 |
|
FBI
agents refused to show their search warrants until the end of
the raids |
By
Ayesha Ahmad and Neveen A. Salem, IOL Washington correspondents
WASHINGTON,
March 21 (IslamOnline) - Federal agents raided homes and businesses
in Virginia and Georgia on Wednesday, March 20, many of them
Muslim-owned, bearing search warrants with information regarding
alleged fundraising for so-called "terrorist groups",
witnesses said.
The
International Institute of Islamic Thought (IIIT), based in Herndon,
Virginia, was raided at about 10 a.m., witnesses told IslamOnline.
Agents from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and other
federal law enforcement agencies entered the building and told staff
members to leave their desks without touching anything.
"We
were told to step out of our cubicles and offices and we were taken
to the library," said one staff member who wished to remain
anonymous. "We were like prisoners… we were watched all the
time," she added, explaining that staff members were escorted
to and from bathrooms. For the noon prayer, which is required of
Muslims, she said they were taken to the prayer room in groups of
six to pray.
The
staff member said that earlier that morning, agents from the
Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) were also present,
demanding documentation of the staff members' eligibility to work in
the United States and writing down information from their driver's
licenses and other documents.
One
of the first Muslim organizations created in the United States, IIIT
is an academic research institution with branch offices around the
world. It has no political activities, and serves as an Islamic
intellectual forum that promotes research, organizes meetings and
publishes scholarly works.
In
the afternoon, the agents prepared a camera to take pictures of
staff members, who refused to comply, the IIIT staff member said.
At
no time was the staff placed under arrest, but most were not allowed
to leave until later in the day. The staff member said that when
IIIT staff asked agents about calling an attorney, they were told
that if they were placed under arrest, they would have the right to
an attorney, but that they were not being arrested at the present
time.
The
IIIT staff remained in the library for most of the work day, and
agents brushed aside repeated requests to see the search warrant,
which the IIIT worker said was issued from the U.S. District Court
in Alexandria, Virginia - the same court in which September 11
suspect Zacarias Moussaoui and American Taliban John Walker Lindh
are being tried.
The
agents filmed the books held in the library as well as the
nameplates on the doors of offices in the building, she said.
Although
most of the agents were respectful, the staff member said, one of
them was exceptionally harsh, telling staff members to "shut
up" when they asked repeatedly about the warrant or about
contacting a lawyer.
This
particular agent threatened to take staff members to the INS if they
did not cooperate, the staff member said. However, "we are
citizens," she told IslamOnline. "Most of us are citizens
over there."
She
said that the agents seemed confused as to what they were telling
the IIIT staff; first, the staff was told that no one could leave
without getting a picture taken first, but then some were allowed to
leave. "They weren't communicating among themselves, each one
was acting in a different way," she said. "I left at 2:30,
I told them I had children to go to."
She
also described how two staff members - a white American and an
American-born Lebanese woman - were told they were free to go
because they were citizens, but other staff members were not allowed
to leave, despite their citizenship status. "They just
considered us foreigners, citizenship didn't matter," she said.
The
warrant was finally read to the staff, the IIIT employee said, in
the afternoon, just before she was allowed to leave around 2:30 p.m.
She said the warrant claimed the government was investigating IIIT
and a number of other groups for "providing funds to terrorist
organizations."
She
said the warrant began by describing the IIIT building - down to the
color of the bricks, the windows and the location - then listed the
organizations being raided, finally giving the reason for
investigation in the end.
Between
10 and 15 other organizations were listed on the warrant, the
witness said; news agencies reported that 14 search warrants were
issued for organizations in Northern Virginia and one in Georgia.
Of
the other 150 or so law enforcement officers involved in the raids,
aside from INS and FBI agents, others came from Customs, the
Internal Revenue Service (IRS), the Secret Service, the Bureau of
Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms and the U.S. Postal Service, as well
as local police officers. News agencies were unable to obtain
further information about the warrants.
A
number of homes were also raided, according to witnesses. One man
told a legal advisor with the American Arab Anti Discrimination
Committee (ADC) that several officers invaded his home claiming that
his family was "linked to Osama bin Laden and terrorism."
Attorney
Nawar Shora, who spoke to the victim, said the man and his family
were very disturbed and that his mother was still distraught over
the incident. The man is a U.S.-born citizen and a Muslim, yet his
home was raided by INS, IRS and SWAT (Special Weapons And Tactics)
officers, as well as local police.
"We
hope that this raid is not just another round up of Muslims,"
Shora said. "I would like to believe that the four homes that
were hit today were not raided purely because they were Muslim
homes."
ADC
has contacted the Justice Department and is still waiting to hear
back regarding the incidents.
