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March 31, 2005

Fred Korematsu Passes Away at 86 Years

The Passing of a Constitutional Law Legend

press release from Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund

Press Contacts:

Legal Team Members
Don Tamaki (415) 788-2705
Dale Minami (415) 788-2703
Karen Kai (415) 255-7385
Bob Rusky 415) 255-7385
Lori Bannai (206) 398-4009
Eric Fournier (filmmaker) (415) 971-3305
Peter Irons (530) 284-6138

Fred Korematsu, who President Bill Clinton described as "helping to widen
the circle of democracy by fighting for human rights, by righting social
wrongs, and by empowering others to achieve," passed away on Wednesday
afternoon (March 30th) at his daughter's home. He died of respiratory
failure at the age of 86.

Born in Oakland, California on January 30, 1919 and an American citizen by
birth, Korematsu was among 120,000 Americans of Japanese ancestry living on
the West Coast when Japan attacked Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. In the
ensuing months, the Army issued orders rounding up these Americans into 10
Internment camps, each surrounded by barbed wire and machine gun towers and
located in desolate regions from California to Arkansas.

Korematsu defied the military orders, evaded authorities and was ultimately
arrested and jailed in 1942. He appealed his case to the U.S. Supreme
Court, arguing that it was unconstitutional for the government to
incarcerate Americans without charges, evidence or trial. He lost. In its
1944 landmark decision, the high court ruled against him, declaring that the
Internment was not caused by racism, but rather, was justified by the Army=s
claims that Japanese Americans were radio-signaling enemy ships from shore,
and were prone to disloyalty. The court called the Internment, a Amilitary
necessity.@

In a stinging dissent, Justice Jackson complained about the lack of any
evidence to justify the Internment, writing ".the Court for all time has
validated the principle of racial discrimination.and of transplanting
American citizens. The principle then lies about like a loaded weapon ready
for the hand of any authority that bring forward a plausible claim of an
urgent need." Constitutional law scholars have referred to the 1944 case as
a "civil liberties disaster."

Korematsu's case stood for almost 40 years until Professor Peter Irons with
the help of Aiko Herzig Yoshinaga, researching government's archives,
stumbled upon secret Justice Department documents. Among them were memos
written in 1943 and 1944 by Edward Ennis, the Justice Department attorney
responsible for supervising the drafting of the government's brief. As
Ennis began searching for evidence to support the Army's claim that the
Internment was necessary and justified, he found precisely the opposite --
that J. Edgar Hoover of the FBI, the FCC, the Office of Naval Intelligence
and other authoritative intelligence agencies categorically denied that
Japanese Americans had committed any wrong. Other memoranda characterized
the government's claims that Japanese Americans were spying as "intentional
falsehoods." These official reports were never presented to the Supreme
Court, having been intentionally suppressed and, in one case, destroyed by
setting the report afire.

It was on this basis -- governmental misconduct -- that a legal team of pro
bono attorneys successfully reopened Korematsu's case in 1983, resulting in
the erasure of his criminal conviction for defying the Internment.

During the litigation, Justice Department lawyers offered a pardon to
Korematsu if he would agree to drop his lawsuit. In rejecting the offer,
Kathryn Korematsu, his wife of 58 years remarked "Fred was not interested in
a pardon from the government; instead, he always felt that it was the
government who should seek a pardon from him and from Japanese Americans for
the wrong that was committed."

In throwing out Korematsu's 40 year old criminal conviction, Judge Marilyn
Hall Patel of the US District Court of the Northern District of California
wrote:

"Korematsu remains on the pages of our legal and political history. As a
legal precedent it is now recognized as having limited application. As a
historical precedent it stands as a constant caution that in times of war or
declared military necessity our institutions must be vigilant in protecting
our constitutional guarantees. It stands as a caution that in times of
distress the shield of military necessity and national security must not be
used to protect governmental actions from close scrutiny and accountability.
It stands as a caution that in times of international hostility and
antagonisms our institutions, legislative, executive and judicial, must be
prepared to protect all citizens from the petty fears and prejudices that
are so easily aroused."


In 1998, Korematsu received the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation's
highest civilian award. President Clinton's introduction of Korematsu
reflects the significance of his achievements: "In the long history of our
country's constant search for justice, some names of ordinary citizens stand
for millions of souls.Plessy, Brown, Parks.To that distinguished list, today
we add the name of Fred Korematsu."

Korematsu has been the subject of numerous documentaries including the Emmy
awarding film "Of Civil Wrongs and Rights" co-produced by filmmaker Eric
Fournier and Korematsu's son, Ken Korematsu. His daughter Karen
Korematsu-Haigh actively supported Korematsu's interest in civil rights,
helping to found the Korematsu Civil Rights Fund sponsored by the Asian Law
Caucus, the oldest Asian American public interest law firm in the nation.
Karen remarked "I know he was the country's hero, but he was my personal
hero."

Other awards include honorary doctorates from the University of San
Francisco, California State University Hayward, McGeorge School of Law, and
the City University of New York Law School, and official recognition from
the California State Senate.

Korematsu's other community activities include serving as past President of
the San Leandro chapter of the Lion's Club, and actively supporting the Boy
Scouts of America. Funeral arrangements are pending.

March 30, 2005

WITNESSES NEEDED for OIG investigation of detainee abuse

Hello friends,

The Office of Inspector General (OIG) connected to the Department of
Homeland Security is currently conducting an investigation of abuses
against immigrant detainees at four county jails throughout the country.
Two of the county jails being investigated are in New Jersey -- Passaic
and Hudson.

New Jersey Civil Rights Defense Committee is providing support to the
detainees during the interview process. We are looking for people who are
willing to be witnesses to interveiws between OIG representatives and
detainees. You do not need any previous experience to be a witness.
While we are asking for general volunteers we are also specifically
soliciting help from immigration attorneys who would be willing to
volunteer to be present during the interviews.

These interviews will be conducted at Hudson County Jail beginning April
18 and at Passaic County Jail beginning in May. We will be signing people
up to go into the jail as witnesses throughout this time period. Please
contact New Jersey Civil Rights Defense Committee at
info@nj-civilrights.org to help.

New Jersey Civil Rights Defense Committee
http://www.nj-civilrights.org

March 18, 2005

Four Iranian brothers released after long immigration detention in Los

By PAUL CHAVEZ, Associated Press Writer

Thursday, March 17, 2005

(03-17) 00:02 PST Los Angeles (AP) --

Four Iranian brothers detained for more than three years after their arrest in an FBI terrorism probe were freed after U.S. immigration authorities eased certain travel restrictions.

The Mirmehdi brothers — Mohammed, Mostafa, Mohsen and Mojtaba — had rejected a release offer last month, claiming proposed travel limits and other restrictions were unjust. The brothers were released Wednesday night after the government revised its offer and reduced the restrictions, said Virginia Kice, a spokeswoman for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

The brothers declined to sign documents outlining the conditions of their release, but they nevertheless will be bound by the modified terms, Kice said.

The brothers returned home to the San Fernando Valley and told The Associated Press that they would try to resume their careers as real estate agents.

"It was a great victory for us," Mohsen Mirmehdi said by telephone. "After 3 1/2 years of going to this court and that court and proving to them that we are innocent."

The brothers can remain in the United States although two have been ordered deported and the other pair are appealing such orders.

The brothers have been held since October 2001. Federal authorities alleged they supported a Los Angeles-based cell of the Moujahedeen Khalk, or MEK, which opposes Iran's regime and is classified by the State Department as a terrorist organization.

The brothers acknowledged attending protest events against Iran's current regime, but denied belonging to the MEK.

They never faced criminal charges. They were sent into detention to await deportation for allegedly lying in the 1990s on their applications seeking political asylum, and for their suspected ties to the MEK.

Last August, the Board of Immigration Appeals ruled evidence tying the brothers to terrorism was inconclusive. The board also upheld the decision of two immigration judges who said the Mirmehdis would be tortured or persecuted if returned to Iran. The board also agreed with the government that the brothers did not qualify for political asylum.

"One thing is not in dispute. All four men are in this country illegally," Kice said.

Final deportation orders have been issued for Mostafa Mirmehdi, 45, and Mojtaba Mirmehdi, 41, and they will be deported if a third country can be found that will accept them, Kice said.

The brothers' attorney, Marc Van Der Hout, said he doubts they will be deported.

"I don't think any other country will accept them," he said. "Another country won't welcome someone into their country that the United States has accused of being part of a terrorist organization, even though those charges are baseless."

The brothers will be allowed to travel freely within Los Angeles, Orange and Ventura counties, but will need permission in advance to travel outside that area, Kice said.

They also must report to immigration officials weekly by telephone and every other week in person, Kice said.

The brothers' release occurred less than two weeks after an altercation in which the Mirmehdis allege that a guard beat Mohammed Mirmehdi after he intervened in an argument between the guard and one of his brothers.

The allegation is under investigation, Kice said.

March 16, 2005

Attacker Still on Duty; Detainee Punished

Action Alert: March 14, 2005

Nine Days After Assault on Detainee:

Attacker Still on Duty; Detainee Punished with Transfer, Segregation

Tell Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE): Stop the Cover-up!

Tell Congress: Investigate the Abuses

On March 5, 2005, at the San Pedro detention center in California, ICE agent M. Lopez laughed at and made fun of immigration detainee Abdel-Jabbar Hamdan's illness and refused to let him use the bathroom, then brutally assaulted detainee Mohammed Mirmehdi after Mohammed and his brother Mostafa questioned Lopez's treatment of Mr. Hamdan.

Nine days later, ICE officials Gloria Kee and Victor Cerda seem to have ignored the more than 100 letters, emails, faxes and phone calls they received from concerned citizens and advocacy organizations--demanding immediate medical care for Mr. Hamdan and Mohammed Mirmehdi, that Lopez be removed from duty while an investigation proceeds, and that Mr. Hamdan and all four of the Mirmehdi brothers be freed from unjust detention.

ICE spokesperson Virginia Kice claimed that Mohammed Mirmehdi hit Lopez and both men fell down and were bruised. But the ACLU visited Mohammed and stated that the marks on his body are not compatible with that story, and indicate that excessive force was used against Mohammed.

While scandals grow around torture by US officials overseas, ICE officials are attempting to cover up torture and abuse by one of their own agents in San Pedro, California:

- ICE is refusing to hand over its digital and Polaroid photographs of Mohammed Mirmehdi's injuries, and its videotape of the assault and the events leading up to it. Attorney Marc Van Der Hout, attorney for Mr. Hamdan and the Mirmehdi brothers, specifically requested copies of these materials in a March 7 letter to Gloria Kee and other officials.

- ICE has refused to provide medical care to Mohammed Mirmehdi--who is in severe pain and may have bone fractures--despite a formal request from his lawyer that a doctor be sent to see him immediately.

- ICE moved Mohammed to the Santa Ana jail as punishment following the incident and is holding him in segregation (solitary confinement) and refusing to allow him regular access to his attorneys.

- ICE has not removed agent Lopez from duty. He is still working at the San Pedro facility. Likewise, two guards employed by the private security company MVM who were present during the incident--D. Barnes and T. Logan--have not been removed from duty, even though they failed to sound an alarm during Lopez's assault and their only intervention was to try to prevent other detainees from witnessing it.

- ICE is still refusing to allow the media to do in-person interviews with Mohammed Mirmehdi (are they waiting for his visible bruises to go away?), his brothers, Mr. Hamdan, or any of the other detainees who witnessed the March 5 incident.

Contact ICE to ask: Why hasn't ICE given the lawyers a copy of the videotape and photographs? Why has Mohammed Mirmehdi not yet seen a doctor? Why is he being punished with transfer and segregation? Why hasn't Mr. Hamdan received medical treatment? Why are Mr. Hamdan and the Mirmehdi brothers still detained? Why is the media banned from interviewing them in person?

Gloria Kee, field operations director of ICE Detention and Removal Office in Los Angeles, 606 South Olive Street, 8th Floor, Los Angeles, CA 90014; phone 213-830-7913 or 213-830-7970; fax 213-830-7973; email gloria.kee@dhs.gov

Victor Cerda, head of ICE Detention and Removal Office in Washington, 801 "I" St., NW, Suite 900, Washington, DC 20536; phone 202-514-8663; fax 202-353-9435; email (c/o ICE Chief of Staff Shelly Han), shelly.han@dhs.gov

Send copies to Mr. Hamdan's support committee at mail@adclaoc.org and to the Coalition for the Human Rights of Immigrants at chri@itapnet.org

ALSO, contact your senators and representatives to urge them to ensure a thorough investigation into the March 5 assault on Mohammed Mirmehdi, and all other incidents of torture and abuse in US detention centers: call via the Congressional Switchboard at 202-224-3121 or get the contact info for your representative and senators through http://www.house.gov/writerep and http://www.senate.gov/general/contact_information/senators_cfm.cfm

Press inquiries about the Hamdan and Mirmehdi cases can be directed to attorneys Stacy Tolchin and Marc Van Der Hout at 415-981-3000, ext. 320. Press inquiries about the Hamdan case can also be directed to Ahilan Arulanantham at the ACLU Southern California, 213-977-9500.

Mr. Hamdan's support committee can be reached through the Arab American Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC) Los Angeles/Orange County Chapter, 714-535-1719, mail@adclaoc.org

For background on the assault, see the March 5 action alert at:
http://la.indymedia.org/news/2005/03/123418.php or http://www.lifeorliberty.org/libertyblog/archives/000078.html

and press coverage at:
http://www.signonsandiego.com/uniontrib/20050310/news_1n10brothers.html http://www.grandforks.com/mld/mercurynews/news/local/states/california/north ern_california/11084995.htm

This message distributed by / Este mensaje distribuido por:

Coalition for the Human Rights of Immigrants (CHRI)
Coalicion para los Derechos Humanos de los Inmigrantes
339 Lafayette St, New York, NY 10012
tel 212-254-2591 / 888-575-8242 fax 212-674-9139
chri@itapnet.org http://www.itapnet.org/chri

-->> To get on the CHRI email list (average 4-5 messages a week), sign up through the website at http://www.itapnet.org/chri-or- to be added to or removed from the list write to chri@itapnet.org .

-->> Para recibir nuestros mensajes por email (promedio de 4 a 5 mensajes por semana), inscribase en nuestro sitio, http://www.itapnet.org/chri, o, para unirse a o quitarse de la lista, escribanos al chri@itapnet.org.

March 14, 2005

Hunger Strike at Passaic County Jail

Below is a letter from an immigrant detainee from Mali who is being held in Passaic County Jail. Mr. Ba Madani, a 54 year old man with diabetes, was denied asylum and has been held in jail with a final deportation order since April 19, 2004. At his review hearings in September 2004 and January 2005 Mr. Madani was denied release on the basis that his deportation to Mali is imminent. However the Mali embassy is refusing to issue travel documents.
March 11, 2005

Today is my fourth day on hunger strike. I am not feeling well. My diabetic condition is worsening. Both my legs are numb from the heel down. Thanks God my spirit is up. I must fight for what I believe is the right thing to do. It is not my intent to fight anybody. I just want to prove to myself that I am still a human being. I believe at some point something is gonna happen. I still believe in America, land of justice and liberty for all. I am in jail because of the immigration laws. I am not a criminal and I will never be.

Please help Mr. Madani and all the other immigrant detainees. New Jersey Civil Rights Defense Committee is working with the Office of Inspector General, Department of Homeland Security's Audit of Hudson and Passaic County Jails. The audit of Hudson will start in mid-April and the audit of Passaic will start in mid-May. Most of the detainees do not have attorneys so NJCRDC is bringing witnesses into their interviews to help protect them from retaliation from the county jails and ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement). Please help out by becoming a witness.

Witness Training for Government Audit
March 22, 2005 at 7:30 pm
Christ Church
5 Paterson Street
New Brunswick, NJ

For more information see http://www.nj-civilrights.org or email us at info@nj-civilrights.org

March 10, 2005

Apology to Commenters

I just discovered that my comment spam blocker, MT-Blacklist, has systematically told all commenters "Your comment could not be submitted due to questionable content." This was because it had been mistakenly set to block comments containing a colon, INCLUDING THE WEBSITE FIELD.

I was wondering why no comments were appearing, when the traffic on this site has been substantial for months. Anyone who commented must have thought, "pretty draconian content restrictions for a pro-civil liberties site."

So accept my apologies and please, COMMENT if you have something of substance to add. Please keep comments relevant and within the bounds of internetiquette or they'll be deleted. Repeat offenders will be blocked.

This site with its categories isn't really a "blog" -- the posts are primarily for disseminating information. The "Director's Blog" is the place where I write from my personal viewpoint. But in the interest of public discourse and with the hope of attracting commenters who will edify what's posted here, welcome.

March 06, 2005

Urgent Action! Immigration Detainees Abused in San Pedro, CA

Urgent Action!
March 5, 2005
Immigration Detainees Abused in San Pedro, CA

On March 5 at the San Pedro detention center near Los Angeles, California, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agent M. Lopez verbally abused 44-year old Palestinian immigration detainee Abdel-Jabbar Hamdan and refused to let him go to the bathroom when he complained of severe stomach pain and fell screaming on the floor clutching his stomach. Lopez then attacked Iranian immigration detainee Mohammed Mirmehdi, dragged him into a storage room and repeatedly punched and choked him. Mr. Mirmehdi has been put in segregation.

Mr. Hamdan remains extremely ill. Neither has received medical care.

Tell Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE):

1) Free Abdel-Jabbar Hamdan and all four of the Mirmehdi brothers, without conditions, NOW, and provide all needed medical care while their release is being processed.

2) Remove ICE agent M. Lopez from duty immediately and carry out an investigation into his abuse of detainees.

3) Allow the media and advocates immediate access to the jail to interview Mr. Hamdan, the Mirmehdi brothers and other witnesses and to photograph Mohammed Mirmehdi's bruises.

Send your messages to:

Victor Cerda, head of ICE Detention and Removal Office in Washington, 425 I Street NW, Washington, DC 20536; phone 202-514-8663; fax 202-353-9435; email (c/o ICE Chief of Staff Shelly Han), shelly.han@dhs.gov

Gloria Kee, field operations director of ICE Detention and Removal Office in Los Angeles, 300 North Los Angeles St, Los Angeles, CA 90012; phone 213-830-7913 or 213-830-7970; fax 213-830-7973; email gloria.kee@dhs.gov

Send copies to Mr. Hamdan's support committee at mail@adclaoc.org and to the Coalition for the Human Rights of Immigrants at chri@itapnet.org

At about 10:20am PST on Saturday, March 5, 2005, Abdel-Jabbar Hamdan was in the holding area at San Pedro detention center, after returning from the visiting room, when he felt ill and asked to use the bathroom. ICE agent M. Lopez refused to let Mr. Hamdan use the bathroom. When Mr. Hamdan doubled over and clutched his stomach, screaming in pain, agent Lopez did not call for medical help but instead verbally abused Mr. Hamdan and told him he should urinate on himself. Other detainees who witnessed the scene were very concerned, and detainee Mostafa Mirmehdi asked ICE agent Lopez, "What is your name, sir?" with the hopes of later reporting the incident. Lopez became enraged, and confronted Mostafa. When Mohammed Mirmehdi came and stood by his brother, Lopez attacked Mohammed, threw him against a wall and tried to choke him. When Mohammed stood up, Lopez punched him in the face and stomach repeatedly, then dragged him into a storage room--where there is no video camera--and continued to punch, choke and beat him. Lopez also sat on Mohammed's chest, pressing down with his full weight. The savage attack was witnessed by a number of detainees through the door and window of the storage room. The witnesses saw visible choke marks on Mohammed's neck and bruises on his stomach and arms before he was taken away to segregation, where he remains without medical care as of 4pm on March 5. In addition, Mr. Hamdan is still suffering from severe stomach pains and has not received medical treatment.

The assault on Mr. Hamdan and Mr. Mirmehdi comes just five days after Mr. Hamdan's supporters issued an action alert demanding his release. The action alert generated dozens of letters to ICE officials and some 400 signatures on a petition to free Mr. Hamdan, a respected community leader in Orange County, California, who has never been charged with a crime yet is being held without bond. Mr. Hamdan's health is deteriorating in jail--he has blood pressure problems and has been taken to the hospital three times for serious medical emergencies during his seven months in detention. His family is extremely concerned about this latest health crisis and is asking supporters to please step up the pressure on ICE to release him immediately.

Mohammed, Mohsen, Mojtaba and Mostafa Mirmehdi have been in immigration detention for over 41 months, since Oct. 2, 2001. They have been held longer than any other post-911 detainees. The Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) ruled they are not a national security threat, and can't be sent back to Iran.

The Mirmehdi brothers have been denied release because two of them went to a demonstration sponsored by the Iranian opposition group National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) in June 1997, four months before the NCRI and one of its affiliates, the Moujahedeen Khalq (MEK), were added to the State Department's list of terrorist organizations. Yet high-profile politicians including former attorney general John Ashcroft continued to support these groups actively as late as 2000, when 228 congressional representatives and 31 senators signed on to a letter supporting the NCRI and MEK. Ashcroft and these members of Congress have not been charged with supporting terrorists, yet the Mirmehdi brothers remain in jail.

On Feb. 3, a day before the four brothers were to be interviewed on ABC's "Nightline," and a few weeks before ICE faced a Feb. 20 deadline to free them or explain their continued detention, ICE officials laid out a series of restrictive conditions for their release--including one which bars them from attending demonstrations or from having any contact with supporters of the MEK or NCRI. At the same time, ICE cancelled the Nightline interview, saying the brothers' situation had been resolved. When the brothers refused to accept the unconstitutional and unfair restrictions, ICE said they were "uncooperative" and barred the media from further interviews at the jail. Now ICE says it will not release them.

Press inquiries about the Hamdan and Mirmehdi cases can be directed to attorneys Stacy Tolchin and Marc Van Der Hout at 415-981-3000, ext. 320.

Mr. Hamdan's support committee can be reached through the Arab American Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC) Los Angeles/Orange County Chapter, 714-535-1719, mail@adclaoc.org

The Feb. 28 action alert for Mr. Hamdan can be read at:
http://www.lifeorliberty.org/libertyblog/archives/000077.html

For more background information on the Mirmehdi Brothers, see:
http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/metro/20050221-9999-1n21brothers.html
http://www.lifeorliberty.org/libertyblog/archives/000077.html
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4510019

March 03, 2005

Take Action NOW Against Illegal Detention! Free Mr. Hamdan!

Action Alert
February 28, 2005

Take Action Against Illegal Detention!

Tell Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE):
Free Abdel-Jabbar Hamdan NOW!

The Supreme Court has ruled that immigration detention is constitutional only when it serves the purpose of carrying out a deportation. The use of immigration detention as punishment--for ethnicity, religion, political views or other reasons--is illegal and unconstitutional.

Mr. Hamdan is a respected community leader in Orange County, California. He has never been charged with a crime, and ICE knows perfectly well he is not a security threat. Mr. Hamdan's health is deteriorating in jail--he has blood pressure problems and has been taken to the hospital three times for serious medical emergencies during his seven months in detention. His family wants him back home NOW.

Ask ICE: why are you keeping Mr. Hamdan in jail?

Call, fax or email:

Victor Cerda, head of ICE Detention and Removal Office in Washington, 425 I Street NW, Washington, DC 20536; phone 202-514-8663; fax 202-353-9435; email c/o ICE Chief of Staff Shelly Han

Gloria Kee, field operations director of ICE Detention and Removal Office in Los Angeles, 300 North Los Angeles St, Los Angeles, CA 90012; phone 213-830-7913 or 213-830-7970; fax 213-830-7973; email Gloria Kee Send copies of all messages to Mr. Hamdan's support committee at mail@adclaoc.org

Sign an online petition to demand Mr. Hamdan's release at http://www.petitiononline.com/Hamdan/petition.html

Mr. Hamdan was born in a Palestinian refugee camp in Jordan. He has been living in the US for 25 years and has six US-born children. He had a valid work permit and a green card application in process when he was detained on an alleged immigration violation on July 27, 2004. He has been denied release on bond; the US government claims he is a "national security threat" because he worked as a fundraiser for the Holy Land Foundation, a Muslim charity, before it was shut down in late 2001. Like thousands of Americans, Mr. Hamdan believed the foundation was a legitimate charity.

Five of the foundation's executives were indicted on criminal charges, yet they were freed on their own recognizance within weeks, while Mr. Hamdan--who faces no charges--remains detained. The FBI wanted Mr. Hamdan to provide information against the others--but he would have had to lie, so he declined. He had already told US government investigators everything he knew.

An immigration judge ruled that Mr. Hamdan cannot be deported to Jordan because he would face torture there. The immigration judge also said Mr. Hamdan was not a flight risk because he has substantial family and community ties in Southern California. Yet he remains detained. Now ICE is refusing to allow reporters to interview Mr. Hamdan in the San Pedro detention center. Why?

For more information about the campaign to free Mr. Hamdan, contact:

Arab American Anti-Discrimination Committee ADC LA/OC Chapter mail@adclaoc.org (714) 535-1719