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Iraqi with alleged terrorist ties arrested in Phoenix
The Arizona Republic ^ | Feb. 20, 2003 02:00 PM | Susan Carroll, Daniel Gonzalez and Carol Sowers

Posted on 02/20/2003 2:15:10 PM PST by occam's chainsaw

Edited on 05/07/2004 5:21:08 PM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]

Phoenix authorities have arrested an Iraqi man on the FBI's Watch List who is suspected of having connections to "known terrorist groups" and who fought against the United States in Desert Storm in 1991, authorities said.

Alidai Al-Hamdani, 27, was formerly employed by Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport, according to police reports. He was arrested Wednesday at a home in the 6700 block of North 32nd Drive on an outstanding warrant in Maricopa County for unlawful flight and probation violation, said Phoenix police spokesman Tony Morales.


(Excerpt) Read more at azcentral.com ...


TOPICS: Breaking News; Crime/Corruption; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; US: Arizona
KEYWORDS: arizona; iraq; jihadinamerica; phoenix; terrorism; terrorist
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To: All
Iraqi accused of forced marriage is paroled
By MARGERY BECK, Associated Press Writer

September 28, 2000, Thursday, BC cycle

LINCOLN, Neb.

One of two Iraqi men sentenced to prison for marrying and having sex with the teen-age daughters of a fellow refugee was paroled Thursday under strict conditions.

The state Parole Board voted 4-0 to parole Majed Al-Tamimy.

Conditions of his release from prison can be lifted only by another vote of the board. Al-Tamimy must wear an electronic monitor and have no contact with the girl he married, the board said. Al-Tamimy, who planned to live at a home in Lincoln with a friend, also will be registered as a sex offender and will be required to receive sex offender and cultural counseling.

Al-Tamimy, 31, was accused of having sex with the 14-year-old daughter of a friend after an arranged marriage during a Moslem ceremony in November 1996. He was accused of forcing the girl to have sex several times before she ran away.

Another Iraqi, Latif Al-Hussani, 37, was accused of marrying a 13-year-old daughter during the same ceremony and forcing her to have sex before she ran away.

The two men, refugees of the Persian Gulf War who came to Lincoln in 1995, denied doing anything wrong. They were sentenced in 1997 to four to six years in prison.

In Nebraska, people cannot marry if they are under 17 years old.

61 posted on 02/21/2003 5:12:09 AM PST by honway
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To: All
http://www.publiccounsel.org/news/feb501.htm



Fascinated by the unusual aspects of the case, Levy took on the case of Mohammed Jwer Al-Ammary. Matter of Al-Ammary et al, A76-201-016, Aug. 28, 1997, San Pedro Immigration Court.

In the years since, Public Counsel, assisted by former CIA Chief James Woolsey, won declassification of 90 percent of the secret evidence against the Iraqis. Six of the Iraqis accepted a government deal that released them from jail to live under house arrest in Nebraska.

Dr. Ali Karim, another defendant, refused the deal, and opted for a new trial along with his brother, Mohammad Karim. An immigration judge acquitted the pair last year and granted both political asylum.

Recently, Attorney General Janet Reno, in one of her last actions before leaving office, lifted travel and employment restrictions on five of the men living in Nebraska, allowing them to travel outside the state. The restrictions remain against the sixth.


62 posted on 02/21/2003 5:14:02 AM PST by honway
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To: All
Resettling Iraqi POWs in U.S. Criticized; Lawmakers Urge Clinton to End 'Potentially Dangerous'

More than 80 members of Congress have asked President Clinton to end what they called the "potentially dangerous and unfair policy" of resettling captured Iraqi soldiers in the United States along with deserving civilian Iraqi refugees.

Nearly 1,000 Iraqi soldiers captured by U.S. forces during the 1991 Persian Gulf War have been resettled at public expense in cities across the United States. They are among nearly 3,000 Iraqi refugees -- the majority of them civilians -- who have been resettled in the United States from internment camps in Saudi Arabia.

Another 3,000 Iraqi former POWs and their families are scheduled to be moved here on humanitarian grounds, the complaining House members said. According to the State Department, the former prisoners were conscripted into the Iraqi Army against their will and have now been classified by international agencies as refugees who face persecution by Iraqi President Saddam Hussein's regime if they return home. Many of the former POWs provided valuable services to U.S. forces in the aftermath of the war, administration officials said.

63 posted on 02/21/2003 5:16:44 AM PST by honway
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To: Marine Inspector
Police in Tucson picked the man up Tuesday after he flagged down a passing patrol car and told an officer that he was being kidnapped by the two men he was with, said Sgt. Judy Altieri, a Tucson police spokeswoman.

How funny! The Middle Easterners must not have realized Mexican smugglers lately have decided kidnapping gets them even more money.

64 posted on 02/21/2003 5:37:20 AM PST by FITZ
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To: valleygal
I've added you. Thanks !
65 posted on 02/21/2003 5:44:28 AM PST by MeekOneGOP (Bu-bye SADdam. You're soon to meet your buddy Stalin in Hades.)
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To: Marine Inspector
There is no law requiring State or Local law enforcement agencies to report anything to the INS, so who’s head should roll?

Is that so? Texas Statute Chapter 493.015. Look it up.

66 posted on 02/21/2003 10:16:13 AM PST by LaineyDee
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To: honway; aristeides; Fred Mertz; MizSterious; rubbertramp; Lion's Cub
The men said they were grateful for the efforts to free them, especially those of former CIA Director James Woolsey, now a private lawyer. But they also feel betrayed by the U.S. government, which they say promised asylum.

of the millions of attorneys in the United States, I wonder how these Iraqi refugess were referred to former DCIA, James Woolsey????

67 posted on 02/21/2003 10:24:53 AM PST by thinden
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To: thinden
Don't know. But my best guess is that it was some form of reciprocation for help during the war--which doesn't mean that they couldn't be double agents, of course.

Life's sure getting messy.

68 posted on 02/21/2003 10:48:06 AM PST by Lion's Cub
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To: thinden
BTW,Algarawi said he believes Al-Hamdani moved to the Phoenix area from Lincoln, Neb. in 1997

I notice he doesn't say when he entered the country, so he could well be part of your group of resettled RG.

69 posted on 02/21/2003 10:53:22 AM PST by Lion's Cub
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To: MizSterious; thinden; Lion's Cub; OKCSubmariner
http://www.sltrib.com/2002/mar/03262002/utah/722731.htm

Iraqis in Utah Say They Face Bias, Suspicions

Karim al-Hamdani is no longer one of Saddam Hussein's soldiers.

He is a U.S. citizen and a Utahn, and until late last summer, life was good. "Here I felt peace and secure," he says.

But no longer. Today, al-Hamdani and many of the hundreds of his former compatriots who settled in Utah with the U.S. government's blessing are feeling lost and afraid amid America's war on terrorism and talk in the nation's capital of invading Iraq and getting rid of Saddam once and for all.

In the wake of the Gulf War, al-Hamdani was among thousands of Iraqi soldiers and others who attempted to overthrow Saddam in a March 1991 uprising encouraged by the former President Bush but not supported by the U.S. military. Saddam quickly snuffed the rebellion with tanks and helicopters and thousands of Iraqis fled to become refugees in Kuwaiti and Saudi Arabian camps.

Al-Hamdani said he escaped his desert homeland by trudging barefooted past land mines, enemy tanks and the bodies of dead soldiers. He was one of about 41,000 Iraqis who, according to the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service, immigrated to the United States between 1991 and 2000.

And like the hundreds who eventually found their way to Utah, he has lived here quietly for nearly a decade. "We escape from danger and war and destruction," al-Hamdani said during an interview. He was joined by five other former Iraqis, some of whom had been soldiers. All had participated in the failed 1991 uprising; all had found peace and security in the Beehive State.

But everything changed after the Sept. 11 terror attacks. Al-Hamdani and other transplanted Arabs say they instantly became the focus of suspicion, fear and hatred. Then last month, the public's attention seemed to focus on the 1,000 or so former Iraqis living in Utah after Iraqi immigrant Hani Salem al-Bazoni was indicted for lying to FBI agents after allegedly making death threats toward Americans.

Stopped and cited for trespassing at Mountain Dell Reservoir in July, al-Bazoni allegedly told a Salt Lake County Sheriff's deputy that all Americans would be "blown up and die."

Questioned by FBI agents in November, al-Bazoni denied making anti-American statements. But two days before the opening of the 2002 Winter Games, he was federally indicted for making false statements to the FBI agents and arrested.

The implication he might be a terrorist sent a shiver of suspicion through his Holladay neighborhood. Al-Bazoni, who owns a Salt Lake City car repair shop, returned home from jail to discover copies of a Salt Lake Tribune article about him had been placed in mail boxes and on doorsteps.

Someone scrawled on the pages that al-Bazoni was "a thief and suspect in numerous burglaries in the Holladay area."

"This is very scary," said another Iraqi immigrant, Ali Najim, 42, an unemployed machine operator living in Salt Lake County. "We are peaceful. We have suffered enough. We love Utah and Salt Lake City. We want to live here -- but we don't want to live in fear."

Said Banen Zahawi, an executive council member of the Al-Rasool Islamic Center in Salt Lake City: "They escaped from [Iraq] just to come here and find the same thing, to a lesser extent. They are targeted, wherever they go."

Utah's Iraqis are a loose-knit community with no central spokesperson -- a lack they say they felt keenly after al-Bazoni's indictment. After dozens of Latino immigrants were arrested at Salt Lake City International Airport in December, activists and community leaders immediately objected, holding news conferences and rallies alleging discrimination.

But no one spoke for the Iraqi community after al-Bazoni's arrest and as President Bush labeled their homeland part of an "axis of evil." The handful of Iraqis who agreed to be interviewed by The Tribune insist they are not a threat and were horrified and saddened by the events of Sept. 11.

"Every Iraqi condemns everything that happened in New York," said al-Hamdani. "He [Osama bin Laden] can't go kill innocent people that way. I wish I died before I see that terrible thing."

They also want people to understand that they had tried to overthrow Saddam, and were thoroughly screened before they were allowed into this country. State Department officials completed background checks and they were also scrutinized by the Immigration and Naturalization Service, said INS spokeswoman Nina Muniz in Denver.

The men interviewed by The Tribune came to Utah in the early 1990s, drawn by friends who described it as quiet and friendly.

Arriving in America, Iraqi refugees received monetary assistance for eight months, but little orientation to the American way of life. "Now we suffer from it," said Wasfi al-Rudan, 42, a permanent U.S. resident who has lived in Utah for eight years. "People don't know how to act, how to talk."

Nevertheless, they have adapted, and most live lives indistinguishable from other Americans.

Al-Rudan is a skilled machinist who works eight hours a day and comes home to an ordinary apartment. "I get my sofa from R.C. Willey, like everybody else," he joked.

He married an American woman and has two children. Despite the fact he occasionally speaks Arabic, neither child is bilingual. "It's hard," he said. "They watch TV, their mom speaks English and their friends speak English."

Added Mohannad Shakir, a 39-year-old Salt Lake City taxi driver who also married an American: "There is no way to stay in touch with the culture. There's no community."

Several of the Iraqi immigrants who spoke to The Tribune work as cab drivers, saying they enjoy the relative freedom and independence. Many have children born as U.S. citizens. Some, like al-Bazoni, own businesses.

Beyond traffic tickets, they say none has been in trouble with the law.

Said al-Hamdani: "Everything in our record is excellent. We don't know how to prove ourselves. We need help. Now I am very worried about my safety here."

Noted Zahawi of the Al-Rasool Islamic Center: "Some of them [have been] here for 10 years and nobody has seen anything from them. So why come now and single them out?"

Zahawi calls for "more understanding, on both sides. Here, in America, whoever is dark-skinned has become a target. It's easy. Islam has been the hanger we hang our dirty clothes on."

If al-Bazoni did make threats at Mountain Dell Reservoir, al-Hamdani suggests it was prompted by the fear of being confronted by an officer with a gun, and then finding himself handcuffed and on the way to jail.

"We've been afraid all our lives because of living under Saddam Hussein," al-Hamdani said.

"The fear is still here," he said, pointing to his chest. "We're still scared. We don't know who's right and who's wrong."

70 posted on 02/21/2003 7:17:23 PM PST by honway
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To: All
Then last month, the public's attention seemed to focus on the 1,000 or so former Iraqis living in Utah after Iraqi immigrant Hani Salem al-Bazoni was indicted for lying to FBI agents after allegedly making death threats toward Americans.
71 posted on 02/22/2003 6:09:12 AM PST by honway
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To: All
Very good article at the link.

Clues Alerted White House to Potential Attacks

-Sources have also told Fox News that the memo from the FBI Phoenix office about Arabs training in U.S. flight schools never reached headquarters because FBI counterterrorism officials were overwhelmed by the bombing of the USS Cole. The memo ended up "sitting on a shelf," according to sources.

- An Iranian in custody in New York City told local police last May of a plot to attack the World Trade Center.

-Based on its own intelligence, the Israeli government provided "general" information to the United States in the second week of August that an Al Qaeda attack was imminent.

– Pakistanis were taken into custody June 4 in the Cayman Islands after they were overheard discussing hijacking attacks in New York City; they were questioned and released, and the information was forwarded to U.S. intelligence

72 posted on 02/22/2003 7:19:43 AM PST by swampfx
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To: thinden; MizSterious; Lion's Cub
Feds: Man Poses Terror Risk

Forty-eight hours before tonight's ceremony opening the 2002 Winter Olympics, federal agents arrested a former Iraqi soldier who last July was cited for trespassing at Mountain Dell Reservoir, an important source of drinking water for Salt Lake City residents.

73 posted on 02/22/2003 7:34:57 AM PST by honway
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To: thinden; Lion's Cub
According to Jennifer al-Bazoni, her husband came to America in 1995, worked as a dishwasher, later installed neon signs and then was employed by Sky Chefs, an airplane caterer at Salt Lake City International Airport.

---------------------------------------------------------

I am starting to identify a pattern.

Former Iraqi soldiers working at U.S. airports.

Hussein Al-Hussaini a.k.a. John Doe 2, a former member of the Iraqi Republican Guard, went to work at Boston's Logan Airport after his work was done in OKC.

74 posted on 02/22/2003 7:41:16 AM PST by honway
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To: occam's chainsaw
Jabir Algarawi, executive director of the Arizona Refugee Community Center, said Thursday he was shocked to learn of Al-Hamdani's arrest. He characterized
Al-Hamdani as a non-practicing Muslim who liked to party and pick up women.

But he found it impossible to believe Al-Hamdani had any links to terrorism.

"Terrorism, no," Algarawi said. "He cannot be. It's ridiculous. He's a kind of a troublemaker but he's not the kind of person who would be involved with these things."


This above quote kills me..... SO it is only those that are committed muslims that would be involved in terrorism.... Thank you duely noted.
75 posted on 02/22/2003 7:48:53 AM PST by Walkingfeather
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To: All
Alidai Al-Hamdani, 27, was formerly employed by Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport, according to police reports
76 posted on 02/22/2003 7:59:31 AM PST by honway
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To: LaineyDee
Is that so? Texas Statute Chapter 493.015. Look it up.

Interesting, but since the majority of illegals aliens are arrested for misdemeanors and not felonies, the majority would never get investigated and reported to INS.

While it's a nice little law, it has many loopholes and the majority of illegals slip right through them.

77 posted on 02/22/2003 9:22:14 PM PST by Marine Inspector (DHS BCBP II)
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To: Marine Inspector
Why......I thought you said there were no laws pertaining to this.....now it's irrelevant because there's too many loopholes? Me thinks you just want to argue my opinion (which I'm entitled to) and play rabbit trails when I prove you wrong. Good day sir.
78 posted on 02/23/2003 7:30:31 AM PST by LaineyDee
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To: LaineyDee
Why......I thought you said there were no laws pertaining to this.....

I was speaking of Federal laws and I'm sorry I was not clear. Yes, Texas does have this law, that I did not know about before, and maybe 1 or 2 other states may have a similar type law.

now it's irrelevant because there's too many loopholes?

Yes, anything with that many loopholes, IMO, is irrelevant. When lawmakers make laws with huge built in loopholes, so those laws can not be effectively enforced, then, IMO, the laws are irrelevant. The majority of federal immigration laws are like this.

Me thinks you just want to argue my opinion (which I'm entitled to) and play rabbit trails when I prove you wrong. Good day sir.

No, but good day to you also.

79 posted on 02/23/2003 8:59:42 AM PST by Marine Inspector (DHS BCBP II)
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To: Marine Inspector
This is on the AZ legislative website.....FYI

The Crime Bill, S. 1607/H.R. 3355, includes three Senate provisions that affect immigration policy. An amendment by Senator William Roth (R-DE) requires state and local government personnel to cooperate with the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) in its efforts to find and deport undocumented immigrants. This would bar localities from creating sanctuaries for undocumented entrants and potentially require local police, schools, and health facilities to report any information concerning the whereabouts of undocumented immigrants. States and localities in violation of this requirement would lose new crime bill funds.

This was passed November, 1994.

80 posted on 02/23/2003 4:23:32 PM PST by LaineyDee
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