August 21, 2006
Op-Ed Columnist
The Truth Puts You in Jail
By BOB HERBERT
http://select.nytimes.com/2006/08/21/opinion/21herbert.html

The problem with the way the United States government
dealt with
Abdallah Higazy had nothing to do with the fact that
he was
investigated as a possible participant in the Sept. 11
attack on the
World Trade Center.

He was caught in a set of circumstances that was
highly suspicious,
to say the least. It would have been criminal not to
have
investigated him.

On the morning of the attack, Mr. Higazy, the son of a
former
Egyptian diplomat, was in his room on the 51st floor
of the Millenium
Hilton Hotel, which was across the street from the
twin towers. He
fled the hotel, along with all the other guests, after
the attack.
But a Hilton security guard said he found an aviation
radio, which
could be used to communicate with airborne pilots, in
the safe in Mr.
Higazy’s room.

When Mr. Higazy returned to the hotel three months
later to pick up
his belongings, he was arrested by the F.B.I. as a
material witness
and thrown into solitary confinement. Federal
investigators were
understandably suspicious, but they had no evidence at
all that Mr.
Higazy was involved in the terror attack.

And that’s where the government went wrong. In the
United States, a
free and open society committed to the rule of law,
you are not
supposed to lock people up — deprive them of their
liberty — on mere
suspicion.

The government could not link Mr. Higazy to the
attack, and yet there
he was, trembling in a jail cell, with no reasonable
chance of
proving that he was innocent.

This was cruel. It was unusual. And it was a blatant
abuse of the
material witness statute. People arrested as material
witnesses are
supposed to be just that — witnesses — not criminal
suspects. (The
witnesses are taken into custody when there is some
doubt as to
whether their testimony can otherwise be secured.)

When a person is actually arrested for a crime, the
government has
certain important obligations, including the
obligation to provide a
prompt arraignment and to demonstrate that there is
probable cause
that the suspect had committed the offense.

Mr. Higazy was held as a material witness while
investigators
searched for something to pin on him.

Court records show that eventually Mr. Higazy was
coerced into saying
that the radio was his by an F.B.I. agent who knew
that if he didn’t
elicit some kind of admission from the suspect, a
judge would most
likely set him free. Mr. Higazy said the agent made
threats regarding
his relatives back in Cairo, saying they would be put
at the mercy of
Egyptian security, which has a reputation for engaging
in torture.

Mr. Higazy’s admission was not truthful, but that
didn’t matter. The
feds were happy to finally be able to accuse him of a
crime. They
charged him with lying to federal agents when he said
the radio
wasn’t his.

The case against Mr. Higazy fell completely apart when
a pilot, an
American, walked serendipitously into the Millenium
Hilton, looking
for the aviation radio he had left behind on Sept. 11.
(It also
turned out that the security guard had lied.) Mr.
Higazy’s original
story, which he had clung to as long as he felt he
could, had been
truthful. He was set free.

It’s scary to think about what might have happened to
Mr. Higazy if
the pilot hadn’t shown up to claim his radio.

What the government ignored in Mr. Higazy’s case and
in so many other
cases linked to the so-called war on terror, is that
when it comes to
throwing people in jail, a hunch is not enough. As
Jonathan Abady, a
lawyer for Mr. Higazy, said:

“The criminal justice system recognizes that before
you deprive
somebody of liberty in any significant way, you have
to have some
quantum of proof that they committed a crime, and the
government
didn’t have it in this case. What they had was a
suspicion.”

Once we had voodoo economics. Now, in the age of
terror, we have
voodoo law enforcement. Mr. Higazy’s case is far from
the most
egregious. People have disappeared. People have been
sent off to
foreign lands to be tortured. People have been
condemned to secret
dungeons run by the C.I.A. People have been put away
at Guantánamo
Bay, Cuba, with no hope of being allowed to prove
their innocence.

For five years now Americans have been chasing ghosts
and shadows,
and demanding that they confess to terrorizing us.
Who’s terrorizing
whom here?

We need to ask ourselves: Do we want a just society?
Or are we
willing to trade that revolutionary idea for a
repressive government
that gives us nothing more than the illusion of
safety?




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