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Unable to convict computer engineer Sami al-Arian—he was acquitted
on eight of 17 counts, including criminal charges related to immigration violations,
supporting terrorism and perjury and immigration violations last December—the
feds have decided to deport him. “Sami Al-Arian, who had met with U.S.
presidents and other political leaders before his terrorism indictment in 2003,
reached an agreement with prosecutors to plead guilty to a lesser charge and
be deported, two lawyers familiar with the case said Friday. The arrangement
requires the approval of a judge,” reports the Associated
Press. “It was not clear where Al-Arian would be sent.”
It is unclear because al-Arian has lived in the United States since
he was seventeen. He graduated with honors in 1978 with a major in Electrical
Engineering, and completed his Master’s Degree and Ph.D. in computer engineering
in 1980 and 1985 respectively, according to a Wikipedia
write-up. “He was employed in 1986 as a professor in the Computer
Sciences Department at the University of South Florida in Tampa. He was chosen
in 1993 as the best professor in the Faculty of Engineering, and as the best
professor on the level of the entire university in 1994.”
Of course, none of this matters because al-Arian made the mistake of supporting
the Palestinians against the criminal sate of Israel (a rogue nation that continually
violates the Geneva Conventions and a flurry of United Nations resolutions).
In America, if you are an Arab and support the Palestinians, you’re asking
for trouble. Sami al-Arian also made the mistake of responding to reactionary
loudmouth and Fox News host Bill “phone sex” O’Reilly and
appearing on his “show,” a sort of pillory for masochists.
It appears Sami al-Arian’s crime was the instrumental role he played
in establishing Arab and Islamic institutions, not assisting the Palestinian
Islamic Jihad movement in terrorist activities, as the government claimed. “The
jury’s decision, on the 13th day of deliberations and six months to the
day after the trial started, marks a stunning defeat for federal prosecutors,”
TBO reported last December.
“This ranks as one of the most significant defeats for the U.S. government,
for the Justice Department since 9/11,” Jonathan Turley, a law professor
at George Washington University Law School, told TBO. “The case against
Al-Arian was once hailed by authorities as a triumph of the anti-terror Patriot
Act, which allowed secret wiretaps and other information gathered by intelligence
agents to be used in criminal prosecutions,” the Associated Press reports.
In other words, as the case demonstrates, the government is in the habit of
using the Patriot Act and illegal wiretaps against people targeted for political
reasons.
The Bush administration’s much heralded prosecutions of so-called terrorists
are dismal failures, with the exception of Zacarias Moussaoui, revealed as a
pathetic mental case and a victim of domestic violence. “Jan Vogelsang,
a clinical social worker testifying for the defense, said Moussaoui was in and
out of orphanages the first six years of his life. She said that based on her
assessment, he also came from a broken home with physical violence and had a
long history of mental illness in his family,” ABC
News reports. “Vogelsang said Moussaoui’s mother was beaten
throughout her pregnancies including six to whom she gave birth prior to Moussaoui
and was hospitalized three weeks before Moussaoui’s birth.” Of course,
none of this matters—Moussaoui will eventually have a date with lethal
injection and will probably claim to his last breath to be a member of “al-Qaeda,”
the CIA-ISI created terrorist organization.
It will be interesting to see where Sami al-Arian will be sent upon deportation.
He was born in Kuwait and emigrated with his family to Egypt in 1966. “He
has lived in the United States for 30 years and holds permanent residency status.
His five children were born in the US and are all American citizens. His own
bid to become a U.S. citizen was denied in 1996,” notes Democracy
Now. Sami al-Arian’s “family went to Jordan and waited there
for a week based on the government’s promise that he would be released.
I mean, you know, this is psychological torture,” John Sugg, senior editor
for Creative Loafing, an alternative weekly newspaper, told Amy Goodman.
In a way, al-Arian is lucky—at least he did not end up at Guantanamo
Bay, where the torture is more than psychological. Speaking of Gitmo,
the Supreme Court has “declined” to “consider whether a federal
judge can free two Chinese Muslims who remain imprisoned unlawfully at Guantanamo
Bay, despite being cleared as ‘enemy combatants,’” that it
to say people kidnapped without any human rights whatsoever. “The high
court rejected the appeal by the Uighurs [a Chinese ethnic group] without any
comment or recorded dissent,” reports the CIA’s favorite newspaper,
the Washington
Post, thus demonstrating the reactionary stacked court can be counted on
to support whatever the executive does, if silently.