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<font face="Arial, Helvetica" size=2>For Immediate Release--November 2,
2009<br><br>
<br>
*Contact: *Paige Cram, Communications Coordinator, 212-679-5100, ext.
15,<br>
communications@nlg.org<br><br>
*New York*—The National Lawyers Guild (NLG) calls for an immediate
and<br>
independent investigation into the FBI’s fatal shooting on October 28
of<br>
Islamic leader Imam Luqman Ameen Abdullah in Dearborn, Michigan. The
FBI<br>
killed him during a series of raids of the Masjid Al-Haqq Mosque by
federal<br>
and local law enforcement officials in which 11 others were arrested.
While<br>
mainstream media outlets are calling the killing and arrests a<br>
counter-terrorism operation, the raids arose out of criminal
complaints<br>
containing no specific allegations of violations of federal law or acts
of<br>
terrorism.<br><br>
All reports from local residents and community leaders indicate that
Imam<br>
Abdullah and Mosque members were dedicated to improving the
community,<br>
feeding hungry neighborhood residents and helping young people in need,
even<br>
letting many sleep in the mosque during inclement weather.<br><br>
By publicizing the killing and arrests as related to terrorism, absent
any<br>
such allegations in the complaint, the FBI seems to be engaging in the
same<br>
tactics used in its Counter Intelligence Program (COINTELPRO), in which
it<br>
spied on, infiltrated and disrupted political movements. Imam Abdullah
had a<br>
close relationship with Imam Jamil Abdullah al-Amin, formerly known as
H.<br>
Rap Brown, was a field organizer for the Student Nonviolent
Coordinating<br>
Committee (SNCC) and later served as national chairman of the Black
Panther<br>
Party (BPP).<br><br>
The FBI and mainstream media blamed the organizing work of SNCC for
the<br>
urban rebellions in over 200 cities in the late 1960s. The Black
Panther<br>
Party was COINTELPRO’s primary target, but it targeted a vast array
of<br>
others, including Martin Luther King. In light of these events, we
cannot<br>
trust the claim that COINTELPRO has been abandoned. Many have been<br>
imprisoned on spurious charges?Al-Amin, for example, maintains his
innocencein the deaths of Atlanta law-enforcement officers and has sought
an appeal<br>
of his case. Reports indicated that he has been harassed and placed
in<br>
isolation in the Georgia prison system. Over two dozen BPP members
were<br>
killed by law enforcement between 1968 and 1971.<br><br>
The National Lawyers Guild advocated on behalf of, and represented,
members<br>
of the BPP and other political organizations. The FBI tried to have
the<br>
Guild labeled as a subversive organization, and for many years spied on
and<br>
infiltrated the association and its individual members.<br><br>
Guild president David Gespass said, “It took more than twenty years to
prove<br>
in court that Fred Hampton and Mark Clark were targeted and murdered by
the<br>
FBI and Chicago police. We cannot wait that long for the truth of
what<br>
happened to Imam Abdullah.”<br><br>
The National Lawyers Guild was founded in 1937 and is the oldest and
largest<br>
public interest/human rights bar organization in the United States.
Its<br>
headquarters are in New York and it has chapters in every state.<br><br>
###<br>
--<br>
Paige Cram<br>
NLG Communications Coordinator<br>
communications@nlg.org<br>
(212) 679-5100, ext. 15<br><br>
<br>
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