http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/GB17Ak02.html
Feb 17, 2005

A letter to America
By Kaveh L Afrasiabi

President George W Bush recently sent a message to the Iranian people, 
promising to support them "as you stand for your own liberty". I would like 
to take up the promise, since my human and civil rights in America have been 
seriously trampled on, yet the legal system has turned a blind eye to my cry 
for justice.

It is a fair request, I assume, that America delivers at home first before 
trying to "spread liberty around the world", to paraphrase a New York Times 
headline after Bush's recent inaugural address, otherwise I am afraid the 
labels of hypocrisy and double standards may stick. Unfortunately, 
revisiting in my head the sad spectacle of the justice system in America 
like a horror movie, I am inclined to believe that it's mostly just ice, 
floating feebly above a glacier of might.

Of might and rights. How can I summarize in a letter the ordeal of a 
decade-long battle with the mighty Harvard University, some seven years of 
it in various state and federal courts, all the way up to the US Supreme 
Court, knowing that I was naive all along to think that there is actually 
justice in America.

"The cannons of Harvard are lined up against a pea shooter," said one of my 
supporters in court, veteran CBS correspondent Mike Wallace, adding, "I 
admire Afrasiabi. I think he is an honorable man, and he is innocent enough 
to think that he can prevail over the resources of Harvard." That was on day 
three of a jury trial in the (civil rights) case of Afrasiabi versus Harvard 
University, et al, in January 1999, when I represented myself against six 
Harvard attorneys. Some, like my dear friend and mentor, historian Howard 
Zinn, who testified as my character witness on day one of the 10-day trial, 
called it a "David and Goliath" battle, and the Boston Globe dubbed it "the 
Harvard battle".

After my losing the asymmetrical battle, Professor Noam Chomsky wrote, "I am 
very sorry to hear about the unfairness in court. But I am not surprised. A 
shameful chapter in American history, and one its most renowned 
institutions." Chomsky's sentiment was shared by a number of other 
luminaries who sided with me in my quest for justice, including the famed 
playwright/filmmaker David Mamet, who was so disgusted by Harvard's 
mistreatment of me and their brazen manipulation of the court system that he 
wrote an article for Harper's Magazine, which they censored at the last 
minute, as one of their editors turned out to be a Harvardite.

Another Harvardite, Allan Dershowitz, who is a law professor there, met me 
at his office on three occasions per the suggestion of Mamet, his close 
friend, and once after reviewing the evidence - of false arrest and 
imprisonment on fabricated charges by Harvard police aimed at silencing my 
criticisms of a Harvard professor named Roy Mottahedeh, against whom I had 
complained to the Ethics Committee of Middle East Studies Association and 
threatened to file a lawsuit because he had maliciously defamed me in the 
academia - Dershowitz picked up the telephone and called Harvard's general 
counsel and expressed his concerns about my situation, urging them to remedy 
their wrongful conduct.
Unfortunately, that was as far as Dershowitz was willing to go, and he 
reneged on his promise to represent me in the federal appeals court, which 
denied my appeals two years later, thus forcing me to cast my hopeful stare 
at the court of last resort, the United States Supreme Court, still 
confident that justice would prevail at last, that there would be a light at 
the end of this arduous, and difficult tunnel.

Sour grapes of memory: the honorable chief justice of the US District Court 
in Massachusetts, Joseph Tauro, preferred to recuse himself from my case 
exactly one hour after the deadline he had set for Harvard to produce 
certain documents (about Shobhana Rana, the patsy they had used to cry foul 
against me and who subsequently failed to appear in court even though named 
as defendant) or face judgment. I recall when the judge's secretary called 
and asked for my fax number that particular day, I was brimming with joy, 
thinking that justice has prevailed over might. Indeed, how innocent and 
naive of me. But, surely, the US Supreme Court had to be held to higher 
standards, right?

Initially, when a single justice of the High Court allowed my writ of 
certiorari and dispatched my appeal to the whole chamber, I thought there 
was occasion for a small celebration. "You have already made legal history 
Kaveh," Zinn told me, letting me know that the chances of having my case 
heard by the nine justices was as good as winning a lottery, adding, 
however, that he was skeptical they would make a verdict against the 
"sacred" institution, especially in the volatile post-September 11 climate.

Zinn's premonitions turned out to be on the mark and on March 23, 2003 the 
court denied my appeal, thus bringing to an unhappy closure my relentless 
quest for justice which had commenced in early 1996, after the charges, of 
death threat and extortion, brought against me by two subordinates of 
Professor Mottahedeh, were dropped. Having suffered the pain of a pre-dawn 
arrest at my home in January 1996, by Harvard police who trumpeted it as a 
great triumph in the local media, claiming that "there was serious threat to 
kill", "it was a case of cloak and dagger", that the "investigation took 
several months because the suspect had several address and aliases", and so 
on, without once mentioning that I was a former post-doctoral scholar at 
Harvard (at the Center for Middle East Studies) or that I was a university 
professor (at the University of Massachusetts teaching courses on American 
domestic and foreign policy); little did they, especially the Harvard 
detectives leading the cause against me, expect that soon they would all 
stand trial as defendants accused of masterminding a conspiracy to bring 
fictitious charges against me.

On that particular cold wintry day, they were all broad smiles when they 
booked me at their headquarters. I would later learn that they did not even 
have the proper jurisdiction to investigate the "crimes" which per their own 
police report had transpired in the streets of Cambridge, that they were 
nothing more than a private mercenary force without the slightest public 
scrutiny in the service of powers that be.

But at least the Boston Globe got it partially right: the next morning they 
ran a "news brief" headlined: "Iranian professor charged with extortion". 
Funny thing, two months later, when I was cleared of all the charges, the 
Boston Globe, which had published four oped articles by me over the years, 
demoted me to student, running a brief that read: "Charges against Iranian 
student dropped." So much for media objectivity. In fact, the subsequent 
Boston Globe's coverage of the jury trial turned out so biased and erroneous 
that I was compelled to file a lawsuit against them, and dropped it only 
after they agreed to write a "correction" about their reports, eg, that the 
"victim" had identified my photo - six months later. Better late than never 
I suppose. But no matter how hard I tried, they refused to publish the fact 
that the federal judge had reversed himself on key evidence, supported by 
two forensic experts, that a Harvard detective's handwriting matched the 
handwriting of the alleged "extortionist". That would have been staining the 
justice system, and Harvard, too much, nothing the ruling establishment, 
turning the enlightened Commonwealth of Massachusetts in effect into a 
commonwealth of fear, could possibly tolerate.

It would take a voluminous book to cover all that transpired in this legal 
bout, and my purpose is not at all to knock down the much-cherished Harvard. 
How could I? After all, I am published by both Harvard University Press (ie, 
chapter in Islam and Ecology, 2003) as well as the Harvard Theological 
Review, this, ironically, despite the fact that since the day I was 
exonerated I have been banned from Harvard, threatened to be subject to 
arrest if I ever enter any Harvard property. I was informed of this matter 
through a letter expressed to me by the chief of police of Harvard 
University, stating that "after consultation with the general counsel's 
office" they had decided to ban me - not just from the campus either, since 
Harvard practically owns half the city of Cambridge.

"Why Am I Banned?" That was the topic of my response in Harvard Crimson, 
requesting a formal apology instead. There would be none forthcoming, 
however, and after a failed mediation, when Harvard's attorneys turned a 
blind eye to my long list of academic, financial and other backlashes as a 
result of my false arrest, I saw no alternative but to commence legal action 
in both federal and state courts.

Speaking of backlashes, the list is actually too long to enumerate in 
detail. Suffice to say that I lost my teaching position, my publisher at 
Westview sent me a one-liner a week after the arrest informing me that my 
newly-published book was now "out of stock", and another publisher, 
University of Texas Press, would similarly inform me that my manuscript, on 
state and populism in the Middle East, which they had consented to publish 
after two highly positive reactions by their readers, was rejected.

And I remember attending the annual conference of the Middle East Studies 
Association in Providence, Rhode Island, shortly thereafter and being 
shunned by practically all my "colleagues", including the historian, Ervand 
Abrahamian, whose blurb on the back of my book on Iran's foreign policy 
read: "A must read for both policymakers and academics alike." Another 
Iranian academic, who is the president of this association, psychology 
professor Ali Banu Azizi, was a member of the Ethics Committee and had voted 
to deny my complaint from full consideration by the committee, a fact denied 
by him when I took his video deposition in 1998.

And then there was the ordeal of litigating my (defamation and civil rights) 
cases, involving a few dozen hearings, some 700 briefs and motions, 
extensive trial preparations, and the deposition of 16 witnesses, including 
Professor Mottahedeh and his two subordinates (who left the US shortly 
after), several Harvard police, as well as Mike Wallace, who granted to be 
on videotape after sending a letter (image below) to my federal judge that 
read:
Dear Judge Tauro:
I am writing you at the suggestion of Dr Kaveh Afrasiabi. Dr Afrasiabi 
served as a consultant to me on matters dealing with Iran, beginning in 
March of 1990. I had called him after reading a letter he had written to the 
New York Times on the subject of Iran.
After that, he cooperated with me in preparation for a program on author 
Salman Rushdie, object of a fatwa by the Ayatollah [Ruhollah] Khomeini; he 
also attended two meetings I had with Andrew Wylie, Mr Rushdie's literary 
agent.
At the time I dealt with him it was my understanding that he was a 
post-doctoral fellow at Harvard University, so I was brought up short when I 
heard from Professor Roy Mottahedeh of Harvard that Afrasiabi had never been 
a post-doctoral fellow at the university. That assertion shook my confidence 
in Dr Afrasiabi and led me to stop asking for his counsel on things Iranian.
Only later did I learn that Dr Afrasiabi had been in fact a post-doctoral 
fellow at Harvard. Since that time he has kept me informed of his various 
scholarly activities and it is apparent to me that he is held in high regard 
by various Middle Eastern Islamic scholars.

Respectfully Yours,
Mike Wallace
Correspondent, Co-Producer
60 Minutes, CBS

After losing my job, which inevitably contributed to the breakdown of my 
marriage and turning into an academic pariah, I enrolled as a theology 
student at Andover-Newton Theological School and as a result was able to 
write an article on post-modern Christian theology, titled "Communicative 
Theory and Theology: A Reconsideration" for the Harvard Theological Review, 
which was reviewed by a Harvard divinity professor as "a major contribution 
to the theological discussions" on the relevance of Habermasian critical 
theory to theology. I must confess that it was, and still is, somewhat 
gratifying that I was able to circumvent the "no trespass" order 
intellectually, by entering the intellectual domain of Harvard even though I 
was, and still am, banned from it physically.

At one point, at a pre-trial hearing in 1998, the federal judge proposed a 
formula to settle the lawsuit. He recommended that Harvard cover all my 
legal expenses, running into well over US$100,000 by then, and compensate me 
another $300,000 as well as give me a two-year stipend research position at 
Harvard in order to regain my academic status. Harvard's attorneys agreed in 
front of Professor Zinn and some 10 to 12 other academics who had come to 
court in expression of support for me, and I remember Zinn approaching the 
judge and asking the judge if I had to give my reply right then and the 
judge said no, that I could think about it and give my answer in writing, 
which I did a few days later, agreeing to his rather paltry proposal.

Sadly, Harvard changed its mind and I was told that there would be no 
monetary compensation or position at Harvard, much to the chagrin of 
Wallace, who had spared no criticisms of Harvard's mistreatment of me in his 
in-court testimony. Per the official transcript of Wallace's testimony, he 
reiterated the content of his letter reproduced above, called Mottahedeh a 
"pathetic, schizophrenic liar" and urged Harvard to settle with me.

One main reason, it now turns out, why Harvard was disinclined to settle out 
of court with me was because their general counsel, Margaret Marshall, wife 
of New York Times columnist Tony Lewis, had been slated for an important 
judgeship in the Massachusetts supreme judicial court, and she obviously had 
to be cleared of the slightest wrongdoing. Marshall was in fact the first 
witness I called on the stands at the opening day of trial and she defaulted 
the subpoena to testify, a fact I brought to the attention of the commission 
conducting open hearings about Marshall's subsequent nomination for the 
chief justice of the same court. In her defense, before the glaring 
limelight of dozens of cameras in Massachusetts State House, judge Marshall 
claimed that her motion to "quash the subpoena" had been granted, and that 
was a lie that I exposed to the local media, when I proved to them that the 
judge had made no such ruling and that Marshall's failure to testify was 
contrary to the law.

"What do you want me to do? Send marshals to bring a sitting judge here in 
handcuffs? You think I could walk in this town if I ever did that?" Judge 
Harrington thundered at me at the sidebar when I complained that Marshall 
had defaulted the subpoena to testify. But, that was the judge's least 
shortcoming, allowing a double standard, and his reversal on the handwriting 
evidence and several other evidence damaging the defense were rather 
egregious, in fact so egregious that in my 120 page appeals brief, backed by 
hundreds of case laws and legal authorities, I was supremely confident that 
the judge's faulty rulings would be reversed and I would be entitled to a 
new trial.

Well, it wasn't to be. But at least I got a dose of "fair trial" in the 
federal court, compared to the state court, led by a Harvard-graduate judge 
who, per his own admission, sat at two oversight committees at Harvard, and 
who threw out my case on the day set for jury trial, this after reversing 
himself on all the evidentiary rulings of a mere nine days earlier. "A judge 
is entitled to change his mind Mr Afrasiabi," the judge told me sternly when 
I objected to his sudden turnabout after he had given us instructions on how 
to conduct the jury selection (with the pool of jurors waiting in the next 
room). This miscarriage of justice called for a complaint to the Judicial 
Conduct Commission, since I was sure they would agree with me that due to 
the conflict of interests the judge should have recused himself from the 
case; in fact, I was so upset by this injustice that I placed an 
announcement in the main section of the New York Times announcing my 
complaint against Judge Hillar B Zobel to the said commission. And I sent a 
complementary copy of the paper to the judge for his "personal record".

A final note, and that is, I hope that this letter serves to shed a little 
more light on the sad state of civil rights in America today by recounting a 
bitter experience of academic intolerance and police repression that 
pre-dated September 11 by a few years and, hopefully, draws us closer to the 
need to be on guard in protecting our cherished human rights everywhere.

Kaveh L Afrasiabi, PhD, is the author of After Khomeini: New Directions in 
Iran's Foreign Policy (Westview Press) and "Iran's Foreign Policy Since 
9/11", Brown's Journal of World Affairs, co-authored with former deputy 
foreign minister Abbas Maleki, No 2, 2003, and contributor to Mediterannean 
Quarterly. He teaches political science at Tehran University. He is the 
founder of a United Nations-related non-governmental organization, Global 
Interfaith Peace, and has been a consultant to both ABC News and CBS News, 
both of them in the past couple of years.

(Copyright 2005 Asia Times Online Ltd. All rights reserved. Please contact 
us for information on sales, syndication and republishing.)

















 



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