Suspect is declared an enemy combatant
By Josh Meyer, Los Angeles Times Staff
Writer
June 24, 2003
WASHINGTON The Bush administration on Monday dropped
criminal charges against a Qatari man who was in the United
States on a student visa and instead declared him an "enemy
combatant" who allegedly led an effort to settle Al Qaeda
"sleeper" operatives in this country.
President Bush signed the order switching control of Ali Saleh
Kahlah Al-Marri, 37, from the Justice Department to the Pentagon
the first time such a transfer has occurred.
The change in Al-Marri's status denies him nearly all of the
rights afforded criminal suspects in civilian court, including
access to a lawyer and a show-cause hearing before a judge,
senior administration officials said. As an enemy combatant,
he could eventually be tried before a military tribunal.
In a one-page letter to Atty. Gen. John Ashcroft and Defense
Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, Bush said he made the decision
"based on evidence available ... from all sources."
That evidence, Bush wrote, indicated that since Al-Marri entered
the United States in early September 2001, he had "engaged
in conduct that constituted hostile and warlike acts, including
conduct in preparation for acts of international terrorism."
"Mr. Al-Marri represents a continuing present and grave
danger to the national securityof the United States, and thedetention
of Mr. Al-Marri is necessary to prevent him from aiding Al Qaeda
in its efforts to attack the United States," Bush wrote.
Along with Jose Padilla and Yaser Esam Hamdi, Al-Marri is the
third person publicly designated by name as an enemy combatant
since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks and the only
one who is not a U.S. citizen.
Hamdi, a Saudi born in Louisiana, was captured with the Taliban
in Afghanistan, while Padilla, a native of New York, was held
in connection with an alleged Al Qaeda plot to detonate a radioactive
"dirty" bomb in the United States.
Hundreds of unidentified men captured during the war in Afghanistan
also are being detained and interrogated at the U.S. Navy base
at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
The Pentagon confirmed Monday that the Department of Defense
had transported Al-Marri from Illinois to the Naval Consolidated
Brig in Charleston, S.C., the same place where Padilla is being
held. Hamdi is in a Navy brig in Norfolk, Va.
Al-Marri, also known as Abdullakareem A. Almuslam, has been
in federal custody since December 2001. A 1991 graduate of Bradley
University in Peoria, Ill., he is a native of Saudi Arabia who
holds Qatari citizenship.
Al-Marri initially was interviewed by the FBI in October 2001
at his home in Peoria, and he was arrested two months later
as a material witness in the investigation into the terrorist
attacks. He was subsequently accused of lying to the FBI and
committing credit card fraud.
Prosecutors said they have evidence that Al-Marri made a series
of calls to a number in the United Arab Emirates associated
with Mustafa Ahmed Al-Hawsawi, a top Al Qaeda financier linked
to the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. Al-Marri
has denied the allegation, prosecutors said.
Al-Marri's laptop computer contained evidence of suspicious
activity, prosecutors said including hundreds of stolen
credit card numbers that authorities asserted were to be used
to fund terrorist activity.
The FBI also found an Arabic oath or prayer asking God to "protect"
and "guard" Osama bin Laden, audio files containing
lectures by Bin Laden and his associates, photographs of the
Sept. 11 attacks and lists of Web sites with titles such as
"Jihad arena," "Taliban" and "martyrs,"
according to the complaint against Al-Marri.
Senior Bush administration officials said that the decision
to designate Al-Marri as an enemy combatant came in part because
of recently obtained information indicating that he remained
a threat to national security, with knowledge of ongoing terrorist
plots and operatives on American soil.
An Al Qaeda detainee "in a position to know" identified
Al-Marri "as an Al Qaeda sleeper operative who was tasked
to help new Al Qaeda operatives get settled in the United States
for follow-on attacks after9/11," said Alice Fisher, deputy
assistant attorney general for the criminal division.
Several U.S. officials identified the detainee as Khalid Shaikh
Mohammed, Al Qaeda's operations chief, who was arrested March
1 in Pakistan. The officials said Mohammed not only named Al-Marri,
but also said that he had given Al-Marri the job of helping
set up sleeper cells because he spoke English well and because
his life as a student and a family man he and his wife
had five children wouldn't attract suspicion.
Fisher said other detainees confirmed that Al-Marri had been
to the Al Faruq training camp in Afghanistan, where he met with
Bin Laden and other senior Al Qaeda members.
Fisher stressed that Al-Marri wasn't handed over to the military
because of lack of evidence in the criminal case.
"We are confident we would have prevailed on the criminal
charges," said Fisher, who oversees terrorism prosecutions.
"However, setting the criminal charges aside is in the
best interests of our national security."
Legal experts had mixed responses to the Bush administration's
action.
Some hailed it as an aggressive but necessary countermeasure
in the ongoing war against Al Qaeda, which has itself changed
tactics and continued to stay alive and deadly despite a massive
crackdown both here and overseas.
Others said that by denying alleged terrorists arrested in
the United States the right to trial within the civilian court
system, the administration risked appearing as if it was trampling
on the Constitution.
Eugene R. Fidell, president of the National Institute of Military
Justice, an Alexandria, Va.-based research group, said that
his organization had not taken a position on the administration's
use of the enemy combatant designation, but that it is "watching
them with increasing interest" to make sure the tactic
is not abused.
Designation as an enemy combatant "is a law enforcement
tool of potentially overwhelming power" that can be used
beneficially or abused, said Fidell.
He said that "it gives them tremendous leverage"
against terrorist suspects.
Al-Marri's attorney, L. Lee Smith, said he was summoned to
court early Monday and told that the criminal charges were being
dropped on Bush's order. Smith said he asked U.S. District Judge
Michael M. Mihm to postpone dropping the criminal charges so
he could appeal.
Mihm, who could not be reached for comment, "didn't explain
his position except to say he had little discretion in not allowing
the government to dismiss its case," said Smith.
Al-Marri had pleaded not guilty to the criminal charges, but
Smith said he couldn't say whether his client contests the terrorism
allegations because he has been prohibited from discussing the
case with him because of special administrative measures imposed
by the court.
But, Smith added, "there is nothing in the indictment
or the discovery that I'm aware of that directly links him to
Al Qaeda or that he is an enemy combatant. If that evidence
exists, it certainly wasn't established in what was turned over
to us."
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