Iran Says it Thwarted Nuclear Site Sabotage it Ascribes to Israel

Photo from a brochure published by the Iranian Atomic Energy Organization on Nov. 6, 2019, showing the interior of the Fordow plant in Qom, Iran. (Atomic Energy Organization of Iran, AFP file photo)
Photo from a brochure published by the Iranian Atomic Energy Organization on Nov. 6, 2019, showing the interior of the Fordow plant in Qom, Iran. (Atomic Energy Organization of Iran, AFP file photo)
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Iran Says it Thwarted Nuclear Site Sabotage it Ascribes to Israel

Photo from a brochure published by the Iranian Atomic Energy Organization on Nov. 6, 2019, showing the interior of the Fordow plant in Qom, Iran. (Atomic Energy Organization of Iran, AFP file photo)
Photo from a brochure published by the Iranian Atomic Energy Organization on Nov. 6, 2019, showing the interior of the Fordow plant in Qom, Iran. (Atomic Energy Organization of Iran, AFP file photo)

Iranian state television said on Monday its security forces had thwarted a planned sabotage at the country's major Fordow nuclear site by a network it accused Israel of recruiting. It said the forces made arrests.

The Israeli prime minister's office had no immediate comment on the report.

The television said an Israeli officer first contacted a neighbor of an employee of the uranium enrichment plant and managed to recruit them both after paying them in cash and digital currency.

Revolutionary Guards security agents were monitoring the network and were able to break it up before the sabotage could be carried out, arresting an unspecified number of people, the television said.

The state news agency IRNA said a new agency called Revolutionary Guards Nuclear Command, which it said had been set up to oversee defense and security matters at nuclear installations, was involved in the operation to stop the planned sabotage.

Iran has accused Israel of carrying out several attacks on facilities linked to its nuclear program and of killing its nuclear scientists over the past years. Israel has neither denied nor confirmed the allegations.

In April 2021, Tehran said an incident that disrupted the flow of power at Iran’s Natanz uranium enrichment facility, in the desert in the central province of Isfahan, was caused by an act of “nuclear terrorism”.



Thumbprint on Cigarette Carton Leads to Arrest in 1977 Death of US Woman

This taken Feb. 1, 1977, photo provided by the Santa Clara County District Attorney's Office shows the inside of the Volkswagen in San Jose, Calif. (Santa Clara County District Attorney's Office via AP)
This taken Feb. 1, 1977, photo provided by the Santa Clara County District Attorney's Office shows the inside of the Volkswagen in San Jose, Calif. (Santa Clara County District Attorney's Office via AP)
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Thumbprint on Cigarette Carton Leads to Arrest in 1977 Death of US Woman

This taken Feb. 1, 1977, photo provided by the Santa Clara County District Attorney's Office shows the inside of the Volkswagen in San Jose, Calif. (Santa Clara County District Attorney's Office via AP)
This taken Feb. 1, 1977, photo provided by the Santa Clara County District Attorney's Office shows the inside of the Volkswagen in San Jose, Calif. (Santa Clara County District Attorney's Office via AP)

Nearly half a century after a young California woman was strangled to death, officials say a thumbprint on a carton of cigarettes has led to an arrest.

Willie Eugene Sims was arrested in Jefferson, Ohio, in connection with the death of Jeanette Ralston, according to a Friday statement from the Santa Clara County District Attorney’s Office.

Sims, 69, has been charged with murder and was arraigned on Friday in Ashtabula County Court before being sent to California.

Ralston was found dead in the back seat of her Volkswagen Beetle on Feb. 1, 1977, in San Jose, according to the Santa Clara County District Attorney’s Office. Her body was found in the carport area of an apartment complex near the bar where friends say she was last seen.

She had been strangled with a long-sleeve dress shirt, and evidence appeared to show she was sexually assaulted, according to prosecutors. Her car showed signs of having been unsuccessfully set on fire, The Associated Press reported.

Her friends said at the time that they saw her leave the bar with an unknown man the evening before, saying she would be back in 10 minutes, but she never returned.

Police interviewed the friends and other witnesses and created a suspect sketch. But the investigation went cold.

A thumbprint found on Ralston’s cigarette carton in her car was found to match Sims last fall after law enforcement had asked to run the print through the FBI's updated system, prosecutors said.

Earlier this year, officials from the District Attorney’s office and San Jose police went to Ohio to collect DNA from Sims. Prosecutors say it matched the DNA found on Ralston’s fingernails and the shirt used to strangle her.

“Every day, forensic science grows better, and every day criminals are closer to being caught," District Attorney Jeff Rosen said in a statement. "Cases may grow old and be forgotten by the public. We don’t forget and we don’t give up.”

William Weigel, homicide team supervisor for the Santa Clara county public defender’s office, confirmed Monday that Lara Wallman had been assigned the case. He said their office can't comment on the evidence yet because they haven’t seen it but cautioned the public from jumping to conclusions.

“It is kind of important that we let the system play itself out and allow our side to conduct our own independent review and investigation of the case before we rush to judgment as it were,” he said.

Back in 1977, Sims was an army private assigned to a facility about 68 miles (109 kilometers) south of San Jose, prosecutors said.

The year after Ralston’s death, a jury in a separate case convicted Sims of an assault to commit murder in Monterey County and sentenced him to four years in prison, court records show.

Ralston's son, Allen Ralston, was 6 when she died. He told WOIO-TV that he is grateful and relieved an arrest was finally made.

"I'm just glad that somebody cared," he said about the case.