The source told the Campaign that the family only learned about the Medical Examiner report one year after Beheshti’s death, after the 3,000 page case file was sent to the Criminal Court. “This is a report from one of the Medical Examiner doctors which was sent to the autopsy hall of the Medical Examiner last year; but Sattar’s family and lawyer were not allowed to read the case file until October this year, when it was sent to the Court, and were hence unaware of it,” said the source.
“In October [2013], Sattar Beheshti’s lawyer was able to receive permission from the Court to photocopy the Medical Examiner’s opinion, but because we couldn’t understand the medical expressions used in the report, we showed it to several specialist physicians. The specialists explained that in this report it is stated that Sattar suffered hemorrhaging in his lungs, liver, kidneys, and cerebellum and the doctors agreed unanimously that Sattar died as a result of this hemorrhaging,” the source added.
“In its report last year, the Medical Examiner said that the death was probably caused by stress; however, a year later we realized that there was a report by one the Medical Examiner doctors, stating Sattar’s cause of death as internal bleeding,” said the source.
In a July 9 interview with Mehr News Agency, the Head of the Medical Examiner Organization said that according to his organization’s final report, the blows Sattar Beheshti received were not fatal and could not have caused his death. Dr. Ahmad Shojaee also said that there had not been any indications in the toxicology reports, either which could have indicated death by unnatural causes.
In a November 2012 article, the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran reported a Beheshti family member’s description of his body just before burial. “There was a large dent in his head and they had put plaster over his head. His face was swollen. As soon as they untied his shroud, blood splattered on the shroud from the side of his right knee. As soon as they untied his shroud it became completely bloody, and there were signs of an autopsy on his body, as well,” the source told the Campaign.
Sattar Beheshti, 35, a laborer and blogger, was arrested on October 30, 2012, by Iran’s Cyber Police and died under torture by his interrogator on November 3, 2012. His body was buried at Robat Karim Cemetery near where he lived. According to public death records at Tehran’s Behesht-e Zahra Cemetery, Sattar Beheshti’s date of death was November 3, 2012.
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