistan, suggesting that Levinson might be held there," Apuzzo and Goldman report. "Also, Pashtun wedding music played faintly in the background, officials said. The Pashtun people live primarily in Pakistan and Afghanistan, just over Iran's eastern border."
The video was also "accompanied by a demand that the U.S. release prisoners, but officials said the United States is not holding anyone matching the names on the list," Goldman and Apuzzo wrote. However, officials told the AP it's possible the men may have previously been held by the Pakistani government.
Shortly after Clinton's March announcement, "the Levinson family received a series of photos of Levinson dressed in an orange prison jumpsuit like the ones worn by detainees at the U.S. military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba," the AP investigation reported. "In each photo, he wore a different sign hung around his neck. One read, 'Why you can not help me.' "
Investigators determined the photos were sent from an Internet address in Afghanistan, Apuzzo and Goldman wrote.
And then the trail went cold, leaving investigators to pour over old details.
One person who reportedly currently professes not to know, and the last person known to have seen Levinson before his 2007 disappearance, is the American-born Salahuddin, who has lived in exile in Iran ever since his alleged murder of an anti-Khomeni Iranian dissident in Bethesda, Md.

The family has issued its own video plea on Levinson's behalf at a website devoted to his release.
"Please tell us your demands so we can work together to bring my father home safely," Levinson's son David says on the video.

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