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Dr. Al-Arian
Not Permitted to Attend Hearing, Harsh Conditions Continue
March 16, 2004
On Friday, Dr.
Sami Al-Arian and his attorneys learned that he would not be permitted
to attend a hearing in his case taking place this Monday, May 17.
Dr. Al-Arian
was denied the right to attend the hearing even though in a previous
hearing on March 11, the magistrate judge overseeing the case stated
that he would be brought back to Tampa within two months.
In fact, since
his detention on February 20, 2003, Dr. Al-Arian has not been allowed
to attend most of the hearings in his case. So long as he is not
in Tampa, Dr. Al-Arian cannot examine the evidence located there
in the government's possession. Even though the judge has stressed
publicly that Dr. Al-Arian should be able to examine all of the
evidence in a timely manner, this has clearly not been the case.
By repeatedly denying requests by attorneys to bring both Dr. Al-Arian
and Sameeh Hammoudeh to Tampa to attend hearings and review evidence,
Magistrate Thomas McCoun has placed tremendous stress on the defendants,
their attorneys, and their families.
Dr. Al-Arian
has had to wait for over a year to receive summaries and transcripts
of phone calls and other evidence which have been in the government's
possession for years. He was given over 20,000 pages of documents
that were in no logical order, chronological or otherwise, all of
which will require at least a month just to organize. This systemic
inefficiency, along with the time it takes for the government to
hand over evidence in the case, is psychologically straining and
debilitating to Dr. Al-Arian.
It is part of
a longstanding policy by the judge and the government to keep Dr.
Al-Arian from participating in his own defense and to isolate him
from his family, attorneys and evidence located in Tampa.
Moreover, recently
the inhumane conditions in Coleman Federal Penitentiary, 75 miles
away from Tampa, under which Dr. Al-Arian has been held have been
exacerbated. When he is granted a phone call with his attorneys,
usually after much pleading, his hands are cuffed and more recently,
shackled to his waist. This obviously makes it extremely difficult
for him to hold the receiver, let alone take notes. This action
is especially unreasonable and harsh considering he is locked in
the room alone at the time, posing danger to no one. Such conditions
can only be described as physically torturous, humiliating, and
gratuitously punitive.
Although Dr.
Al-Arian and his co-defendant Sameeh Hammoudeh are the only pre-trial
detainees in the entire facility, they are held under much harsher
conditions than the other detainees. Since March 27, 2003, they
have been held in the Special Housing Unit (SHU), a section of the
prison reserved to temporarily house convicted inmates who misbehave.
While the legal limit of placing regular inmates in the SHU is one
year, Dr. Al-Arian and Mr. Hammoudeh have been there for 14 months.
The stark discrepancy in treatment undoubtedly demonstrates that
the men are being discriminated against.
The denial of
their right to attend hearings, coupled with the psychological torture
they endure on a daily basis (including cruel treatment by the guards),
make a fair trial nearly impossible for Dr.
Al-Arian and Mr. Hammoudeh. These conditions must change immediately.
At a time when
the United States is taking measures to prove its humane treatment
of prisoners abroad, it must do the same with its political detainees
at home. Persistently keeping Dr. Al-Arian and Mr. Hammoudeh in
complete isolation and under abusive treatment from prison officials
have had irreversible physical and psychological effects.
Action Alert:
We encourage you to write to:
Judge Thomas B. McCoun III, U.S. District Court, 801 North
Florida Ave., Tampa, FL 33602
-Ask him about
Al-Arian's due process rights and inhumane treatment and ask that
he be moved closer to family, lawyers, and evidence in the case.
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