The government deliberately fabricated bogus charges and
plotted to convict a man they knew was innocent. It was a "cold,
calculating plan carried out over a long period of time, costing
millions of dollars and involving dozens of agents, prosecutors, and
the acquiescence of high-level officials, to convict two men of
terrorism who had no involvement or interest in (it)....I could not
adapt....to this new reality. For me, Yassin's case (won't end) until
(his) injustice (is) corrected. Besides, (he's) now my brother." Today,
we're all Yassin's brothers and sisters and must stand with him for
justice.
The FBI Plot
In August 2004, FBI agents arrested
Aref and Mohammed Hossain as part of a counterterrorism sting operation
based on an unsubstantiated claim: that his name, address and phone
number were in a notebook in a "bombed out Iraqi encampment." The
information was classified and unavailable to his defense counsel even
though he's cleared for security. The government first claimed Aref was
called "commander." It then admitted there was a "mistranslation" and
the Kurdish word "kak" means brother and is a common term of respect.
Aref
originates from Iraqi Kurdistan where his grandfather was a famous
imam, and Aref was known and respected in the area. No information is
available on the target was bombed, whether a notebook really exists,
or what's in it if it does. Its "contents" are classified and kept
under wraps, so that automatically raises suspicions about their
authenticity or existence.
Nonetheless, the FBI claims Aref was
tied to Mullar Krekar, Ansar al-Islam's founder. It's a Kurdish Sunni
group that supposedly promotes radical Islamic and Jihad views. Since
1991, Krekar lived in Norway as a political refugee. While there,
police investigated him for seven months, found incriminating evidence,
and in April 2003 the country's Supreme Court acquitted him of
terrorism charges. In spite of it, US authorities recharged him with
consorting with Ansar to carry out 2003 suicide bombings in northern
Iraq.
Norwegian police then reopened their investigation, went
to Iraq, and what they learned was disquieting. The key witness (Didar
Khalan) was in Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) custody, and his
statement was obtained through torture. He subsequently retracted it,
said he never met Krekar, and Norwegian authorities dropped all charges
they believed had no basis in fact.
The real issue is this. In
mid-2002, US officials sought Ansar's support for its planned Iraq
invasion. When Krekar refused, Washington targeted him and his group.
It got Jordan to demand his extradition on drugs-smuggling charges with
no substantiating evidence. It also called Ansar the "missing link"
between Saddam and Al Qaeda, and the New York Times mysteriously
uncovered evidence of the group's tie to bin Laden. The PUK was the
rest of the "link" on a trumped up Ansar- Baathist connection. It was
all untrue, but in February 2003, the State Department designated Ansar
a "foreign terrorist organization (FTO)," claimed it was "one of the
leading groups (against) Coalition (forces) in Iraq," and accused
Krekar as the group's founder.
It also got Aref in trouble with
trumped-up charges of his ties to Krekar and secret "evidence"
supposedly proving it. After marrying, Aref left Iraq in 1994 and lived
for five years in Syria. While there, the UN approved his refugee
status and right to emigrate that allowed him to come to America. While
still in Syria, he worked as a gardener, lost his job in 1998, and was
hired by the Damascus office of an Islamic Kurdish US ally opposed to
Saddam Hussein - the Islamic Movement of Kurdistan (IMK). Krekar was an
IMK official. In 2001, two years after Aref left Syria, he formed Ansar
al-Islam. Aref briefly met him in Damascus but neither knew him or
espoused his views.
In 1999, Aref and his family came to America
and worked as a hospital janitor and ambulance driver. A year later he
became the Masjid As Salam Mosque's imam. Aref's troubles began when
FBI agents targeted him in a 2003 sting operation that his lawyers call
a frame-up. They convinced a Pakistani informant (facing a long prison
sentence and deportation on fraud charges) to approach Aref's friend,
Mohammed Mosharref Hossain (a Bangladesh immigrant and US citizen), as
a way to target him.
Shahed Hussein was the informant, he was known as Malik, and here's the essence of the scheme:
— Malik was wired to secretly record all conversations with his targets;
--
he offered Hossain a $50,000 loan, pretending an interest in his pizza
shop; as a show of good faith, he asked for $45,000 in checks so
Hossain could keep the rest;
— Hossain was told the money came
from a surface-to-air (SAM) Chinese missile purchase that was intended
for a group called JEM (Jaish-e-Mohammed - a Pakistani-based Islamic
group that's also a designated FTO); and
— the missile supposedly would be used against the Pakistani ambassador in New York.
It
was all untrue, Malik was a willing FBI accomplice, Hossain thought JEM
was a musical group, and he knew nothing about terrorism. He went along
with the arrangement, and according to Muslim custom, brought in Aref
to witness it. Later, the government arrested both men and claimed Aref
was part of a money laundering and terrorist scheme. Aref's defense
argued that he spoke poor English at the time, believed the loan was
legitimate, was unaware of any laws broken, and the affair was a plot
to entrap him.
Moreover, in January 2006, the defense learned
that "evidence" was illegally obtained through NSA warrantless
wiretapping and filed a motion to suppress it. It was denied. The
defense appealed and was joined by the New York ACLU. Their appeal was
denied on procedural grounds that no action could be taken while the
case was still pending. It was unclear how this and other classified
evidence (99% withheld from the defense) affected the trial. However,
the Court instructed the jury that "the FBI had good and valid
suspicions for investigating Yassin Aref."
He and Hossain were
arrested in August 2004 and convicted in October 2006 - Hossain on 27
counts and Aref on 10 of 30 charges of money laundering, conspiracy to
provide material support for a terrorist plot, terrorism, and making
false statements in February 2002 and August 2004.
In March
2007, both men were sentenced to 15 years in prison and have filed
appeals. In addition, Aref's counsel filed a lengthy sentencing
memorandum to the US District Court for the Northern District of New
York. It detailed his client's history and character and concluded as
follows:
...."this case....raises a lot of troubling issues
(including) the nature of the sting operation, targeting two
individuals who had never been in any trouble before, and who clearly
were not involved in any illegal activity at the time the informant
entered their lives.... Moreover, the case occurred in a post-9/11
climate of great fear when ordinary Americans had become suspicious of
Muslims.....history will recognize that this case never should have
happened, and that the two defendants were the victims of an
unfortunate over-reaction....Yassin Aref asks that the Court seriously
consider his entire history and character (and) all (his) letters (of
support,) the troubling nature of the case, and impose a truly just
sentence."
Before sentencing, Aref professed his innocence and
addressed the Court in imperfect English: ...."I know you, (your)
Honor, and every single person and everybody, FBI, they check all my
record, all my life, they interview thousands of the people....they
knew never I did any violence, never I participate in any fighting,
never I support any terrorist group....everybody knew I did nothing to
be one day in the jail for. And I did not come to this country to be in
the jail. I came to be free. I did not come to this country to destroy
(it). I came to be my life. I (didn't) threaten any human being....I
came for my children to be safe from terrorist....I believe what's done
for me it is unfair and I believe, (your) Honor, it is your duty to
make sure that justice has been served."
The prosecution asked
for 30 years. The Court imposed 15. After the convictions, the Muslim
Solidarity Committee (MSC) was formed to support Aref, Hossain and
their families. It collected letters and around 1000 petition
signatures asking the Court for leniency. It also held vigils twice
weekly between conviction and sentencing and raised funds to support
the two families. IMC members were traumatized by the verdict and knew
it could happen to them. Others in the community were also outraged
because Aref was innocent and was targeted for political reasons. They
united with a committed goal - to exonerate Aref and Hossain, get all
charges against them dropped, and protect their families from further
harm.
For now, however, Aref remains a victim of US justice.
After sentencing, he endured a punishing 43 day odyssey that took him
to Terre Haute, Indiana federal prison. But first he was sent to
federal facilities in Massachusetts, Brooklyn, Oklahoma City and the
Ray Brook, New York Correctional Institution about which he recounted
his first days:
They "placed (him) in the special housing unit
(SHU) or, as they call it, the Hole. Even in that unit they placed
(him) in a special cell. (He) was alone by (himself), the rest of the
prisoners were in double cells. (His) cell was so small and had a
concrete bed in the middle of it where there was no room to talk and a
small window with frosted glass, one could not see outside. The unit
was like a basement and it was a nasty and filthy place. (He) was
shocked to see that!....(He) did not know why (he was there). (He) was
thinking how the place was (and) asking (himself) - how can such a
place exist in the United States?
....It was like a bad
dream....(He) had no mail....no books to read....no commissary....no
cellmate....not even a call to (his) attorney!!....(He believed) the
reason (he was convicted was) that (he) is a Muslim (with) a beard, not
because (he) did something wrong....(and because he doesn't) know
English well....am from the Middle East and speak Arabic (and) am not a
citizen. (He kept) thinking about the kind of victory (the government)
achieved (that) separate(d) (him) from (his) four very young
children....They knew in their hearts what they did to (him) was
unfair, unjust. (How can what they did to him be) a victory in the
justice system of this country."
After Ray Brook, Aref was sent
to the secret Terre Haute, Indiana federal penitentiary Communications
Management Unit (CMU) that opened in December 2006. It's for
"high-security risk" Muslim and Middle Eastern prisoners to limit or
cut them off entirely from outside contact. Doing so, however, violates
the May 3, 2004 US Supreme Court decision in Johnson v. California
which held that segregating prisoners by race, ethnicity or language is
illegal. In addition, Prison Bureau regulations stipulate that "staff
shall not discriminate against inmates on the basis of race, religion,
national origin, sex, disability, or political belief (including)
administrative decisions (involving) access to work, housing and
programs." Further, the Federal Administrative Procedures Act
explicitly requires all prison regulations comply with this law.
At
great personal risk, Aref described his CMU life in an October 2007
article titled "Dead Life - Inside out and upside down: Life at the
'Communication Management Unit' of Terre Haute Federal Prison." When he
wrote it, his English had improved, and it was painful to read. He said
Terre Haute is geared toward revenge, to hurt for the sake of hurting.
There's no pretense of rehabilitation, no thought of protecting society
from harm. The place is a playground for thugs who like to make people
suffer. CMU inmates are "lock(ed) down in this old leaky building and
prohibit(ed) from hugging our children and calling them often....(This)
will never bring peace to this country, and will never make this nation
safer. But it is really putting the justice system in this country on
trial."
"Is it true that all humans are equal?
Is it true that everyone is free to choose his faith?
Are human rights really protected by law?
We hear this but we would like to see it!!"
Aref
and Hossain's appeal is before the Second Circuit Court of Appeals in
New York. Oral arguments are scheduled for late March with a decision
likely months in the future, so their status remains on hold. Their
case may challenge NSA's warrantless wiretapping as it's the only time
evidence from it has been used so far against a defendant. The motion
before the Court states: "The government engaged in illegal electronic
surveillance of thousands of US persons, including Yassin Aref, then
instigated a sting operation to attempt to entrap (him) into supporting
a non-existent terrorist plot, then dared to claim that the illegal NSA
operation was justified because it was the only way to catch (him)!"
Winning
won't be easy, however, in a post-9/11 climate and after the Protect
America Act of 2007 became law last August. It allows near-unrestricted
warrantless spying of anyone considered a national security risk. It
further ends Fourth Amendment protections against unreasonable searches
and seizures and Fifth Amendment ones against self-incrimination. It
effectively annuls the letter and spirit of the law and henceforth
denies everyone its protection.
International law and human
rights expert, Francis Boyle, explains what defense attorneys are now
up against in federal court. In his new book, "Protesting Power - War,
Resistance and Law," he explains that federal judges abdicated their
authority, defer instead to presidential lawlessness, and over
two-thirds of them are from the extremist Federalist Society. It means
winning in this environment is tenuous at best, but Aref's lawyers are
determined to press on.
Defense counsel Stephen Downs recounted
the case in a Washington Report on Middle East Affairs
(September-October 2007) article called "From Sting to Frame-Up: The
Case of Yassin Aref."
He described how, for three years, the
government tried to destroy his life through bogus terrorist charges
from a sting operation frame-up with "evidence" from it classified,
inconclusive, and unavailable to the defense. So it hired a convicted
felon (Malik) to entrap him through a "fictitious plot," and for his
cooperation would "make all of his legal troubles go away (and cancel
his scheduled deportation)...." On October 27, 2006, a federal judge
sentenced Malik to time served, and he's now a free man.
Aref's
conviction highlights how America treats Muslims post-9/11 and in a
climate where no one is safe. Targets are innocent victims of rogue
state justice that "send(s) a politically reassuring message to the
country that the government is hard at work catching terrorists - even
if (those targeted) are not real terrorists at all, but simply people
the government can frame." It makes no one safer - "indeed it makes us
less safe by undermining the rule of law."
Aref is well-known in
Albany and his family recognized and respected. It's reassuring that
"Yassin's case will not be forgotten. His family (bears) silent witness
to the government's reign of terror against people who have no
involvement or interest in terrorism. Injustice, no matter how we try
to rationalize it as part of a 'war on terror,' is still injustice, and
it will not be forgotten." Neither will Aref and Hossain until they're
exonerated and free in the land that should afford everyone that right
but denies to Muslims and others police state America targets.
Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
Also
visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to The Global
Research News Hour on RepublicBroadcasting.org Mondays from 11AM - 1PM
US Central time for cutting-edge discussions with distinguished guests.