SEARCH: CBSNews.com The Web
CBSNews.com
   ET

Section Front
E-mail This StoryE-mail This Story  Printable VersionPrintable Version

Muslim Cleric's Case Takes A New Turn

PORTLAND, Oregon, Sept. 23, 2002


Members of the Portland Muslim community gather outside the Federal courthouse awaiting Kariye's arraignment. (Photo: AP)



Public records show Kariye was affiliated in 1992 with a Muslim charity, Global Relief Foundation, that was later investigated for ties to Al Qaeda. A lawyer for the charity denies it was used to funnel money to terrorism.

A Portland police officer guards the building as as FBI agents search the apartment of Sheik Mohamed Abdirahman Kariye earlier this month. (Photo: AP)


(AP) Tests that found explosive residue on the bags of a Muslim cleric arrested at Portland International Airport have been reviewed at an FBI crime lab, and thrown out, the man's lawyer said.

Stanley Cohen, a New York civil rights attorney who took the case of Sheik Mohamed Abdirahman Kariye, said the FBI tests showed the bags were free of explosives.

Cohen said he is negotiating with prosecutors to release Kariye pending trial.

"I'm talking to the government about a bail package," Cohen said. If that doesn't happen, he said, the defense would request another detention hearing.

Kariye, who served as an imam at the Islamic Center in Portland, was arrested Sept. 8 at Portland International Airport as he tried to board a flight to the United Arab Emirates.

He was charged with Social Security fraud dating from 1983 to 1995 and has pleaded not guilty. But at a detention hearing Sept. 10, assistant U.S. attorney Charles Gorder cited the tests in arguing Kariye should be held in jail until trial.

The case is one of scores around the country of Muslim men held on charges unrelated to terrorism, although they were arrested by federal agents or members of a terrorism task force.

Cohen, a New York-based civil rights lawyer who took Kariye's case over the weekend, said the FBI sent a letter explaining the negative test results to U.S. District Judge Donald Ashmanskas on Wednesday.

FBI spokesman Beth Anne Steele declined to discuss the test results Sunday and referred questions to the U.S. Attorney's Office. Phone messages left there were not returned.

At a Sept. 10 detention hearing, Robert Ramos, a senior inspector for the U.S. Customs Service, testified that two bags carried by Kariye's party tested positive for explosives residue.

Ramos added that he had tested hundreds of bags, and Kariye's was the first to test positive for explosives.

Residue collected from a third bag tested positive for cocaine, but a second test on the bag turned up negative for cocaine, Ramos testified.

Cohen said he may argue the residue test used at the airport is faulty.

Cohen spoke about Kariye's case Saturday at a gathering of about 200 Muslims, many in skull caps and sporting bushy beards. To cheers and applause, he advised the Portland crowd not to cooperate with law enforcement in the terror probe unless they have a lawyer present.

He urged them to fight back "in an appropriate and lawful manner."

Police have not said they suspect Kariye of terror-related offenses, other than to say that he was detained by the FBI-led Joint Terrorism Task Force. Kariye's supporters question why the task force was even involved, because Kariye has only been charged with Social Security fraud.

Searches of public records show Kariye was affiliated in 1992 with a Chicago-area Muslim charity, Global Relief Foundation, that was later investigated for ties to Al Qaeda. A lawyer for the charity denied it was used to funnel money to terrorism, and said Kariye's name does not appear on charity documents after 1992.


By Andrew Kramer © MMII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
INSIDE War On Terror
U.S. Intel: Qaeda Plotting 'Big Bang'
CBS News Reports Major Terror Attack Planned For Iraq

Key GOP Lawmaker Blasts Ports Deal
Senate Resoundingly Renews Patriot Act
Judge Questions Gitmo Force-Feeding
• More
TOP STORIES
Tight Security Greets Bush In Pakistan
Air Force One Lands At Pakistani Airbase After Dark With Lights Off

Settlement Ends BlackBerry Patent Suit
'Cell Phone Bandit' Gets 12 Years
Day Of Calm In Baghdad
• More

Back to Top Back To Top


Help  |  Advertise | Contact Us  |  Terms of Service  |  Privacy Policy  |  CBS News Bios  |  CBS.com  |  CBS SportsLine.com  |  Internships
©MMV, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved.


War On TerrorWar On Terror
Iraq After SaddamIraq After Saddam

Sept. 11 And Since
Enter
Chart the sequence of events on Sept. 11 and look back on the challenging days that followed.

Sept. 11 Investigation
Enter
Al Qaeda arrests, the FBI's most wanted, military tribunals and a look inside Gitmo.

Bin Laden & Al Qaeda
Enter
Where al Qaeda operates, who's been caught, how they're financed and a timeline of attacks on Americans.

Story StoryGo

'Lackawanna Six' Plead Not Guilty
Story StoryGo

Civil Liberties -- Post-9/11
Story StoryGo

Lackawanna 6 Face Hearing
Story StoryGo

Bin Laden Family Passports Found
Story StoryGo

Karzai: I'm No U.S. Puppet
Story StoryGo

Bin Laden's Big Shots?
Story StoryGo

Trained In Tools Of Terror?
Story StoryGo

U.S. Arrests Al Qaeda Cell In NY
Story StoryGo

Suspected Al Qaeda Killed In Pakistan




Sign up: E-Mail Alerts

RSS Feeds

Podcasts