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  Ahmed Abu Ali: 
  Guilty of Being Muslim 
	at the Wrong Time in America 
  By Stephen Lendman 
      Al-Jazeerah, ccun.org, May 24, 2010 
	   Writing on May 12 in Alternet.org, Mariam Abu Ali headlined, "My 
	Brother Faces a Lifetime of Solitary Confinement on a Spurious Terror 
	Conviction," saying:   He "spent the past five years in solitary 
	confinement, under 23-hour lockdown, in a 7 x 12 cell," and overall has been 
	treated horrifically "in a dungeon, over 20 meters beneath the ground."  
	  An April article by this writer explained what they're like -
	
	http://sjlendman.blogspot.com/2010/04/harmful-effects-of-prolonged-isolated.html. 
	Material from it is repeated below.   Abu Ali wasn't charged or 
	convicted for violence. He's not at Guantanamo or secret detainment abroad. 
	He's in Florence, CO Supermax hell, like state-run facilities the only 
	federal one evolving from a "get tough on crime" philosophy to keep hardened 
	offenders separate from others, the greater prison population safer, and the 
	public secure knowing these prisons are escape-proof. Over the last two 
	decades, nearly 60 were built in over 40 states, currently for over 20,000 
	inmates.   The US Department of Justice (DOJ) National Institute of 
	Corrections calls the term "supermax" the most common one to describe 
	"special housing unit(s), maxi-maxi, maximum control facilit(ies), secured 
	housing unit(s), intensive management unit(s), and administrative maximum 
	penitentiar(ies.)." It describes them as:   "a highly restrictive, 
	high-custody housing unit within a secure facility....that isolates inmates 
	from the general prison population and from each other due to grievous 
	crimes, repetitive assaultive or violent institutional behavior, the threat 
	of escape or actual escape from high-custody facility(s), or inciting or 
	threatening to incite disturbances in a correctional institution."   
	Their cost to build and operate is two to three times more than for a 
	conventional prison. They have high-tech security features. Walls, floors, 
	ceilings and doors are built out of reinforced materials. Complex electronic 
	systems minimize officer-inmate contact. Moving inmates requires multiple 
	officers. They're confined in windowless single cells about 7 by 12 feet for 
	up to 23 hours a day, with a shower and concrete bed. The staff-to-prisoner 
	ratio is much higher than in conventional prisons. Inmates have few if any 
	programs. Very little constructive activity is offered on a daily basis. Few 
	visits are allowed, though almost none directly.    Overall, there's 
	very little human contact. Most inmates are incarcerated for life but other 
	sentences are determinate. No federal entry or release standard is observed. 
	Some states use Supermax facilities for different reasons, including when a 
	shortage of segregation beds exist elsewhere.   Those in them describe 
	the experience with horror because long-term isolation contributes to 
	anti-social behavior and mental illness, so released inmates may be violent 
	and unemployable. Yet proponents say they're the most effective way to deal 
	with dangerous offenders. Opponents believe they do more harm than good, and 
	the expense compounds the problem.   They're for society's most 
	incorrigible (or ones authorities want to punish for political or other 
	reasons) on the notion that solitary confinement, sensory deprivation, and 
	punitive treatment will change behavior, only for the worst according to 
	experts.   The facilities are extremely harsh. They crush the human 
	spirit, mind and body through isolation and cruelty enough to turn ordinary 
	inmates into sociopaths. Physical abuse and extreme deprivation are common, 
	inflicted as punishment. Inmate contact with staff is restricted and none 
	allowed with other prisoners. They're confined in windowless cells 23 hours 
	a day, have no work, social contact, education, recreation, rehabilitation 
	or personal privacy. Nearly everything is delivered - food, medical supplies 
	and other materials. Outside their cells, they're escorted by 4-man teams, 
	painfully handcuffed and shacked. Inside, they're treated like caged 
	animals.   Department of Justice (DOJ) Charges   On February 22, 
	2005, a DOJ press release announced a six-count indictment, charging Abu Ali 
	with:   -- conspiracy to provide material support and resources to Al 
	Qaeda;   -- providing material support and resources to Al Qaeda;   
	-- conspiracy to provide material support to terrorists;   -- 
	providing material support to terrorists;   -- contribution of 
	services to Al Qaeda; and   -- receipt of funds and services from Al 
	Qaeda.   It claimed he "advised (an unnamed) co-conspirator whom he 
	had met on previous travels to Medina, Saudi Arabia, of his interest in 
	joining Al Qaeda," and that he "intended to become a planner of terrorist 
	operations like Muhammad Atta and Khalid Sheik Muhammad." It also alleges 
	that he and another co-conspirator discussed plans to assassinate George 
	Bush, either  close range by gun shot or car bomb.    On November 
	22, 2005, he was convicted on all charges, the jury rejecting his testimony 
	that his Saudi captors tortured him into confessing. Two doctors who 
	examined him agreed, but their testimony was suppressed - a clear Sixth 
	Amendment violation that assures:   "the right to a speedy and public 
	trial, by an impartial jury....to be confronted with the witnesses against 
	him; to have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his favor, and to 
	have the Assistance of (competent) Counsel (and enough time) for (a proper) 
	defense."    Although the Sixth Amendment doesn't specifically 
	prohibit attorney-client communications, doing so clearly violates its 
	spirit and provision for a proper defense. More on that below.   Worse 
	still, government witnesses were allowed, including from Saudi guards 
	(translated by live satellite feed using pseudonyms for "security reasons") 
	who tortured him yet they denied using it on anyone, contradicting clear 
	evidence the State Department acknowledges, but the defense wasn't allowed 
	to introduce it - a Fifth Amendment violation that no one shall "be deprived 
	of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law," meaning a fair 
	trial according to established legal standards, what prosecutors flagrantly 
	prohibited.   Further, Saudis admitted that US prosecutors "ordered" 
	certain questions be asked, and FBI agents participated - clear evidence 
	that Washington engineered the entire process, including his interrogation 
	and torture that took place from 8PM - 6AM on successive days, during which 
	he was shackled, chained, ordered to confess in writing, then read it aloud 
	during videotaping.   Before trial, prosecutors called him "one of the 
	most dangerous terrorist threats that America faces" since 9/11. His lawyer, 
	John K. Zwerling, said he was in Saudi Arabia for religious studies, now 
	bogusly convicted of terrorism and a plot to kill George Bush.   On 
	March 29, 2006, a DOJ press release announced his conviction on nine 
	charges, three above the original six, including:   -- a conspiracy to 
	kill George Bush;   -- conspiracy to commit air piracy; and   -- 
	conspiracy to destroy an aircraft.   He was sentenced to 30 years in 
	prison, followed by 30 more on supervised release. His co-conspirators 
	weren't named, yet prosecutors claimed "he received training from members of 
	(an Al Qaeda cell) in weapons, explosives, and document forgery." Deputy 
	Attorney General Paul McNulty called his conviction "a milestone achievement 
	in the international effort to bring terrorists to justice." With Abu Ali 
	behind bars, he's "no longer a threat to the American people."   He 
	never was, nor are dozens of other Muslims bogusly charged, tried, 
	convicted, and imprisoned for their faith and ethnicity at the wrong time in 
	America. When a nation imprisons the innocent, we're all equally vulnerable, 
	and this country does it repeatedly and shamelessly.   His trial was a 
	travesty of injustice, based solely on  torture-extracted evidence, 
	Judge Gerald Lee suppressing a chance to prove it nor acknowledging his 
	denial of constitutional protections, including against self-incrimination 
	or right to an attorney during questioning, let alone not to be tortured. 
	  On appeal, the US Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the 
	conviction, but overturned the sentence on grounds that the District court 
	deviated from federal sentencing guidelines. Judge Lee then resentenced Abu 
	Ali to life in prison after which he was incarcerated at Florence, CO 
	Supermax.   Commenting on the case, Amnesty International (AI) said it 
	was:   "seriously concerned that (his) trial may set a precedent in US 
	courts of according unqualified support to the declarations of a foreign 
	government regarding its human rights record as a means of rendering 
	evidence admissible, including statements obtained by torture and 
	ill-treatment. In this case, the statements of officials from Saudi Arabia, 
	a state with a clear record of widespread torture and ill-treatment, flatly 
	denying that such practices existed appear to have been taken at face value 
	with no serious attempts allowed to challenge the claims when presented." 
	  Court proceedings were orchestrated to convict. Abu Ali never had a 
	chance. From the time he was arrested, held by the Saudis and returned to 
	America, he was guilty as charged to be locked in prison hell for as long as 
	authorities wish, and be treated like a caged animal under restrictions 
	imposed under Special Administrative Measures (SAMs).   Effective May 
	17, 1996, "the Attorney General may authorize the Director of the Bureau of 
	Prisons (BOP) to implement 'special administrative measures' (when) there is 
	a substantial risk that a prisoner's communications or contact with persons 
	could result in death or serious bodily injury to persons."   Using 
	vague language, it scraps traditional attorney-client privileges to monitor 
	and/or restrict communications between them - not to protect state secrets 
	or prevent harm, but to harass and obstruct justice.    Effective 
	October 2001, they may be imposed from 120 days to a year, and if the 
	Attorney General believes that "reasonable suspicion exists (that) an inmate 
	may use communications with attorneys or their agents to further or 
	facilitate acts of violence or terrorism, this rule amends the existing 
	regulations to provide (BOP authorities the right to) monitor mail or 
	communications with attorneys in order to deter such acts...."   In 
	other words, on the pretext of deterring "terrorism," a centuries-long core 
	US legal principle was scrapped, to include attorney-client privilege, other 
	communications with family, friends, other inmates, and the media, regular 
	correspondence and telephone use - compounded by imposed isolation in 
	special residential units or solitary confinement.   From arrest to 
	incarceration, Abu Ali's case represents a travesty of justice from an 
	nation affording none to its most vulnerable, especially Blacks, Latinos, 
	and Muslims determined guilty for their faith at the wrong time in America. 
	  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 cutting-edge discussions with 
	distinguished guests on the Progressive Radio News Hour on the Progressive 
	Radio Network Thursdays at 10AM US Central time and Saturdays and Sundays at 
	noon. All programs are archived for easy listening.   
	
	http://www.progressiveradionetwork.com/the-progressive-news-hour/.   
	  
	  
	   
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