Posted on 11/01/2001 1:56:02 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
In 1995, after a suicide bombing operation carried out by Palestinian Islamic Jihad killed 21 Israeli soldiers, University of South Florida computer science professor Sami Al-Arian wrote a fund-raising letter in which he "call(s) upon you to try to extend true support to the jihad effort in Palestine so that operations such as these can continue." Many of Al-Arian's past statements and associations have raised suspicions that he was involved with terrorist organizations based in the Middle East. However, the fund-raising letter signed by al-Arian, shown during the Oct. 28 telecast of NBC's Dateline, is direct evidence of his active support for terrorism.
As usual, Al-Arian dismissed the story as old news and impugned the integrity of his critics. The videotapes and letters speak for themselves. When Al-Arian is seen and heard saying "let us damn America" and calling Jews "monkeys and pigs," no one needs to rely on his critics to interpret his remarks. And when he puts his signature on a letter soliciting funds for terrorist operations, his involvement isn't subject to misunderstanding.
Al-Arian claims he only "raised funds for the orphans" of suicide bombers. Please. It's no wonder he thinks he can get away with insulting people's intelligence. He has been playing his American hosts for fools for years, presenting a benign face to the general public while spewing the most hateful sort of venom in the company of fellow Islamic extremists.
The facade should have been stripped away years ago. Al-Arian founded the World and Islam Studies Enterprise at USF a decade ago. WISE sponsored events at USF and at other sites around the country, some of which featured radical Islamic speakers such as Sheik Omar Abdul Rahman, later convicted in connection with the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center. WISE was shut down in 1995 after one of Al-Arian's WISE associates, Ramadan Shallah, left USF and popped up in Syria as the new leader of Palestinian Islamic Jihad -- the same terrorist organization for which Al-Arian was soliciting funds that year. Al-Arian claimed at the time to be shocked to learn of Shallah's association with PIJ.
Al-Arian is entitled to his political views, and supervisors say he has competently performed his duties as a computer science professor. However, USF administrators never should have allowed the university to be affiliated with WISE under the leadership of Al-Arian, who has no academic credentials in Islamic studies.
A 1996 report for USF prepared by Tampa lawyer Wm. Reece Smith somehow managed to find "no evidence" that Al-Arian or WISE had supported terrorism. For better or worse, USF officials allowed Al-Arian to keep his job then, despite the embarrassment he brought to the university by misrepresenting WISE's activities. There is no evidence that Al-Arian has engaged in fund-raising for PIJ or any other terrorist group since WISE was shut down in 1995. Still, the embarrassment to the university hasn't ended. USF President Judy Genshaft put Al-Arian on paid administrative leave again last month because of campus safety concerns after Al-Arian made a controversial appearance on Fox News Channel's The O'Reilly Factor. The recent national attention, some of which he actively courted, has backfired on Al-Arian. He is still a legal resident of the country he damned, and he may yet return to lecture (though presumably not on Middle Eastern politics) at the university he embarrassed. But he'll never again get away with the pretense that his ugly support for terrorism has been misunderstood.
An affidavit and supporting court papers by a Customs Service special agent were used to justify warrants for searches of 11 residences and businesses in northern Virginia and a chicken processing plant in Georgia.
The agent, David Kane, contends targets of the requested searches moved huge sums through multilayered financial transactions and to accounts in banks on the Isle of Man, a tax haven in the English Channel.
From there, he surmised, the money must have been moved, but the island's tight bank secrecy laws had thwarted investigators.
He said he had probable cause to believe the reason that SAFA Charities existed was to hide the distribution of money to terror groups, principally Palestinian Islamic Jihad and Hamas, the Islamic resistance movement.
The affidavit was filed in March 2002.
Prominent in it was former University of South Florida professor Sami Al-Arian, accused by the government of being the North American head of Islamic Jihad.
He was indicted this year with seven others on charges they set up a terrorist cell at the university and funneled support to Islamic Jihad.
Kane described one series of transactions that had occurred in fall 2001, which he said was typical.
Based on records of First Union Bank, he said, the Sterling Charitable Gift Fund in northern Virginia deposited on Oct. 26, 2001, a check for $250,000 received from Mar-Jac Poultry of Gainesville, Ga.
Sterling transferred $100,000, from the same account, to SAAR Foundation, an affiliated Saudi organization, on Nov. 2, 2001. Sterling transferred another $150,000 by wire to SAAR Foundation on Nov. 29, 2001, he wrote.
This, Kane said, was "an example of an intra-SAFA Group money transfer and apparent `pass through' activity that I believe is conducted for the purpose of layering financial transactions and confusing any ostensible investigation."***
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