This is the identity of the ethics patrol elements that arrested the victim, Mahsa Amini

This is the identity of the ethics patrol elements that arrested the victim, Mahsa Amini

Image by Mahsa Amini taken at a demonstration in support of the Iranian protestors from Getty Images
Mahsa Amini, a young lady in her 20s who was detained by Iran’s morality police, has come to represent the Iranian revolution throughout the world, making it crucial for everyone to know the specifics of her detention, the identity of the detainees, and the circumstances surrounding her demise.

According to a report by Iran International, Captain Enayatullah Rafei, who was born in 1970 in the Zanjan Province city of Khadabandeh, served as the team leader of the police officers who detained Mahsa Amini.
The 1995-born Staff Sgt. Ali Khushnam Wend was also a part of the group that carried Mahsa Amini to the Ethics Patrol van. He was born in the community of Khoshnamund in the province of Lorestan’s southern highlands.

and Parastou Safari, a police officer who stopped Mahsa Amini in the street. She was born in Kermanshah in 1986.
Fatima Qurban Hosseini, a member of the organisation that detained Mahsa Amini, was born in Tehran in 1995.
Before then, a letter from Dr. Ali Amiri, the assistant prosecutor at the fifth branch of the Public Prosecution 38, had been published by the hacking collective “Adalat Ali.”

Mahsa Amini’s head reportedly impacted the sidewalk during an attempt to arrest her, according to witnesses, according to Mohsen Pour, the director of this prosecution’s office.
After questioning taxi drivers, Taleghani park rangers, and store owners, the police inspectors said in the letter that Mahsa Amini “resisted” being escorted to the car and “as a result of the conflict injured her head on the sidewalk.” And that while in the care of the morality police on Wazir Street, this blow caused her death.

The findings of the investigation, according to this letter, also indicate that the ethical patrol posted outside the Haqqani metro station frequently treats people improperly.
The “Adalat Ali” hacking group recently released information regarding those connected to the Mahsa Amini case as well as 10 officials and staff members of the 8th District Prosecution Office for Moral Security Crimes, including Hamid Mohsen Pour Qadeklani, the director of this prosecution’s office.

At the same time, this group made public a letter that Hamid Mohsenpour, Deputy Prosecutor and Head of the Prosecution Office of the Eighth Circuit for Moral Security Crimes, had written to the Chief Judge of Tehran Province, in which he demanded “physical protection” and the “establishment of a security and protection umbrella” for himself and 9 officials and employees at the Public Prosecutor’s Office.

Iran International’s exclusive CT scan of Mahsa Amini revealed a skull fracture on the right side of her head as a consequence of a head injury.
These images also revealed blood and fluids in her lungs. According to the medical professionals, Mahsa Amino’s coma after suffering a severe head injury was the cause of the fluid buildup in the lungs.

The Iranian Revolutionary Guard’s Fars News Agency stated that its reporter’s follow-up with “relevant sources” revealed that the CT scan photographs of Mahsa Amini published in Iran International were indeed legitimate.

On September 20, Iran International reported that one of the cameras overlooking Mahsa Amini’s prison facility, which captured footage of her being battered near the metro station, had been seized by the Tehran Public Prosecutor and given to the judiciary.

The members of the ethical patrol who detained the victim, Mahsa Amini, are listed below.

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