Cross-Cultural Understanding
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Opinion Editorials, October 2007 |
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A tale
of three show-case trials of Muslims in By Abdus Sattar Ghazali ccun.org, October 29, 2007 This
week’s failure to win any convictions against the Holy Land Foundation
for Relief and Development, once the largest Muslim charity in the What is common in the three major
trials? The three cases have been touted by the Bush administration as a
major breakthrough in disrupting “terror financing cells.” The In
2004, John Ashcroft, the then US Attorney General, personally
announced the indictment in the HLF case. "This prosecution sends a
clear message: There is no distinction between those who carry out
terrorist attacks and those who knowingly finance terrorist attacks. The At the time of Al-Arian's 120-page
indictment in February 2003, John Ashcroft, said Al-Arian has been
actively funding terrorist attacks in The case against Salah, and his
co-defendant Abdelhaleem Ashqar, was deemed so significant that the
indictments were announced in a news conference by John Ashcroft along
with Chicago U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald in
2004. At the time, Ashcroft said that
these two men "played a substantial role in financing and supporting
international terrorism ... [and] took advantage of the freedoms of an
open society to foster and finance acts of terror." With beefed-up investigative powers
authorized under the Patriot Act, the prosecution utilized all the legal
tools available in the post-9/11 In Holy Land Foundation and Mohammad
Salah’s cases Israeli intelligence agents were allowed to testify under
fictitious names. During the trial of Salah, the trial judge’s rulings
set very negative precedents regarding due process for future cases.
First, the judge admitted Salah’s confession when he sided with the
prosecution claim that Salah was not tortured. Second, the judge allowed
two Israeli agents to act as witnesses using fictitious names.
Consequently, in Holy Land Foundation trial, Israeli agents were allowed
as witnesses using fictitious names. Salute to the jurors who had the
courage and integrity not to fall for the government's much abused
"terrorism" rhetoric. In the HLF case even one juror proclaimed
that there was no credible evidence, with the government relying on
information dating back 20 years -- before Hamas had been declared a
terrorist organization by the The The
perverse nature of the un-indicted co-conspirator designation made public
in the HLF case is that those so-designated cannot challenge the
designation in a court of law and thus have no way to restore their
reputation to its earlier standing. This is a unique situation where any
person or organization can be designated “guilty by association” and
stigmatized as such without legal redress. There
is no doubt that the Department of Justice in selecting that list of
organizations and individuals intended to accomplish such results,
especially for three of the largest and most effective American Muslim
organizations. It will not be too much to say that the
three showcase trials are likely to go down in the record books as one of
the great abuses of the American legal process. About 500 cases have been
brought against Muslims in The cloak
of secrecy The
foundation of The
government often requires defense lawyers to obtain a security clearance
in order to view key evidence against their clients. Even if attorneys get
the security clearance, they are not allowed to discuss classified
evidence with their clients. Other members of the defense team can see
classified evidence only if the judge approves. And prosecutors also are
allowed to file ex-parte evidence that is reviewed only by the judge --
not defense attorneys. In
Al-Arian's case, the government also classified "hundreds of
thousands of hours" of wiretapped conversations and initially refused
to release them to Al-Arian, even though he had been a party to them. The
judge eventually declassified the information, allowing it to be seen only
by the defense attorneys. The
Bush administration's judicial “war on terrorism” is cloaked in
controversy. Legal scholars find the Department of Justice inflates its
prosecution tally by classifying immigration and other low-level offences
as terrorism. A Washington Post investigation reveals that most DOJ
homeland-security cases have no terrorist connections at all. Prosecutions
are littered with flawed investigations, false accusations, ineptitude and
malfeasance. Here are few more examples: Sami
Al-Hussayen -- This Ahmed
Omar Abu Ali – On Richard
G. Convertino: Richard G. Convertino, the one-time federal prosecutor
who won two convictions in the nation's first terror trial after September
11, was formally indicted on March 30, 2006, on charges that he built that
case on perjury and deception. The four-count indictment alleges
Convertino and Harry Raymond Smith III, a State Department security
officer in Amman, Jordan, concealed photographs and lied under oath about
a hospital in that country that was supposedly a terrorist target. The
pictures could have helped the defense attorneys, authorities say. The
indictment marks another low point for the government in the disastrous Reverting
to the high profile trials, although the prosecution failed to get guilty
verdict by the jury but such high profile arrests and trials are producing
the desired results: intimidation of the Muslim community, defaming their
faith (which is linked to acts of terrorism) and straining its financial
resources because million of dollars are paid by the community in defense
expenses. No body more bluntly expresses this attitude than Dr. Hatem
Bazian, Professor at the COINTELPRO
is the acronym for a series of FBI counterintelligence programs designed
to neutralize political dissidents. In the 1960s and 1970s - the
program was directed against the civil rights movements, and especially
against the community leadership of African Americans, Latinos and
Native Americans. In the 1980s there was a program against Central
American solidarity groups. Drawing on Brian Glick’s book - War At Home
– Dr. Bazian pointed out that four methods were employed by the FBI
during the height of the Cointelpro program during 1960s and the same
methods are being employed now which are: 1). Infiltration. 2).
Psychological warfare from outside. 3). Harassment through the legal
system. 4). Extra legal force and violence. The
logical consequence of this campaign is reflected in the opinion polls. According
to the Washington Post-ABC News poll of March 2006, a growing proportion
of Americans are expressing unfavorable views of Islam, and a majority now
say that Muslims are disproportionately prone to violence. The proportion
of Americans who believe that Islam helps to stoke violence against
non-Muslims has more than doubled since the 9/11 attacks, from 14 percent
in January 2002 to 33 percent today, the poll indicated. In a chain
reaction to this negative perception, there are now more hate crimes
against the Muslim community, hate mails, attacks on Mosques/Islamic
centers and in many cases rejection of plans to build new mosques/Islamic
centers or expand the existing one. Just one example. After facing
anti-Muslim sentiment at a public hearing in March 2006, the There
cannot be two opinions on the priority of the security and safety of the
nation but one wonders if such headline grabbing arrests and trials made
the nation more safe or they are being used to maintain a state of fear
among the masses and usurp their civil rights in the name of national
security. Read
main points of verdicts in three major cases: http://www.amperspective.com/html/the_three_verdics.html Abdus Sattar Ghazali is the Executive Editor of the online magazine American Muslim Perspective: www.amperspective.com Email:
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