NEW YORK — A New York man who was indicted in 2022 on felony charges of acting as an unregistered agent of Egypt's government pleaded guilty on Wednesday (Aug 14) to a lesser charge, in the latest stumble for US prosecutors trying to clamp down on foreign influence.
Pierre Girgis, a dual Egyptian-US citizen living in Manhattan, admitted in court to sharing information in 2019 with the Egyptian-American community from the Egyptian government about expatriates' military draft obligations, without labelling it as "political propaganda" as required by law.
That was a far cry from the felony charges Girgis initially faced. Prosecutors had accused him of tracking US-based opponents of Egypt's President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, and helping visiting Egyptian officials attend police trainings in Manhattan meant only for law enforcement.
Those charges will be dropped as part of a deal in which Girgis agreed to plead guilty to one misdemeanour count of failure to file and label informational materials.
"This was overcharged from the beginning," defence lawyer Andrew Dalack told reporters after the hearing, adding that he was grateful prosecutors decided felony charges were not warranted. "This was just not what it seemed to be."
A spokesperson for the US Attorney's office in Manhattan declined to comment. Egypt's embassy in Washington did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The US Justice Department has in recent years cracked down on what it terms transnational repression, or efforts by a foreign state to intimidate or threaten political opponents in another country.
But prosecutors have occasionally struggled to win convictions on foreign agent charges, which require them to prove that defendants were acting at the "direction or control" of a foreign government.
The US Attorney's office in Brooklyn last year dropped charges against a former New York City Police Department officer who was accused of acting as a Chinese agent, and businessman Tom Barrack was acquitted after a six-week trial in 2022 of acting as an agent of the United Arab Emirates.
Girgis, who worked in finance, said in court he did not know he was breaking the law at the time he shared the information on behalf of an Egyptian consular official. He apologised and said he now understood he should have "placed a statement on the document identifying it as political propaganda."
Girgis, 42, faces no more than six months behind bars at his Oct 3 sentencing before US District Judge Katherine Polk Failla in Manhattan. The two felony charges he previously faced carried maximum prison terms of ten and five years.
[[nid:697301]]