NCRI Staff
NCRI – In a factional feud, the Iranian regime’s Court of Audit announced on Wednesday, October 18, that since 2008, the Iranian regime’s former president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, has spent more than 4,600 billion Toman worth of crude oil sales illegally, which should be returned to the treasury.
The prosecutor of the Supreme Audit Court, in August this year, had announced that Ahmadinejad had seven definitive and ongoing rulings in the court, five of which were related to oil revenue.
Some of the charges brought against him include importing gasoline and oil gas before legal permissions through the exchange of crude oil with petroleum products from 2008 to 2010.
The lack of clearing the cost of gas condensate to petrochemical companies, the non-alignment of accounts between the government and the National Oil Company in the years 2007-2009, and the failure to settle more than 600 billion Toman of crude oil delivered to the law enforcement forces for sale are among other charges.
Ahmadinejad, in response to these accusations, issued a statement announcing that he has decided to put aside the silence and soon he would publish more information about what he called a “conspiracy plot”.


