In the annals of Turkish judicial history, few documents have sparked as much intrigue, political debate, and public curiosity as the indictment of the İzmir Military Espionage Case. While the full text of the indictment (İzmir Askeri Casusluk Davası İddianamesi Tam Metni) remains a classified or heavily redacted document for national security reasons, leaked excerpts, court summaries, and lawyer statements have allowed legal experts and journalists to reconstruct its core arguments, evidence lists, and legal rationales.
Sanıklar; suç işlemek amacıyla örgüt kurmak, kişisel verileri hukuka aykırı olarak kaydetmek, devletin güvenliğine ilişkin gizli bilgi ve belgeleri temin etmek ve casusluk maksadıyla kullanmakla suçlanmıştır.
The original indictment spanned thousands of pages and was built upon several core arguments and types of evidence: izmir askeri casusluk davasi iddianamesi tam metni
Aşağıda, davanın temelini oluşturan hukuki analizi, iddiaların yapısı, dijital materyallerin sahteliği ve davanın beraatle sonuçlanan hukuki serüveni ayrıntılı olarak ele alınmıştır.
Siyasal veya Askeri Casusluk Suçu (TCK 328) - Avukat Baran Doğan In the annals of Turkish judicial history, few
İddianame, "askeri casusluk" iddialarını "fuhuş çetesi" iddiasıyla birleştirerek toplumsal algı yaratmayı hedeflemiştir.
A unique detail cited in the indictment's forensic annex was the discovery of digitized documents inside military hard drives that contained forged signatures of base commanders. The indictment alleges that the suspects created a parallel digital network using encrypted messaging apps (ByLock and Wiper) to exfiltrate "Red List" intelligence regarding the Syrian border. The original indictment spanned thousands of pages and
According to leaked excerpts from the indictment’s "Historical Background" section (Part I), the operation began in late 2018 following a whistleblower report within the in İzmir. The prosecutors alleged that between 2015 and 2018, a covert cell of active-duty military personnel had been selling operational secrets to a foreign intelligence service—specifically, Russia’s GRU, according to media leaks.