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US: jury acquits Idaho webmaster of terrorism charges
By Jamie Chapman
30 June 2004
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In a sharp setback to the US Justice Department, a federal
jury on June 10 found the University of Idaho doctoral student
Sami Omar al-Hussayen not guilty of all three charges of promoting
terrorism that prosecutors had brought against him under the USA
Patriot Act. He remains in prison under a deportation order.
His supposed crime was helping to set up and register several
web sites for the Michigan-based Islamic Association of North
America (IANA), which publishes and distributes Islamic religious
books in various languages.
Though IANA has never been listed as a terrorist organization,
according to prosecutors its web site posted links to other sites
that sought to recruit and raise funds for Chechen and Palestinian
terrorist groups. For this, al-Hussayen was charged under the
expert guidance or assistance provision of the Patriot
Act, even though, as webmaster, he had no knowledge of the links
that may have been posted on the site by others.
The not-guilty verdict came after six weeks of testimony and
a week of deliberations. All but one of the witnesses were called
by the government, which monitored some 29,000 e-mails and phone
calls before arresting al-Hussayen 16 months ago. The avalanche
of testimony, covering everything from financial records and visa
forms to academic experts seeking to establish a link between
Islam and terrorism, could not convince jurors to find the defendant
guilty of anything.
One juror told the press after the trial, There was no
clear evidence linking al-Hussayen with terrorism. Another
juror said that under the First Amendment, even the few postings
or links on the IANA web site that could be considered inflammatory
constituted protected speech.
Besides the three terrorism counts, al-Hussayen was also found
not guilty on two charges of visa violations. However, jurors
could not agree on eight other immigration violations, leading
the judge to declare a mistrial on these items.
With respect to these charges, the government alleges that
al-Hussayens association with IANA violated his student
visa by engaging in a business. Defense attorneys
insisted that al-Hussayens work for IANA, extensive though
it may have been, was strictly volunteer.
Federal prosecutors are considering retrying al-Hussayen on
the eight deadlocked visa charges. They have said they would announce
their decision by the end of the month. In the meantime, the defendant
remains in jail under a separate deportation order. He has appealed
the order, but proceedings are on hold pending the decision on
a retrial.
Late last year, immigration officials ordered al-Hussayens
wife and their three small children deported to Saudi Arabia.
In a transparent attempt to put pressure on al-Hussayen, the authorities
warned that if his wife appealed her deportation order and lost,
she as well as her children would be thrown in jail themselves.
As a result, she agreed to a voluntary deportation, which was
carried out in January.
The not-guilty verdicts were welcomed by al-Hussayens
many supporters in the small university town of Moscow, Idaho.
His former professor, Dr. John Dickerson, said, I think
this has been a long ordeal for him and his family, and I look
forward to hearing the moment that hes back with his family.
His lead attorney David Nevin commented, I hope the message
is [that] the First Amendment is important and meaningful in this
country, and activities that are protected under the First Amendment
shouldnt be the subject of prosecutions of this kind.
He added that the worst words that the government
offered into evidence were not even those of his client. They
were the words of other people, he said.
Al-Hussayen was only a few months from receiving his PhD when
FBI agents whisked him away on February 26, 2003. He has continued
to work on his degree, in spite of being kept in solitary confinement
most of the time since, able to leave his cell only an hour a
day. His professors have indicated they would help him complete
his degree even if he ends up being forced out of the country.
Soon after al-Hussayens arrest, a US magistrate ruled
he was not a threat to flee and ordered him to be released under
house arrest. The government immediately issued the deportation
order, providing the legal excuse for keeping him in prison in
the period leading up to and including his trial, and now beyond.
Following the verdict, prosecutors lifted travel restrictions
on Abdulla Al-Kidd, who was headed to Saudi Arabia on a scholarship
to study Islamwhich he has long since lostwhen he
was arrested in March 2003 as a material witness in al-Hussayens
case. Prosecutors never called him as a witness in al-Hussayens
trial.
See Also:
US: Islamic webmaster on trial
for terror conspiracy
[12 May 2004]
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