Hopefully this means good news for them:
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/na...s/news-story/4254b7ac43ee88d1caa7a2443dd76c86
"A former Adelaide woman will be returned to Iran from the US after being sentenced to time already served for her role in breaching sanctions against the Gulf country, months after Tehran — which has imprisoned three Australians — suggested she could be part of a prisoner swap.
Iranian national Negar Ghodskani, 40, was sentenced to 27 months imprisonment for fraud by a US Federal Court judge in Minnesota on Wednesday morning.
The sentence amounts to time she has spent in custody in Australia, on a US arrest warrant, and in the US.
It also triggers her removal from the US to Iran where her husband and young son have returned after losing their rights to Australian residency.
It was unclear what impact Ms Ghodskani’s release would have on the plight of three Australians — University of Melbourne academic Kylie Moore-Gilbert and travel bloggers Jolie King and Mark Firkin — who remain in detention in Iran.
Just hours after the sentence was handed down, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson called for the “immediate release” of dual nationals — which includes Dr Moore-Gilbert and Ms King — during a meeting with Iranian President Hassan Rouhani in New York.
“We retain serious concerns about the detention of dual nationals in Tehran and we are looking forward to making progress on that,” Mr Johnson told Mr Rouhani.
The Australian government has also been lobbying Iran for the three Australians to be released.
In April, Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, raised the prospect of a prisoner swap, citing the case of Ms Ghodskani who was then in custody in Australia.
At the time, Dr Moore-Gilbert had already spent seven months in detention in Iran.
There have been reports that Ms King — arrested with her partner shortly before Ms Ghodskani was extradited from Australia in July — was told that she could be used in a prisoner swap.
Ms Ghodskani spent more than two years in detention in Australia before being extradited to the US to face charges over a scheme to evade sanctions placed on Iran, which saw a Malaysian front company buy electrical components from the US and smuggle them to Iran.
She struck a plea deal and secured an order to be deported to Iran immediately after serving any sentence, which saw several more serious charges dropped in exchange for her pleading guilty to one count of fraud.
Prosecutors had told a Federal Court in Minnesota that a prison sentence of between three years and 10 months and four years and nine months would be appropriate.
But her lawyer called for her to be sentenced to 27 months imprisonment — which has already been served in Australia and the US.
Her husband, Ali Lotfisetan, who returned to Iran after losing his Australian residency status, wrote to the court asking for her to be returned to him and their son, who was born while Ms Ghodskani was in custody in Australia.
“My wife … is one (of) the victims of circumstance,” Mr Lotfisetan, who with his wife owned a Jim’s Cleaning franchise in Adelaide, said in a letter to the judge hearing the case.
“She worked in a country with full sanctions which everyone tries to avoid. She never dreamt she would be arrested by the United States.
“She is a very kind and nice person. I need her and (our son) Nickan needs her.”"