Wives of police chiefs who exposed Erdoğan family’s corruption sentenced to 6 years in prison

A total of 12 people including the wives of a number of former police chiefs who led corruption and bribery operations against the government in 2013 have been sentenced to six years, three months in prison for alleged membership in a terrorist organization.

The suspects, in pre-trial detention since 2017, were accused of alleged links to the civic faith-based Gülen movement.

The family members who were sentenced to prison were Yakup Saygili’s wife Esra Filiz Saygılı, Kazim Aksoy’s wife Sümeyya Aksoy, Kürşat Düşmüş’s wife Fatmagül Durmuş, Ayhan Arıkanoğlu’s wife Ayse Arıkanoğlu, Said Gök’s wife Hatice Gök, Mesut Yılmaz’s wife Huri Yılmaz, Gaffur Ataç’s wife Rabia Ataç, Osman Özgür Açıkgöz’s wife Zeliha Özlem Açıkgöz, Mehmet Habib Kunt’s wife Nurcan Kunt, Abdülhalim Sönmez’s wife Neslihan Sönmez, Ömer Köse’s sister Selda Özdemir and Köse’s son Faruk Serdar Köse.

In March 2019 the İstanbul 14th High Criminal Court handed down life sentences to 15 defendants for attempting to overthrow the Turkish government with a 2013 police investigation that reached to then-ministers. Former police chiefs Yakub Saygılı, Kazım Aksoy, Yasin Topçu and Nazmi Ardıç were among those convicted as well as US-based Islamic cleric Fethullah Gülen, a foe of President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.

In December 2013 Turkey was shaken by the revelation of two corruption investigations, on Dec. 17 and 25, in which the inner circle of then-Prime Minister and current President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan were implicated.

After Erdoğan cast the investigations as a coup attempt to overthrow his government orchestrated by his political enemies, the prosecutors and judges were removed from the case, police were reassigned and the corruption investigations were dropped. Later, the police officers, judges and prosecutors who took part in the investigations were all jailed.

Iranian-Turkish gold trader Reza Zarrab, who was the prime suspect in one of the major corruption investigations, was arrested in Miami in 2016 on charges of evading US sanctions on Iran. Zarrab pleaded guilty in federal court and in a plea deal testified about the plot in 2017 as a witness for the prosecution.

Zarrab testified that Turkey’s then-Prime Minister Erdoğan personally ordered the resumption of the plot to launder billions of dollars in Iranian oil revenue and circumvent US sanctions, in parallel with the evidence exposed during the 2013 corruption scandals in Turkey. Zarrab also admitted that he bribed Cabinet ministers.  (SCF with Turkey Purge)

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