Saturday, April 19, 2008

Stand up for Justice: Speak up for Sami

"Our defense is not in our armaments, nor in science, nor in going underground. Our defense is in our law and order." - Albert Einstein

In November 2007, the world was up in arms at the disintegration of the fundamental rule of law in Pakistan – resulting from the dismissal of Supreme Court justices, the arbitrary detention and abuse of human rights activists and political dissenters and the claim that "judicial interference" was an underlying premise of the declaration of the state of emergency. The American Bar Association, local Bar associations, human rights activists and even to some extent, Congress, loudly and strongly criticized the Musharraf government, and condemned its actions. It is incomprehensible - then - that the very same advocates are not up in arms in the face of the disintegration of the fundamental rule of law in the United States.

Dr. Al Arian was publicly indicted in 2003, endured an agonizing five month trial (costing over $50M), and in light of every obstacle - was acquitted (i.e. 12 jurors voted not guilty) on 8 of the 17 charges. The jury was 10-2 in favor of acquittal on the remaining nine charges, which is an overwhelming number - usually adequate for the government to abandon further prosecution. This however, was no ordinary case. The orders for Dr. Al Arian's 2003 arrest came from high up in the Department of Justice, and he was going to be held up as the poster child for prosecution under the Patriot Act. The fact that the government's defeat was considered "one of the Justice Department's most embarrassing legal setbacks since 9/11," did not deter.

In the shadow of another trial (the nine charges could have been retried), Dr. Al Arian - who had by this time spent over 34 months in prison, away from his wife and five children (two of whom were barely into their teens), under harsh and demeaning conditions, and was knee deep in legal fees, all for no wrong doing on his part - agreed to cut a deal with the government. One guilty plea, in exchange for a ticket out of the country once he had served his sentence, and no obligation to cooperate with the government in any following legal proceedings.

Sweet deal?

Not even close. Almost immediately after the deal was set, Dr. Al Arian faced continued harassment. First, at the hands of a bigoted federal judge Dr. Al Arian was accused of actions that he had been acquitted of only months before, and was sentenced to the highest possible term - 57 months. It's a miracle that the time he had already served was honored, leaving only about 20 months to serve. Second, no sooner had he begun to serve his sentence did the Department of Justice start their next onslaught - subpoenaing Dr. Al Arian to appear as a witness before a grand jury (for an unrelated matter). Since then, he has been called before two additional grand juries (for a total of three) - each of which he has refused to appear before for two reasons. One, a matter of principle, and two, a matter of self defense. Dr. Al Arian's plea agreement had been negotiated in a way such that he would not be required to cooperate, and the government should be required to honor its agreement. Dr. Al Arian had also been advised by his attorneys that his testimony may lead to a perjury trap.

The perjury trap is a (very common) technique used by desperate prosecutors that are unable to convict a defendant on substantive criminal charges. The nature of the grand jury proceedings is self serving in of itself - the proceedings are held with only the prosecutor and the grand jury in the room, and inevitably end up in an indictment for the government to enforce; it is completely antithetical to the adversarial nature, and hence relative transparency, of our justice system. To illustrate the absurdity of the grand jury, Judge Sol Wachtler, the former Chief Judge of New York State, stated that a prosecutor could persuade a grand jury to "indict a ham sandwich" - a prosecutor has free reign, and is barely restrained through the usual protections in a normal courtroom. In a grand jury proceeding, according to Jon Turley, if "the government wants to charge your client with perjury, it is almost certain to be able to do so by asking enough questions over the course of the proceeding." (source) The government has already attempted to distort Dr. Al Arian's words and bring more charges against him, indicating its intent to go after him in any way they can. Hence the added absurdity - if Dr. Al Arian testifies before the grand jury - he is undoubtedly going to be charged with perjury, in a continuation of the harsh prosecutorial tactics by the DOJ and its Asst. US Attorneys (AUSAs) - particularly AUSA Gorden Kromberg.

So - basically - Dr. Al Arian is now caught between the fat and the fire.

On the one hand, if he agrees to testify - Dr. Al Arian will no doubt be cornered, his words distorted and in some way accused of perjury - the only weapon left in the government's arsenal.

On the other hand, if he continues to refuse to testify - as he has for the past three grand juries - the DOJ is likely going to bring criminal contempt charges against him, which hold a sentence of upto 5 years.

The final layer, in this extremely complicated legal battle, is time and the running clock. As of April 11, 2008, Dr. Al Arian has completed his sentence which included an additional 11 months for which he was held in civil contempt for failure to testify before the second grand jury in 2007. The government has since transferred Dr. Al Arian to immigration custody - presumably for deportation. He has continued to suffer at the hands of insensitive and irrational jail personnel who continually offend his dignity and his fundamental human rights. In another twist of logic, it appears that Dr. Al Arian will be not deported any time soon. Whether he will remain at his current facility - Hampton Roads in Virginia - or if he will continue to be shuttled around from facility to facility while the DOJ plans its next move is yet to be seen.

So - what is a man to do in the face of gross misuse of power, injustice and ultimately, no political support? Dr. Al Arian - a strong believer in activism - has begun a non-violent protest, in the only form he has left. He is on a hunger strike (think Gandhi), now past 46 days without food. Here again, time is the enemy - each day that Dr. Al Arian continues his protest, he grows weaker and more vulnerable to his medical conditions (diabetes, for one thing) that are going un-attended.

At this point - if you've chosen to read this far - your question is probably: why should we care?



The answer is simple, and almost deafening. We should care because the prosecution and continued persecution of Dr. Al Arian has cost American tax payers over $50M. We should care because a man's life is at stake, and our efforts from the outside can save him - the saving of one life, is like saving all of humanity and we have that opportunity. We should care because we live in a civilized society with a fundamental rule of law that our country was founded upon, and our freedoms depend on - the continued imprisonment of Dr. Al Arian is not in accordance with the rule of law. We should care because no matter what - when a debt (reasonable or not) is paid, the bondage should not continue. We should care because our ancestors either founded this country or came to it with a common goal - the ability to be free, and live fully in a just and fair society without persecution for thoughts, beliefs or practices.

Dr. Al Arian stands for everything we hold dear - free speech, free expression, political participation, and most importantly - justice. If we don't speak up, our silence will muffle the voices of those that speak truth to power.



Contribute to Dr. Al Arian's legal fund at: http://www.freesaminow.com

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NPdpxxBR2jk (*)

http://www.linktv.org/programs/usavs
(53 minute version of the documentary, USA vs. Al Arian)*



*These videos are accurate upto March 2008; Dr. Al Arian has since been transferred to immigration custody and awaits deportation - which is not forthcoming. Immigration authorities are holding Dr. Al Arian indefinitely, and he is being subject to grave mistreatment. Please see http://www.freesaminow.com for how to help, and to learn more about this case.


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Friday, April 11, 2008

Al-Arian Press Conference Tuesday! (please forward to journalists)

Press Release: April 11, 2008

For Immediate Release:

Contact: Dowoti Desir,Executive Director The Shabazz Center
ddesir@theshabazzcenter.org

Dept. of Justice Must Keep its Promise to Release Palestinian Professor on Hunger Strike


Press Conference:Tuesday, April 15, 2008
To Demand the Release of Dr. Sami Al-Arian


Who: The Malcolm X & Dr. Betty Shabazz Memorial, Educational and Cultural Center, American Muslim Taskforce on Civil Rights, and the Council on American Islamic Relations

WHAT: Press Conference to Call for the Release of Hunger Striking Palestinian Professor Sami Al-Arian

WHEN: Tuesday, April 15, 2008, 11 A.M.

WHERE: The Malcolm X & Dr. Betty Shabazz Memorial and Educational Center 3940 Broadway, New York City, N.Y. 10032 (212) 568.1341


SPEAKERS:
THE HONORABLE RAMSEY CLARK
SARA FLOUNDER,Co-Director, The International Action Center
IMAM SIRAJ WAHAJ
IMAM TALIB ABDUR-RASHID, CAIR-NY Civil Rights Director, Sr.
HEIDI BOGHOSIAN, Executive Director of the National Lawyers' Guild
ALIYA LATIF, Civil Rights Director Council on American-Islamic Relations

LAILA AL-ARIAN, Daughter of Sami Al-Arian

MALAAK SHABAZZ, Daughter of El Hajj Malik El Shabazz -- Malcolm X

NEW YORK, NY. - Friday, April 11, is the scheduled release date of Dr. Sami Al-Arian, a Palestinian professor on a hunger strike, who has been imprisoned for more than five years. But the Department of Justice, through its continuous abuse of the grand jury system, is threatening to keep him imprisoned for many years. This Tuesday, April 15, at 11 A.M., American Muslim Taskforce on Civil Rights and Elections, hosted by the Malcolm X & Dr. Betty Shabazz Memorial, Educational Center and Cultural Center, will hold a press conference to demand Dr. Al-Arian's release as promised.

Sami Al-Arian, 50, was a tenured professor of computer engineering at the University of South Florida. He was arrested in February 2003 with much fanfare, and charged in a bloated terrorism conspiracy case. A jury acquitted him of the most serious charges in December 2005. Under a plea agreement reached in 2006, Dr. Al-Arian should have been released last April at the latest. By forcing him to testify, prosecutors are violating that agreement. For more on the case, please visit www.freesaminow.com
Dr. Al-Arian began a hunger strike on March 3 to protest continued government harassment. That day, Dr. Al-Arian was informed that he would be called to testify before a grand jury in Virginia. "The mistreatment of Dr. Al-Arian is part of the overall oppression of the Palestinian people. This is cruel punishment," said Agha Saeed, chairman of the American Muslim Taskforce on Civil Rights and Elections (AMT). "The government is playing a cat and mouse game with him. They did not decide to do this until the last minute, just as he's about to be released. This amounts to psychological torture."

"Malcolm X stated, "Any person who claims to have deep feelings for other human beings should think a long, long time before he votes to have other men kept behind bars - caged. Behind the bars, a man never reforms- he can't forget those bars." The past decades have been marred by the erosion of civil liberties and the systemic silencing through incarceration, torture, and deportation of non-conformist voices. Unfortunately our brothers and sisters in the Islamic community are the latest victims of such practices. The continued, unwarranted incarceration of Dr. Al-Arian is a violation of his human rights." Dowoti Desir, Executive Director, The Shabazz Center,

If you'd like more information on this topic, please visit www.freesaminow.com , or to schedule an interview with any of the speakers at the press conference, please call 212-568.1341 or email ddesir@theshabazzcenter.org __________________________________________________________________________________


About The Shabazz Center at the historic Audubon Ballroom
Built in 1912, the Audubon Ballroom has been used as a vaudeville house, a movie theater and a meeting hall. When Malcolm X founded the Organization of Afro-American Unity (OAAU) after leaving the Nation of Islam in 1964, he used the space for the group's weekly meetings. The Audubon Ballroom now houses The Malcolm X & Dr. Betty Shabazz Memorial and Educational Center, after an extensive renovation by NYC Economic Development Corporation.

The Shabazz Center is a 501 c(3) that honors the lives and legacies of Malcolm X and Dr. Betty Shabazz by promoting human and civil rights through knowledge of the history and culture of the African Diaspora; education and self-empowerment; family values; and facilitating racial and religious reconciliation.

The Malcolm X & Dr. Betty Shabazz Memorial & Educational Center
3940 Broadway (at 165th Street)
New York, NY 10032
Telephone: (212) 568-1341

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Thursday, April 12, 2007

No rest for the weary ... a patriot's continuing battle

April 12, 2007



The latest news on Dr. Al-Arian, a formerly-tenured Professor in Florida, is that he has been on a 60 day hunger strike to protest government action, and to some extent, inaction against him. The government touted his arrest as a victory for justice and demonstrative of the value of certain provisions of hte Patriot Act that would allow the prosecution to use certain "evidence" against him at trial. The prosecution put forth their case over several months, barraging the jury with testimony from 80 witnesses (many flown in from Israel) and several hundred hours of recordings from intercepted phone calls. Al-Arian's defense was no more than a few seconds long, a brilliant move - his team believed that the prosecution had failed to prove any of its allegations. (see Peace Train? , More absurdities, and There is some justice left )


And rightly so; the jury acquitted Dr. Al-Arian on 8 of 17 charges, and remained deadlocked on the rest. They ended with a plea bargain, and hoped for a shortened sentence, only to be faced with a biggoted Floridian judge and a furhter 11 months in jail. I'm not making this up - you should read hear his rant and rave during sentencing (see press release)

Since his aquittal, Dr. Al Arian has been shuttled from jail cell to jail cell, and is now being held (upto 18 months, but who knows!) in contempt of court for refusing to testify before a grand jury (part of his agreement was that he would NOT be compelled to testify in any other investigations). Yesterday was the day that he was scheduled to have been released, even after his extended sentence. Now he will be subject to continued abuse by prison guards until his contempt sentence ends, and for another 174 days on top of that.

His sentencing is being challenged as unconstitutional, and is rumored to be heading toward the Supreme Court.

Here are various articles from around the world, chronicling the injustice after injustice being dealt to this man and his family.
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/fisk/article2430125.ece
http://www.countercurrents.org/lendman060407.htm

Finally, take action - write in to AG Gonzales in support of Dr. Al-Arian
http://ga3.org/campaign/al_arian?rk=Wp3hI%2dM1i%5fgQE

"To be patriotic is to be able to question government policy in times of crisis. To be patriotic is to stand up for the bill of rights and the Constitution in times of uncertainty and insecurity. To be patriotic is to speak up against the powerful in defense of the weak and voiceless."

- Dr. Sami Al Arian

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Monday, April 17, 2006

Peace Train?

I have, for the longest time, meant to download/buy Cat Stevens "Peace Train". I've been somewhat resistent in the past about succumbing to the flower power type music of the 70's - but I must admit its very soothing, and somewhat comforting ... So, this weekend in a bout of procrastination, I downloaded "Peace Train" (it was legit - ITUNES!) and as usual, scoped out the lyrics. It is now my favorite song.

That introduction to my obsession with lyrics is not baseless ... it really relates to my forthcoming - "summary of news that is important to Z" --



Now I've been crying lately, thinking about the world as it is
Why must we go on hating, why can't we live in bliss
- Peace Train

Supreme Court rejects Gitmo Detainees Appeal

Two Chinese Muslims were mistakenly captured as enemy combatants (in Pakistan - 2001). The appeal to the Supreme Court was an unusual move - lawyers for the detainees asked, in a special appeal, that the Supreme Court release them. The Supreme Court declined to hear it. The federal court has said that their detention at Gitmo is UNLAWFUL, but (and this is the sad part) "there was nothing federal courts could do." The U.S. Military has also decided that these two detainees are NOT ''enemy combatants'' as first suspected. The government refuses to release them unless they can find a country that will accept them, as they will likely be tortured or killed if they return to China.

U.S. to Deport Palestinian that it failed to convict

The rumor mill is running - the Government and Dr. Sami al-Arian are in negotiations to strike a deal. "In exchange for Dr. Al-Arian's plea on one of the lesser charges, the government has agreed to dropall remaining charges and expedite his release and voluntary departure to another country."

I'm torn. Alhamdullilah, this crazy legal battle will end, but at a cost. The burden of fighting a legal battle, especially one where there's such a high personal cost, is that there comes a point where you just can't keep fighting. The stigma of the plea-bargain is terribly harsh, and unfair. The news wires are already buzzing with the misnomer that agreeing to a plea is redemption ... that the prosecution was right all along. The truth of the matter is, while that may be true on occasion, alot of times plea bargains are just the most efficient and least taxing way to get out of the legal web. Is this true justice? Allah hu alim.

[author's note: my criticism is of the justice system, not those that are forced to succumb to it. Dr. Al-Arian and his family have fought with great perseverence through this ordeal. They deserve to be a family again, and live in peace.]

Its stories like this that bring out the skeptic in me. The current topic of conversation in Constitutional Law (the 8.45am class -aargh), and I suppose the underlying thread, has been the balancing of powes and the clashes that result. The lines are so fuzzy, can I ever hope to be able to make any kind of difference with a JD? Will good results be overturned by forceful legislation - driven by money and clout? Or alternatively, by Executive power? I still believe that I'm doing the right thing - but I also recognize that its a tough battle ahead - too many moving parts. It just annoys me that innocent people often pay the price for ignorance, overzealousness and arrogance. And that classification crosses political, ethnic and religious lines. And no, I can't be less ambiguous - I'm in law school for heaven's sake!

Ok, I'm not completely skeptical - I can't afford to be! I've got some really awesome "colleagues" in the field** ... (to name a few currently in the news Amnarani and Aly) that aren't gonna let a little misjustice/misinformation stop them.

The scales of justice can sometimes be unfairly weighed down on the wrong side. And sometimes justice isn't blind. And sometimes it isn't justice at all. But Cat Stevens brings it all back, and gives me hope ...


Now I've been smiling lately, thinking about the good things to come
And I believe it could be, something good has begun
- Peace Train


Watch out world. Here we come.


* the actual mechanics of the bargain and the actual plea are not public yet; they are pending approval w/the Federal Court in Tampa. This is a pretty legit rumor.

**Field is not limited to the field of law, but I'm blessed nonetheless that I've got awesome company in the law.


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Wednesday, December 14, 2005

More absurdities ...

Ok, so in relation to my last post about signing the petition to fillibuster the Patriot Act AND more importantly the legal developments that delivered a well placed blow to the knees of the Patriot Act (see this post) -the NY TIMES reported the the house succesfully voted for renewal of 14 of the provisions. However they anticipate a problem w/the Senate ... (so sign the petition now!)
here are some quotes from the Times article

"President Bush urged the Senate to pass the measure quickly. "The Patriot Act is essential to fighting the war on terror and preventing our enemies from striking America again," he said. "We cannot afford to be without this law for a single moment.""

"Senator Bill Frist of Tennessee, the Republican majority leader, was talking with White House officials about a one-year extension of the current law without any changes as a way around the threat of a filibuster, The Associated Press reported.

The prospects of a delay alarmed some lawmakers. "Renewing the Patriot Act before it expires in December is literally a matter of life and death," said Representative Ric Keller, Republican of Florida."

um, essential to fighting the war on terror? a matter of life and death? - I don't think so - and Dr. Sami's case is a prime example. For two years this case has been the poster child for the oh so wonderful Patriot Act (granted they've been working for a decade in preparing this case, but the Patriot Act allowed them to use the evidence in court) -- five months and 30 million dollars later -- where are they? Absolutely nowhere - the prosecution couldn't convince a Tampa jury (a jurisdiction where 87% of citizens polled believed the Dr. Sami would be convicted) that their evidence, painstakingly collected (including what - 20,000 hours of phone conversations, plethoras of fax transmissions, and what not) was enough to convict!

"Al-Arian's indictment in 2003 was hailed by the government as a triumph of the Patriot Act, which allowed secret wiretaps and other intelligence collected over nine years to be used to charge Al-Arian and others with supporting the Palestinian Islamic Jihad. Before the law, it was more difficult for prosecutors to access information gathered by intelligence agents." - ABC news online, 12/7/05

Matter of life and death - yeah, because while they're holing up University Professors for their constitutionally protected beliefs under an arbitrary peice of legislation, and spending 30 million dollars on their trial, the real dangers are out still out there ...

Gathering intelligence is one thing, and then gathering CREDIBLE, and VALID evidence that actually proves something more than one man's beliefs is a whole different ballgame. Lets just remember that we're all entitled to the protections of the constitution - freedom of speech and all that jazz.

So basically, give it up - amend the provisions so that we're not advocating the knee jerk reaction. Remember the Japanese internment camps - rounded up all the Japanese folk after Pearl Harbor --- knee jerk reactions have no credibility. I understand that people are concerned about terrorism, but honestly, the violaton of individuals civil right is NOT where you start.

How about we start w/liberty and justice for all? And I don't mean just for those that have the great benefits of the super tax cuts ...

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Wednesday, December 07, 2005

There is some justice left ...

I haven't really posted much about the trial of Dr. Sami Al-Arian in Tampa, Fl., but recent events have prompted me to do so!

Dr. Sami was arrested almost two years ago on allegations of supporting terrorism among other things. For anyone following the controversey over the USA Patriot act, this case was considered the "key court test" of the Patriot Act. Over the last several months, the prosecution presented their case against Dr. Sami -built on largely circumstantial evidence collected under the auspices of the USA Patriot ACT and the government's expanded 'search and surveillence' powers. The prosecution presented for nearly FIVE MONTHS.


And how did the defense respond to the prosecutions nearly five months of presentation of its case, including testimony from nearly 80 witnesses? The Al Arian defense was five words

"On behalf of Dr. Al-Arian, the defense rests."

[personal note - I was a little shocked, but it makes sense - if there is no case, there's nothing to defend!]

Yesterday, the jury came back with its verdict - Dr. Al-Arian was acquitted of 8 of 17 charges, with the jury remaining deadlocked on the remaning charges!!! One commentator put it best - Courtroom defeats for prosecutors don’t come much more embarrassing than the one suffered Tuesday!

Now, you'd think that this would make for breaking news ... I mean, this was a huge case right? To put it into perspective - on Feb 20, 2003 - then attorney-general John Ashcroft personally announced the indictment, in a press conference carried live on CNN, followed up by ABC, NBC and CBS giving the story substantial airtime. The trial is rumored to have cost 30 million dollars.
Huge. Newsworthy - at least you'd think.

Well, guess what - none of networks reported the acquittal at all. yeah, I know - SHOCKER. Although it was on the NY Times website earlier today, and CNN had a short story on it too -- its all but disappeared in the black hole of non-consequential news. I don't know, but a 30 million dollar trial that was the mainstay of one of the most controversial pieces of legislation in recent history seems pretty consequential to me. But thats just me.

So, since not alot of people generally follow these types of issues, and don't neccessarily go looking for the information - I decided to give it a little attention. If you're interested ... and want to read more about the trial, Dr. Sami's recent acquittal CLICK HERE ; or here

When I get my act together and fix this blog, I'll have more links up.

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