Sami Al-Arian,
Professor Who Defeated Controversial
Terrorism Charges, is Deported from U.S.
By Murtaza Hussain and Glenn
Greenwald
February
05, 2015 "ICH"
- "The
Intercept" -
In 2003, Sami Al-Arian was a professor
at the University of South Florida, a
legal resident of the U.S. since
1975, and one of the most prominent
Palestinian civil rights activists in
the U.S. That year, the course of his
life was altered irrevocably when he was
indicted on
highly controversial terrorism charges
by then Attorney General John Ashcroft. These
charges commenced a decade-long
campaign of government persecution in
which Al-Arian was systematically denied
his freedom and saw his personal and
professional life effectively destroyed.
Despite the
personal harm he suffered and the
intense surveillance to which he had
been subjected since
as early as 1993, the
government ultimately failed to produce
any evidence of Al-Arian’s involvement
in terrorist activities, instead relying
at trial overwhelmingly on the
pro-Palestinian writing and speaking he
had done over the years.
His ordeal finally ended
last night, 12 years after it began, as
Al-Arian was deported yesterday at
midnight (EST) from the United States to
Turkey. His deportation was part of a
2006 plea bargain to which he acquiesced
in order, he told The Intercept last
night while at the airport preparing to
leave the U.S., to “conclude his case
and bring an end to his family’s
suffering.” Al-Arian added: “I came to
the United States for freedom, but four
decades later, I am leaving to gain my
freedom.”
A 2003 Justice Department
investigation led by Ashcroft allegedly
implicated Al-Arian and 8 other men
in supporting Palestinian Islamic Jihad
(PIJ), a group which had been designated
a terrorist organization under the
Clinton administration for carrying out
bombings and other attacks in the
Israeli-occupied Palestinian
Territories. Ironically, Al-Arian had
been a prominent supporter of Clinton,
and even met Clinton in the White House.
He once remarked to The Intercept that
the multiple occasions when he stood in
very close proximity to the U.S.
President should, by itself, demonstrate
how ludicrous were the “terrorist”
allegations. In 2000, he supported the
Bush campaign (after Bush denounced
racial profiling).
Al-Arian, while a
Professor at the University of South
Florida, was indicted on multiple counts
of providing “material support” to the
group and fundraising on their behalf in
the United States. In the press
conference announcing the indictment,
Ashcroft
claimed that
Al-Arian and his co-defendants
“financed, extolled and assisted acts of
terror,” and praised the recently passed
Patriot Act as being instrumental to
helping bring about the charges.
The charges were part of
a broader post-9/11 campaign to by the
U.S. Government to criminalize aid and
support to Palestinians, as exemplified
by the
successful prosecution of five
officials of what had been the largest
Muslim charity in the U.S., the Holy
Land Foundation. Those charity officials
are now serving decades in prison for
sending money to Palestinians which, it
was alleged, made its way to designated
terror groups in the Occupied
Territories.
For most of the three
years after his arrest, Al-Arian was
kept in solitary confinement awaiting
trial. During this time, he was
regularly subjected to strip-searches,
denied normal visitation rights with his
family, and
allegedly abused
by prison staff. Amnesty International
denounced the circumstances of his
detention as “gratuitously
punitive” and in violation of
international standards on the treatment
of prisoners.
When Al-Arian’s case did
finally reach trial after years
of harsh imprisonment, prosecutors
failed to convict Al-Arian on even one
charge brought against him. Jurors
voted to acquit
him on the most serious counts he
faced and deadlocked on the remainder of
the indictments.
The outcome was hugely
embarrassing for the U.S. Government.
Despite having amassed over 20,000 hours
of phone conversations and hundreds of
fax messages from over a
decade of surveilling
Al-Arian, the DOJ – even with
all the advantages they enjoyed in
terrorism cases in 2003 (and continue to
enjoy today) – was unable to convince a
jury Al-Arian was the arch-terrorist
they had very publicly proclaimed him to
be.
Indeed, instead of
producing evidence that Al-Arian was
involved in actual “terrorism,” the
government attempted to use as evidence
copies of books and magazines Al-Arian
had owned in a failed effort to convince
the jury to convict him of apparent
thought crimes.
This effort failed and a
jury ruled to acquit Al-Arian on 8 out
of 17 charges while failing to come to a
verdict on the remainder.
Al-Arian agreed to a plea
bargain on the remaining charges by
pleading guilty to one count of
providing “contributions, goods or
services” to PIJ, a decision he says he
undertook out of a desire to end the
government’s ongoing persecution of him
and win his release from prison.
Despite this plea,
Al-Arian was not released from prison.
Instead, in 2007, shortly
before he expected to leave jail and
begin likely deportation proceedings,
the government brought a new set of
charges against him for refusing to
testify in another trial against a
Virginia-based Islamic think tank. Among
several reasons he provided for refusing
to testify against the group, he stated
his belief that
the organization was
innocent of terrorism charges
and, according to his lawyer, Jonathan
Turley, “he doesn’t want them to be
persecuted the way he was.” His lawyers
also worried that any testimony he gave
in that other case would allow the DOJ
to bring wholly new charges against him
for perjury.
For his refusal to
testify, Al-Arian was sentenced to an
additional 18 months in prison on civil
contempt charges, the maximum allowed by
law. Al-Arian served this added time
only to be charged at the end of his
sentence once again with additional
criminal contempt charges stemming from
the same case.
In Al-Arian’s
description, these charges were in
contravention of the plea deal he had
previously agreed to with the
government. As he told The Intercept,
“They reneged on their end of the deal
when they brought me to Virginia to try
to force me to testify in another,
unrelated case. It was a perjury trap. I
refused to testify, so they charged me
with criminal contempt.”
During the course of his
imprisonment Al-Arian undertook a hunger
strike to protest his ongoing
persecution,
losing 53 pounds in the process and
being reduced to a state in which he was
no longer able to walk or speak in a
normal cadence. In court appearances,
observers were shocked by his physical
appearance, with representatives from
the U.S. Marshals Service publicly
vowing to subject him to force-feeding
if his hunger strike if his condition
continued to visibly deteriorate.
After his indictment for
criminal contempt, a federal judge
eventually ordered that Al-Arian to
spend the duration of the court
proceedings under house arrest. But the
judge then proceeded to hold, rather
than rule on, his motion to dismiss the
indictment, freezing the case in place
for years as he was consigned to house
arrest. There he languished, confined to
his small family apartment as his court
case took years to work its way through
the system.
In 2014, the federal
government quietly and unceremoniously dropped
all of their charges against
Al-Arian. After 11 years of persecution
which left his once-promising career in
academia and public advocacy in
shambles, Al-Arian was “free” to be
deported from the country where he had
spent 40 years of his life and raised
his family. As a stateless Palestinian,
he was forced to find another country
where he could go, and ultimately was
able to leave for Turkey, where he was
expected to arrive today.
Speaking to The
Intercept, Al-Arian said that he
harbored no resentment despite his
ordeal and that he now feels “at peace”
with the conclusion of his legal ordeal.
Describing his visceral,
firsthand experience of America’s
eroding democratic values Al-Arian said,
“I came to the United States because I
valued living as a free person, one who
is able to advocate in a democratic
society. Unfortunately, the U.S. has
been turning into a less free society, a
police and surveillance state,
especially after 9/11.”
“However, I’m very
encouraged by the millions of Americans
who are pushing back against the forces
of intolerance and exclusionary
politics. I leave hopeful that the tide
is turning because as history has seen,
when the truth is made known to them,
Americans do not support oppression and
discrimination.”
Photo:
Kevin/Wolf