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Life sentence for Islamic fundamentalist Al-Timimi: an attack
on free speech
By John Andrews
27 July 2005
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On July 13, Dr. Ali Al-Timimi, a scientist and Islamic fundamentalist
preacher, was sentenced to life in prison without parole plus
70 years on charges that he urged Muslim followers in the week
following the September 11 terrorist attacks to leave the United
States and support Islamic military efforts in Afghanistan, Pakistan,
Palestine, Indonesia and Russia.
Al-Timimi denied that he made any such appeal. His defense
was that he only counseled Muslims that it might be wise to leave
the United States because practicing Islam in America would be
difficult after September 11, and that they should relocate in
an Islamic country where they could freely practice their religion.
US-born Al-Timimi, 42, has been well known for years within
certain Islamic circles for his lectures on the fundamentalist
salafi form of Sunni Islam at the Center for Islamic
Information and Educationalso known as the Dar al Arqam
Islamic Centerin Falls Church, Virginia.
A professional scientist who has lived most his life in the
Washington, DC area, Al-Timimi has undergraduate degrees in biology
and computer science and a doctorate in computational biology
from George Mason University. He has published or coauthored at
least 12 scientific articles, including pioneering work using
computers to measure and analyze the presence of genes in various
forms of cancer, and worked as a researcher for SRA International,
a major information technology company and US government contractor.
The charges against him arise from a private September 16,
2001 dinner he attended at the home of one of his followers. He
is accused of urging the other Muslim men in attendance to travel
overseas for what one prosecution witness called violent
jihad. He was not alleged to have been involved with planning
or carrying out any terrorist act.
There was no evidence at trial that Al-Timimi actually undertook
any actions to facilitate the men leaving the United States to
join Islamic military movements. He did not arrange any financing
or provide contacts overseas, for example.
Indeed, the evidence at trial established that the three men
who eventually did leave the United States to join Pakistanis
fighting against Indian forces over the disputed Kashmir region
began planning their trip before the September 16 dinner.
The 10 counts against Al-Timimi consist of inducing others
to conspire to use firearms and carry explosives, soliciting others
to make war against the United States, attempting to contribute
services to the Taliban, and inducing others to violate the Neutrality
Act by taking part in military expeditions against countries with
whom the United States is at peace.
Al-Timimi went on trial on April 4, 2005 in federal district
court in Alexandria, Virginia. On April 26, the jury returned
guilty verdicts on all counts.
The most serious charge was that Al-Timimi urged the others
to engage in combat against US troops. The United States never
declared war against Afghanistan, however, and the September 16
meeting preceded not only the US invasion itself, but also President
Bushs signing of the congressional resolution authorizing
military action against Afghanistan in response to the 9/11 attacks.
US District Judge Leonie Brinkema herself called the life sentence
very draconian. It was mandated by federal guidelines,
however, once she denied all Al-Timimis post-trial motions
to set aside the verdicts on the basis that they were not supported
by the evidence and violated his First Amendment rights.
The case began when US government prosecutors in June of 2003
indicted 11 young Muslim men on charges of conspiring to travel
to Pakistan to wage war against India. The group was commonly
referred to as the Virginia Jihad Network, or simply,
the Virginia 11. After the FBI claimed that many of
them played paintball together in the Virginia woods
to train for combat, the 11 were derided as the paintball
jihadists in local media reports.
None of the men made it to Afghanistan or engaged in any combat
against US troops or their allies. Nevertheless, they were prosecuted
with a vengeance. Six of the 11 defendants pled to lesser charges
early this year, their sentences ranging from two to twenty years.
Of the five who went to trial, three were convicted and face prison
sentences of up to 90 years. Two were acquitted.
Although Al-Timimi was not charged in their indictment, he
was named as an unindicted coconspirator and identified as the
groups spiritual leader. Over a year later, the government
indicted Al-Timimi on separate charges. After Al-Timimi rejected
an offer to plead guilty in exchange for a sentence of 14 years,
the case proceeded to trial.
The trial itself exhibited all the features of a witch-hunt.
There were no victims. There was no claim that anyone involved
with Al-Timimi actually perpetrated a specific crime or planned
a terrorist act. The principal witnesses were alleged coconspirators
pressured into plea deals granting sentence reductions in exchange
for testimony.
The heart of the case was the dinner on September 16, 2001
attended by nine of the eleven Virginia Jihadists
at which Al-Timimi supposedly solicited them to leave the United
States and fight with Muslim forces in places such as Afghanistan,
Chechnya, Palestine, Pakistan and Indonesia. Five days later,
three of those at the meeting traveled to Pakistan, where they
obtained two weeks of military training from Lashkar-e-Taiba,
an organization seeking to drive India from Kashmir. Lashkar-e-Taiba
was not at the time designated by the US as a terrorist organization.
The most damaging witness at trial was Yong Kee Kwon, a Korean-born
convert to Islam and the host of the September 16 dinner. On direct
examination he testified that Al-Timimi said that each man present
should repent, leave the United States and try
to join the mujahideen. Another witness at the meeting,
Aatique Gharbieh, testified that Al-Timimi said the battle
in Afghanistan is imminent and, although the Taliban have
problems in how they interpret or implement Islam . . . we should
help them. A third witness, Mahmood Hasan, said Al-Timimi
announced, Mullah Omar has called upon the Muslims to defend
Afghanistan. There was little else of substance in the evidence
against Al-Timimi.
To bolster their case, the government prosecutors appealed
openly to the fears and prejudices of the jurors with inflammatory
and irrelevant evidence. For example, they played excerpts from
videotapes depicting combat in various war zones found in searches
of residences of the Virginia Jihadists. One, entitled
Russian Hell 2000, which depicted the execution of
a captive soldier in Chechnya, was supposedly particularly fascinating
to Kwon. Yet all the witnesses testified that Al-Timimi was not
aware of their watching the videos.
The prosecution made liberal use of Islamic doctrine and Al-Timimis
teachings to paint him as a co-thinker of Osama bin Laden and
therefore complicit in the attacks on the World Trade Center and
Pentagon. The jury heard from a lecture given in 1990, before
the first Gulf War, in which Al-Timimi attacked Shiites for always
unit[ing] themselves with enemies while the swords
of the Sunni Muslims are dripping with the blood of Christians,
Jews and idol worshipers and Allah has commanded us to make jihad
against the enemies of Allah. He added that in an
Islamic state Shiite heads should be lopped off.
Judge Brinkema allowed the prosecutors to read an email allegedly
sent by Al-Timimi on the morning of the Columbia shuttle catastrophe,
February 1, 2003, long after all the alleged acts for which he
was charged criminally. The email stated, [T]here is no
doubt that Muslims were overjoyed because of the adversity that
befell their greatest enemy, and it called the disaster
a good omen.
The racism which pervaded the Al-Timimi prosecution was epitomized
at very end of closing arguments. Assistant United States Attorney
Gordon Kromberg told the jury, If youre a kafir [a
non-Muslim] Timimi believes in time of war hes supposed
to lie to you. Dont fall for it. Find himfind Sheik
Ali Timimiguilty as charged.
Al-Timimis nationalist and religious obscurantist views,
while deeply reactionary, clearly fall within the parameters of
constitutionally protected free speech. The prosecutions
use of such evidence to stampede a jury into convicting him of
multiple felonies flies in the face of the First Amendment.
Al-Timimi waged a two-part defense. First, his lawyer claimed
the witnesses against his client should not be believed because
they were pressured into incriminating him in exchange for leniency
in their own cases, and, second, he argued that the statements
of the prosecution witnesses were contradictory and incomplete.
In the unsuccessful post-trial challenge to the verdict, defense
attorneys argued that Al-Timimis alleged statements at the
September 16 dinner were protected speech because they were not
inciting imminent violent actsthe listeners
would have had to agree with Al-Timimi, make their way overseas,
join Muslim military outfits, and engage in combat before any
breach of the peace would have occurred.
Before sentence was pronounced, Al-Timimi read a 10-minute
statement declaring his innocence and accusing the government
of a frame-up. He recited the preamble to the Constitution, claiming
that he committed it to memory long before I was taught
or learnt any passage of the Koran. Focusing on the Constitutions
professed aim of creating a more perfect union to
establish justice, Al-Timimi pointed out the hollowness
of the case against him.
Let us recall the crimes to which I was charged: advocating
treason, soliciting war against the United States, providing aid
and comfort to the enemy, conspiring to levy war against Israel,
Russia, India, and Indonesia, and, of course, at every turn, the
informal charge of terrorism.
Charges I must say abounding in crudities and absurdities.
(Al-Timimi here quoted Aaron Burr, the one-time US vice president
who was tried and acquitted for treason.)
For to accept these charges we must believe that a solitary
man who would spend his days working full-time at one of Fortune
magazines one hundred best companies and then spend his
evenings and weekends engaged in cancer research for a doctorate
in computational biology, an individual who never owned or used
a gun, never traveled to a military camp, never set foot in a
country in which a war was taking place, never raised money for
any violent organization would becould bethe author
of so much harm.
Al-Timimi concluded his remarks with a clear warning about
the implications of his case for democratic rights. For
if my conviction is to stand, it would mean that 230 years of
Americas tradition of protecting the individual from the
tyrannies and whims of the sovereign will have come to an end.
And that which is exploited today to persecute a single member
of a minority will most assuredly come back to haunt the majority
tomorrow.
Under house arrest until sentencing, Al-Timimi is now in the
custody of the US Bureau of Prisons. His appeal will be heard
by the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit,
the most right-wing court in the nation. If the appellate court
confirms the convictions, his only redress will be an appeal to
the Supreme Court.
Aside from the personal injustice to Al-Timimi, the trial and
life sentence are a stark warning of the extremes to which the
US government is prepared to go in attacking constitutionally
protected rights of free speech and political expression, under
the cover of the war on terrorism.
See Also:
Why the WSWS opposes the jailing of Judith
Miller--a reply to readers
[11 July 2005]
Jailing of Times reporter: an attack
on press freedom and democratic rights
[7 July 2005]
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