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US judge orders open hearings for detained Muslim cleric
By Kate Randall
5 April 2002
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A US District Court judge ruled April 3 that is it unconstitutional
for the government to bar the public from deportation hearings
for detained Muslim leader Rabih Haddad. Haddad was arrested in
mid-December for alleged visa violations in the course of the
Bush administrations mass roundup of Arab and Muslim immigrants
following the September 11 terror attacks on New York and Washington.
He is currently being held without bond in a Chicago detention
facility.
Judge Nancy Edmunds ruling was in response to suits filed
by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), Haddads defense
attorneys, US Representative John Conyers (D-Mich.), the Detroit
Free Press, the Detroit News and other area newspapers,
demanding that Haddads hearings be open to the public and
the media. The suits named US Attorney General John Ashcroft and
US Chief Immigration Judge Michael Creppy as defendants.
Rabih Haddad is one of hundreds of Arabs and Muslims who have
been arrested and detained by the US government in its post-September
11 dragnet. A Lebanese citizen, Haddad was arrested at his home
on December 14, the same day that the Chicago offices of Global
Relief Foundation (GRF), the Islamic charity he co-founded, were
raided by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the US
Treasury Department froze the organizations assets.
The government still refuses to say on what basis it is detaining
Haddad, and what, if any charges have been filed against him.
The government is also seeking to deport his wife, Salma Al-Rushaid,
and three of the couples children. The fourth child is a
US-born citizen and does not face deportation.
The Haddad family filed for an extension of their visas under
the Legal Immigration Family Equity Act (LIFE Act), which they
assumed provided them immunity from deportation, but never received
a response from the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS)
on their status.
Judge Edmunds ruling specifically strikes down the provisions
of a directive issued by Immigration Judge Creppy stipulating
that courtrooms in cases such as Haddads could be closed
to the public, including immigrants families and the press.
Decisions to hold such hearings in secret were at the sole discretion
of Attorney General Ashcroft, and the hearings were assigned only
to judges who held a secret clearance. The directive also instructed
judges to close hearings involving detainees whose cases were
of special interest to the FBI. In addition, the Creppy
memo sought to keep from the public record information on whether
or not a case was scheduled.
At a March 26 hearing in Detroit on the lawsuits, the government
attempted to defend the secret proceedings, claiming there was
no First Amendment right to public access in immigration hearings.
The judges decision clearly contradicts this. Justice Department
lawyers say they are reviewing the new ruling and have not decided
yet whether they will challenge it.
In ruling for the plaintiffs, Judge Edmunds stated, It
is important for the public, particularly individuals who feel
that they are being targeted by the government as a result of
the terrorist attacks of September 11, to know that even during
these sensitive times the government is adhering to immigration
procedures and respecting individuals rights. Openness is
necessary for the public to maintain confidence in the value and
soundness of the governments actions, as secrecy only breeds
suspicion as to why the government is proceeding against Haddad
and aliens like him.
Nazih Hassan, president of the Muslim Community Association
of Ann Arbor, called the ruling a victory for due process
and for civil liberties.
The opening of these hearings to the press and public, however,
is no guarantee of a favorable outcome for Rabih Haddad and his
family. Haddads next immigration hearing is scheduled for
April 10.
Jonathon Martel, an attorney for Haddad, says he also expects
a new public bond hearing for his client within the next two weeks.
The government has so far refused to release Haddad on bond, and
until recently held him in virtual solitary confinement and barred
him from having face-to-face visits with his wife and children.
Haddad is one of the estimated 2,000 immigrants who have been
arrested over the last six months in the Justice Departments
police-sweep targeting young Arab and Muslim men. Many of these
individuals have been held incommunicado, without access to family
members or attorneys. Some continue to be held despite orders
for them to be deported to their native countries. The majority
of these cases have received much less publicity than Rabih Haddads.
In a case related to the lawsuit over Haddads closed
hearings, another suit was filed March 6 by the New Jersey ACLU
and the Center for Constitutional Rights in New York, challenging
the closing of immigration hearings for those detained in New
Jersey. Filed on behalf of the New Jersey Law Journal and
the Herald News based in West Patterson, the suit asserts
that the First Amendment protects public access to government
proceedings.
See Also:
US civil liberties group challenges closed
deportation hearings for detained Muslim cleric
[3 April 2002]
Interviews with supporters
of Rabih Haddad
Muslim cleric the target of Bush anti-terror dragnet
[26 March 2002]
Amnesty International report
condemns US treatment of immigrant detainees
[26 March 2002]
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