US confirms arrest of Iranian TV anchor

US court order says Marzieh Hashemi's testimony is required in undisclosed federal investigation but she has not been accused of a crime.

WASHINGTON - An American-born Iranian television anchor has been arrested as a material witness in an undisclosed US federal investigation, according to a federal court order granted on Friday.

At the request of the Justice Department, US District Judge Beryl Howell issued the order, the first official US confirmation of reports of the arrest of Marzieh Hashemi, an anchor for Iran's English-language Press TV news channel.

The order, which approved the partial unsealing of information in the case, said Hashemi was arrested on a material witness warrant issued by a federal judge and that she was assigned an attorney but "has not been accused of any crime."

Hashemi has made two court appearances, and the US government expects her immediate release after she finishes testifying before a federal grand jury investigating violations of US criminal law, the order continued.

It did not disclose further details of the case, which has added to tensions between the Iranian and US governments over the US withdrawal from the Iran nuclear deal, the reimposition of harsh US sanctions, and the detention of Iranian-American dual nationals by Iran.

Iran has called for the immediate release of Hashemi, who state-run Press TV said was arrested on Sunday by the FBI at St. Louis Lambert International Airport.

Press TV on Saturday quoted Hashemi's son as saying US officials had banned family members from speaking to media. The television did not give further details and the report could not be immediately confirmed.

Press TV quoted Hashemi's daughter as saying the anchor had been given "a hijab (Muslim head covering) and food to get by" after it had earlier said prison officials had taken a photograph of her without her hijab and had not provided halal food.

Press TV said Hashemi was due to appear before a grand jury on Jan. 23. The reports could not be immediately confirmed.

The FBI and the Justice Department declined to confirm her arrest or comment on the case.

A US government source told Reuters it appeared that the grand jury was examining whether Press TV is a propaganda outlet that failed to register with the Justice Department as an agent of a foreign government.

Press TV said on Wednesday that Hashemi was born Melanie Franklin in the United States and changed her name after converting to Islam.

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif was quoted by the ISNA news agency as saying Hashemi received Iranian citizenship after marrying an Iranian.

(Reporting by Jonathan Landay and Mark Hosenball, additional reporting by Dubai newsroom; Editing by Richard Chang, Stephen Coates and Janet Lawrence)