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The
Al-Arian Case
Timeline
of the Case
Claim
vs. Fact
Prison
Conditions
Dr. Al-Arian's Attorneys
Court Motions and Decisions
Statements
of Support
The
Case of Dr. Sami Al-Arian: A Timeline
February 20, 2003: After
nearly eight years of government harassment due to his activities
on behalf of Palestine and his political activism and leading stance
on civil rights in America, Dr. Sami Al-Arian is arrested by federal
authorities on spurious charges of supporting terrorism. Three others
are also arrested and detained at a local jail. To protest his political
incarceration, Dr. Al-Arian embarks on a hunger strike.
February
27, 2003: Only one week after Dr. Al-Arian is charged, the President
of the University of South Florida, with pressure from the Board
of Trustees, fires Dr. Al-Arian from his position as an award-winning
tenured professor, after over a year of trying to do so, in the
aftermath of the post-9/11 hysteria surrounding his constitutionally
protected activities.
March 20,
2003: The bail hearing for Dr. Al-Arian and his co-defendants
lasts four days and features over thirty-five witnesses in defense
of their character, with the prosecution providing no witnesses
and no evidence, and failing to show that any of the men are flight
risks or threats to national security. Weeks later, Magistrate Mark
Pizzo denies bail to Dr. Al-Arian and Sameeh Hammoudeh. Hatim Fariz
and Ghassan Ballut, two American citizens, are granted bail.
March 27,
2003: The men are moved from the local jail in Tampa, Florida
to a maximum-security federal penitentiary in Coleman, Florida,
75 miles away. There they are placed in solitary confinement and
denied basic privileges, given limited visitations and access to
attorneys and subjected to strip searches and the harshest conditions
of confinement. Dr. Al-Arian and Mr. Hammoudeh are the only pre-trial
detainees in a facility full of hardcore criminals.
April 8,
2003: Unable to raise enough funds for private attorneys, Dr.
Al-Arian is appointed attorneys by Magistrate Thomas McCoun. In
the months ahead, little progress is made under their services.
April 10,
2003: Dr. Al-Arian and Mr. Hammoudeh are denied bail, while
Hatim Fariz and Ghassan Ballut are released from Coleman federal
penitentiary. Also, a new civil rights organization, the National
Liberty Fund (NLF) announces it will be taking on the case of Dr.
Sami Al-Arian and organizes a number of events across the country
in the following months.
June 5, 2003:
Judge Moody announces the trial date to be no sooner than January
2005, nearly two years following the arrest.
June 15,
2003: In its annual meeting, the American Association of University
Professors (AAUP) condemns the University of South Florida, stating
that it violated the rights of Dr. Al-Arian to due process and academic
freedom.
June 18,
2003: Upon making a phone call to his home and then to his son
who was studying abroad, Dr. Al-Arian is punished for violating
the Coleman penitentiary's ban on three-way calling. He is given
a six-month ban on all phone calls.
July 17,
2003: Respected human rights organization Amnesty International
writes a letter to the Federal Bureau of Prisons condemning the
conditions under which Dr. Al-Arian is kept, including the 23-hour
lockdown, strip searches, use of chains and shackles, severely limited
recreation, lack of access to any religious service and denial of
a watch or clock in a windowless cell where the artificial light
is never turned off.
July 25,
2003: Dr. Al-Arian is allowed to fire his court-appointed attorneys
following months of little progress in his case or improvements
in the conditions of confinement. He chooses to act as his own attorney.
In preparation for his self-representation, he ends his hunger strike
after 140 days and losing 45 pounds.
September
12, 2003: Following a frustrating few months of little development
for Dr. Al-Arian's case or improvement in his confinement, Judge
Moody rules that the 21,000 hours of taped conversations classified
by the government must be released to defense attorneys, but they
are barred from releasing them to the public or discussing them
with anyone other than their clients. The process of providing these
tapes to the defense is slow and tedious.
October 29,
2003: After three months of representing himself, Dr. Al-Arian
hires respected Washington DC attorney William B. Moffitt and the
experienced local lawyer Linda Moreno to represent him.
December
9, 2003: A Chicago Tribune article reveals that key evidence
in the case was destroyed by federal authorities. The search warrants
and other related materials from the early searches of Dr. Al-Arian's
home and office were mistakenly shredded by court officials.
January 20-22,
2004: Sameeh Hammoudeh is denied his request for bail. A judge
also orders the government to release more of its evidence. The
government narrows its use of wiretapped conversation from the 21,000
hours to 200 hours of relevant material. Defense attorneys argue
for motions to dismiss the indictment on grounds that it criminalizes
free speech and First Amendment protected activities.
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