[Ppnews] Judge calls off Al-Arian Hearing
Political Prisoner News
ppnews at freedomarchives.org
Fri Apr 24 17:07:35 EDT 2009
Judge calls off hearing
http://www.thenational.ae/article/20090425/FOREIGN/704249811/1135
Rebecca Carroll
* Last Updated: April 25. 2009 12:45AM UAE / April 24. 2009 8:45PM GMT
WASHINGTON // A US judge unexpectedly cancelled a
hearing scheduled for yesterday in the case of
Sami al Arian, a former professor and Palestinian
activist once accused of running the North
American operations of a terrorist group and now
facing criminal charges for refusing to testify in separate investigations.
Al Arian faces criminal contempt charges for
refusing to testify in two grand jury
investigations in Northern Virginia. His lawyers
say the charges should be dropped because forcing
him to testify violated a 2006 plea bargain he
struck with prosecutors in Florida.
Leonie Brinkema, a federal judge, last month
suggested the deal may not have been in good
faith if prosecutors were already planning to
subpoena al Arian, who believed his plea would lead to swift deportation.
On Thursday, Judge Brinkema cancelled the hearing
at which she was expected to rule on al Arians
petition to dismiss the case, saying she had all
the evidence she needed and that additional oral
argument will not aid the decisional process.
She promised to issue a written ruling in the near future.
Outside the justice department in Washington, DC,
about two dozen supporters of al Arian, including
his family, campaigned yesterday for his release.
Al Arian was born in Kuwait to Palestinian
refugees and has lived in the United States since
1975. He was a tenured professor of computer
science at the University of South Florida in
Tampa at the time of his much-publicised arrest
in Feb 2003 on terrorism charges, stemming from
his alleged links to Palestinian Islamic Jihad
(PIJ), a group the United States designates a terrorist organisation.
An ardent activist for Palestinian independence
who had campaigned for George W Bush during the
2000 election and been invited to the White House
in 2001, al Arian had by the time of his arrest
already defended a statement in 1991 in which he
called for death to Israel, saying he meant an
end to Israeli occupation, not the murder of civilians.
The US government further alleged that he had
praised the acts of suicide bombers and condemned
the United States. Still, a jury in 2005
acquitted al Arian of eight terrorism-related
charges and remained deadlocked on the other
nine, with 10 of the 12 jurors favouring
acquittal on all charges, according to local media.
Al Arian agreed to a plea bargain in 2006
because, he has said, he wanted to avoid a
lengthy and costly retrial. He pleaded guilty to
one count of conspiring to assist the PIJ and the
prosecution agreed to recommend the minimum
sentence the time he had already served in
prison followed by a speedy deportation. The
sentencing judge, James S Moody Jr, however,
ordered the maximum sentence of 57 months, less
the three years he had already served and called him a master manipulator.
Mr Moody mocked the defendants claim of
charitable work: Your only connection to widows
and orphans is that you create them, even among
the Palestinians, he is quoted as saying in a
transcript of the sentencing hearing.
Over the next two years al Arian was summoned by
Gordon Kromberg, a US assistant attorney, to
testify in three grand juries investigating
terrorism ties to Muslim groups in Northern
Virginia. He refused in all cases on the advice of his lawyers.
Al Arian has been under house arrest since
September, when he was released from jail after
five-and-half years, much of which he spent in
solitary confinement under conditions Amnesty
International has called beyond what were
necessary and indicative of a pattern of abuse
based on his political or ethnic profile.
For some of his supporters, the case exemplifies
post-September 11 antiterrorism efforts that
undermined themselves by going too far. For
others, it is proof of an inherent, anti-Muslim bias in the US judicial system.
I know whats happened to him has happened to a
lot of people and could happen to any one of us,
said Mel Underbakke, a former colleague of al
Arians at the University of south Florida,
describing al Arians years of imprisonment and
legal battles as the denial of rights that are
guaranteed by our constitution.
Lawyers for al Arian would not comment, citing
court rules. A spokesman for the US attorneys
office also would not comment on the case.
Freedom Archives
522 Valencia Street
San Francisco, CA 94110
415 863-9977
www.Freedomarchives.org
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://freedomarchives.org/pipermail/ppnews_freedomarchives.org/attachments/20090424/90d0ffe5/attachment.htm>
More information about the PPnews
mailing list