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Suspected American spy refused entry but not arrested, says Iranian TV

An American woman reported by Iranian media to be a suspected spy was refused entry at a border crossing with Armenia a week ago over a visa problem, Iran’s Al-Alam television reported Thursday, citing a security source.

That contradicted earlier media reports that she had been arrested.

“The American woman was not able to enter Iran,” Al-Alam said. “She approached the border guards, but as she did not have a visa, she was not authorized to enter Iran. She was sent back to Armenia.”

Earlier in the day, Fars news agency reported that Iranian officials had arrested an American woman on spying charges after she tried to enter the country from Armenia “with spying equipment in her teeth.”

“About a week ago an American spy woman whose name is said to be Hal Talayan was arrested by customs officials at Norduz” border area in East Azarbaijan province, Fars said, quoting an unnamed source.

“The 55-year-old American woman was arrested while she had entered Iran from Armenia without a visa and had placed spying equipment in her teeth,” the report said, without elaborating.

“This American spy said after arrest that she would be killed by Armenian security forces if Iran handed her over,” Fars said.

There has been no official confirmation of any version of the story, which was first reported on Wednesday by a little known conservative news website Nasimonline.ir, without naming any sources.

The woman would have been the fourth American to be arrested by Iran on spying charges after hikers Sarah Shourd, 32, Shane Bauer, 28 and Josh Fattal, 28.

The three insist they innocently strayed across the border when they were detained on July 31, 2009 during a hike in the Iraqi Kurdistan region.

While Shourd was released last year on humanitarian grounds, Iranian authorities have not dropped the case against her and officials have set February 6 as a trial date for all three hikers.