海角大神

As Somali-American fights no-fly list, FBI says his brother is most wanted

A federal judge on Friday questioned the constitutionality of the US government's no-fly list. In a twist, the FBI one day earlier put the brother of Gulet Mohamed, who has been fighting the no-fly list for four years, on its list of most-wanted terrorists.

|
Matthew Barakat/AP/File
Gulet Mohamed, left, leaves federal court in Alexandria, Va., with his attorney, Gadeir Abbas, with the Council on American-Islamic Relations, after a 2013 hearing challenging his placement on the government's no-fly list. On Thursday, the FBI added Mohamed's brother, Liban, to its most-wanted terrorists list, one day before Gulet Mohamed's latest hearing.

A federal judge on Friday asked whether the US government really has the right to keep people like Gulet Mohamed, a Virginia-based Somali-American, from flying without telling them why and giving them due process to fight such a designation.

In a twist that highlights the stakes, the FBI one day earlier put Liban Mohamed, Gulet鈥檚 brother, on its most-wanted terrorists list, alleging he has given material support to Al Shabab, the Somali-based terror group blamed for a deadly four-day attack in the Westgate Mall in Kenya in 2013. The FBI has put a $50,000 bounty out on Liban Mohamed, saying he鈥檚 dangerous because of alleged weapons training and an intimate knowledge of Washington, D.C., where he worked as a cabbie until 2012. A lawyer for Gulet Mohamed called the allegations baseless.

Federal Judge Anthony Trenga鈥檚 pointed questions, coupled with the most-wanted designation, provide a tense backdrop as US courts and culture continue a process of coming to terms with deep constitutional questions created by America鈥檚 reaction to the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks in Washington, D.C., and New York.

Last June, Federal Appeals Court Judge Anna Brown found part of the no-fly-list policy unconstitutional, ordering the US government to formulate a due process provision to give fliers a meaningful way to contest their inclusion on the list. Some 20,000 people, including 500 US citizens, are on the list, the FBI disclosed in 2014.

While Judge Trenga made no ruling on Friday, he asked several pointed questions of government attorneys at the hearing, including whether the US had ever created another program that deprived people of their liberty with near zero transparency. US authorities have said the list is, in fact, constitutional, since travelers can find other modes of transportation.

The secret no-fly list came into effect after Al Qaeda terrorists hijacked four jetliners and used them to attack the Pentagon and the two towers of the World Trade Center. The list is part of a well-guarded and concerted US anti-terror effort that critics say at times has skirted the balance between national security and constitutional rights.

In a court case that FBI lawyers have tried for four years to get thrown out, Gulet Mohamed contends that the policy violated his constitutional rights. What鈥檚 more, Mr. Mohamed, through his attorney, argued that the FBI began harassing Liban Mohamed after he tried to intervene on his brother's behalf in 2011 when Gulet was detained in Kuwait and was prevented from traveling to the US. Gulet Mohamed was allowed to return to the US after he filed a federal lawsuit, but his name remains on the no-fly list.

His lawyer contended that the FBI was playing hardball by apparently timing the unsealing of the arrest warrent against Liban Mohamed to coincide with his brother鈥檚 court hearing. The Washington Post reported that the FBI declined to address those allegations.

The agency has been accused of abusing the list before. Last April, the Center for Constitutional Rights filed a lawsuit alleging that four American Muslims were 鈥渁mong the many innocent people who find themselves swept up in the United States government鈥檚 secretive watch list dragnet.鈥 The lawsuit alleged that when the men 鈥渄eclined to act as informants鈥 for the FBI and to 鈥渟py on their own American Muslim communities and other innocent people,鈥 they subsequently discovered they were on the no-fly list.

The agency has in the past contended that a low likelihood of people being mistakenly put on the list is in itself a constitutional safeguard, though it鈥檚 clear that federal judges have begun to apply more scrutiny to that standard.

Still, the FBI says its concerns about the Mohamed brothers are genuine.

鈥淟iban Mohamed is believed to have left the U.S. with the intent to join al Shabaab in East Africa. We believe he is currently there operating on behalf of that terrorist organization,鈥 the agency writes in its official blog. "Not only did Mohamed choose to go to Somalia and fight with al Shabaab, he took a prominent role in trying to recruit people and have them train with weapons.鈥

Gulet Mohamed鈥檚 attorney, Gadeir Abbas, told the Associated Press that Al Shabab had murdered the brothers' uncle and imprisoned their cousins. The FBI鈥檚 allegations 鈥渉ave no basis in fact," he said.

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
Real news can be honest, hopeful, credible, constructive.
海角大神 was founded in 1908 to lift the standard of journalism and uplift humanity. We aim to 鈥渟peak the truth in love.鈥 Our goal is not to tell you what to think, but to give you the essential knowledge and understanding to come to your own intelligent conclusions. Join us in this mission by subscribing.
QR Code to As Somali-American fights no-fly list, FBI says his brother is most wanted
Read this article in
/USA/Justice/2015/0131/As-Somali-American-fights-no-fly-list-FBI-says-his-brother-is-most-wanted
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe