iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Abdullah al-Kidd Lawsuit: Feds Want Wrongful Arrest Suit From Terror-Related Case Thrown Out

By REBECCA BOONE 05/10/12 03:55 PM ET AP

Abdullah Alkidd
FILE - In a Feb. 14, 2011, file photo Abdullah al-Kidd, is interviewed in Los Angeles. Al-Kidd, a former University of Idaho football player, was arrested in 2003, strip-searched repeatedly and held for 16 days in high-security cells. Al-Kidd was never charged with a crime, but prosecutors wanted him to testify against Sami Omar Al-Hussayen, a man charged, but later cleared of charges that he provided material support to terrorists. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes, File)

BOISE, Idaho — A federal judge in Boise, Idaho is questioning the urgency that FBI agents felt when they arrested and detained an American Muslim under a law designed to ensure that witnesses show up to testify in court.

U.S. Magistrate Judge Mikel Williams questioned Department of Justice attorney Marcus Meeks during a hearing Thursday in a lawsuit brought by Abdullah al-Kidd against the federal government.

Al-Kidd, a U.S. citizen, sued former Attorney General John Ashcroft and other federal officials in 2005, after he was arrested and jailed as a material witness in a terrorism-related criminal case against another man. He contends his arrest was just a ruse to give the government time to investigate him for any potential wrongdoing. The federal government maintains its actions were constitutional.

The U.S. Supreme Court has already thrown out al-Kidd's claims against Ashcroft and a few other defendants, and al-Kidd has prevailed in a claim against one prison and settled his claims against two other lockups. Now FBI agents Michael Gneckow and Scott Mace and the Department of Justice are asking the judge to throw out al-Kidd's claims against them.

The case began in 2003, when a University of Idaho student and Saudi national Sami Omar al-Hussayen was arrested on terrorism-related charges. The FBI also interviewed al-Kidd, who was a football star at the university and who had done some computer work for al-Hussayen.

Al-Kidd said he cooperated with investigators and willingly talked to FBI agents whenever they approached him, but was never told he should remain in the country or that he would be expected to testify in al-Hussayen's trial. Instead, eight months after his last contact with investigators, he was arrested at Washington's Dulles International Airport as he was about to fly to Saudi Arabia on a scholarship to study Arabic and Islamic law. The arrest came less than a month before al-Hussayen's trial was scheduled to begin, although the trial ended up being delayed for more than year.

Al-Kidd said he was imprisoned for 16 days, repeatedly strip searched and at times left naked in a jail cell. He was never called to testify in al-Hussayen's trial.

He claims that Gneckow and Mace falsified information and left out important facts on an affidavit they used to get a judge to sign his arrest warrant, and that the United States falsely imprisoned him and abused his right to due process. The warrant didn't include the fact that al-Kidd was a U.S. citizen and was married, nor did it mention that he had cooperated with the FBI in the past. It also wrongly stated that he was flying to Saudi Arabia on a $5,000, first-class and one-way ticket. In reality, it was a round-trip coach class ticket with an open return date that cost $1,700.

"The affidavit makes it sound like Mr. al-Kidd is a Saudi national returning home with no intent of ever coming back," al-Kidd's attorney, Kate Desormeau told the judge.

Desormeau also took issue with the government's contention that they made the decision because they had no way to be sure that al-Kidd would comply with a subpoena.

"The government's argument uses words like, `There was no guarantee,'" al-Kidd's attorney Kate Desormeau told the judge. "But that gets it precisely backward. There must be an indication that a person will disobey a subpoena, not an assumption that the person will."

But Gneckow and Mace have countered that they were relying on the best information they had at the time, and that they are immune from the lawsuit because they were acting under the authority of a federal prosecutor. Gneckow's characterization of al-Kidd's plane ticket to Saudi Arabia was based on information given him by another FBI agent, Department of Justice attorney Marcus Meeks said.

Gneckow made a reasonable decision based on the information he had at the time and believed to be true, Meeks said.

"Here we have a situation that a witness for the government is going to leave the country, and there's no indication that he's going to come back, when he's going to come back," Meeks said.

The judge questioned whether it was reasonable for the government to assume that there was an immediate need to arrest al-Kidd as a witness, since trials are usually postponed for months.

"I don't think there's any prosecutor or defense attorney that would have thought that trial would have gone on in 30 days," Williams said. "In fact, it took 14 months ... That's one of the quandaries I have, just something based upon all of our experience."

The judge is not expected to rule Thursday.

Also on HuffPost:

FOLLOW CRIME

BOISE, Idaho — A federal judge in Boise, Idaho is questioning the urgency that FBI agents felt when they arrested and detained an American Muslim under a law designed to ensure that witnesses sh...
BOISE, Idaho — A federal judge in Boise, Idaho is questioning the urgency that FBI agents felt when they arrested and detained an American Muslim under a law designed to ensure that witnesses sh...
Filed by Kyle McGovern  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 43
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
07:06 AM on 05/13/2012
So be it, identify with the Muslim religion and culture and take what goes along with it. They love our Constittuion because it gives them the freedom they need to tear it down. And that is what they will do if they are allowed. But this same Constitution they use to their benefit, they actually despise. Look at it like this:

They are not happy! They're not happy in Gaza ...They're not happy in Egypt ...They're not happy in Libya ...They're not happy in Morocco ..They're not happy in Iran ..They're not happy in Iraq…They're not happy in Yemen ...They're not happy in Afghanistan ...They're not happy in Pakistan ...They're not happy in Syria ...They're not happy in Lebanon ... So, where are they happy? They're happy in Australia ..They're happy in England ...They're happy in France ...They're happy in Italy ...They're happy in Germany …They're happy in Sweden ...They're happy in the USA …They're happy in Norway…They're happy in Holland…They're happy in Denmark. Basically, they're happy in every country that is not Muslim and unhappy in every country that is, And who do they blame? Not Islam. Not their leadership. Not themselves. They blame the countries they are happy in. And THEN; They want to change those countries to be like The country they came from where they were unhappy! How ignorant can a group of people possibly be?
photo
Gregor53
Remembering your past gives power to the present.
01:05 PM on 05/13/2012
He is an American Citizen and deserves the same rights as others. The Constitution is suppose to ensure people of all races, creeds, color and sex are treated equally. The America you desire many people hate as it is not the America that lead the word in democracy and human rights. Talk about ignorant.
03:51 AM on 05/18/2012
To bad our Constitution doesn't tell us that we are allowed to make basic common sense decisions in regards to those rights when they are being inadvertantly threatened through those very rights that it gives us.  Of course, I'm sure they figured we would be able to figure that out and act accordingly. Clearly gave us more credit that is due. 
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tracee Collins
APATHY = COMPLICITY
07:13 AM on 05/14/2012
DITTO much??
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
loveis22984
ah wah wrong wi yah
05:52 AM on 05/13/2012
If they can do it to him, they can do it to any of us.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
davidb1959
Liberal With a SPINE
09:32 PM on 05/12/2012
Reading the comments I'm am even more saddened by the state of our affairs and more shamed by my fellow Americans than I have been in a long time. In the America I love there is dues process, a presumption of innocence and a right to trial. AS I read I see there are those who would step on the Constitution itself if it "SAVED ONE INNOCENT LIFE". Well if you think in those terms perhaps you should go back and learn what this country was founded on and what it's promise to it's citizens is. I think Ben Franklin said it best when he stated "They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety."
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
12:50 PM on 05/10/2012
Every criminal says they are innocent. It's all in the proof. Too bad some innocent go to jail and some criminals go free. A juror has a difficult job in sorting it all out, for sure. And then they are tied by some of the stupidest laws before they convict or set free.
wilsoncombatgrl
Ignorance is curable, but stupidity is forever!
12:13 PM on 05/10/2012
Would he have been treated the same way if he was a known associate of an Aryan nation zealot? Does his Muslim religion make him more suspect? Charge him or let him go...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sean Lucas
11:30 AM on 05/10/2012
You know what? They definitely did something wrong here. You know how I know that? An innocent man would say, "We did nothing wrong." These guys said, "We did nothing wrong, but even if we did, we should be immune from prosecution." If they were innocent, why would they even mention that?
photo
Roelvdwegen
Truth & Justice are Liberally biased
07:15 AM on 05/12/2012
Where exactly is that mentioned?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sean Lucas
02:07 PM on 05/12/2012
"But Gneckow and Mace have countered that they were relying on the best information they had at the time, and that they are immune from the lawsuit because they were acting under the authority of a federal prosecutor."

Okay, those weren't their exact words, but it was meant as more of a summary. But you're right, I probably shouldn't have put that in quotes.
10:56 AM on 05/10/2012
This government needs to do what ever they have to do to protect this country...if this individual was linked to a terrorist..then detain him.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mister Neutron
The most dangerous and terrifying man in the world
11:47 AM on 05/10/2012
You need to put the threat into perspective. Your chances of getting hit by a car while out for a walk or drowning while going for a swim are significantly higher than you being a victim of terrorism. Politicians are manipulating you with fear into giving them more power at the expense of our constitutional rights.
12:35 PM on 05/10/2012
I agree with your post but I have to add that the muslims have their own agenda and it is not in our best interest. They want to take over and all of us live by their law. Scary stuff.They have no qualms about killing any of us. You are probably right that it is unlikely that we as an individual will be a victim of terroism and the politicians do take advantage to gain power but after saying that we should never let them get the upper hand.and never think they are not a threat because they are. .
05:26 PM on 05/10/2012
You are more likely to be killed by a champagne cork than from terrorism.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mmunnich
11:48 AM on 05/10/2012
But who is going to protect us from those who are supposed to be protecting us?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
markspence
10:32 PM on 05/10/2012
That is a bit of a sticky wicket.
10:43 AM on 05/10/2012
Not the only story of unlawful detention. I heard of a student who was detained for no good reason, tortured, them returned to his family non-verbal and almost catatonic. And what is horrible is that those people have no recourse against the injustices heaped upon them!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
madcityy
10:38 AM on 05/10/2012
i am not sure i know what is going on here............do u??????????????