The FBI’s Threat of Torture
by
James Bovard
by James Bovard
DIGG THIS
A federal appeals
court has concluded that an FBI agent must go to trial on charges
he coerced a false confession out of a prime suspect in the 9/11
attacks. But the FBI still insists that its agent did nothing wrong.
And the feds swayed the court to suppress that portion of a recent
decision detailing how the FBI agent used the threat of torture
to break an innocent man.
Abdallah Higazy,
a 30-year-old Egyptian student, arrived in New York City to study
engineering at the Polytechnic University in Brooklyn on August
27, 2001. A U.S. foreign-aid program reserved and paid for his room
at the Millennium Hilton Hotel, next to the World Trade Center.
After the first plane crashed into the World Trade Center, Higazy
hot-footed it out of the hotel. After the terrorist attack, the
hotel was sealed.
Three months
later, guests were allowed to retrieve their belongings. When Higazy
went to the hotel on December 17, he was arrested and accused of
possessing an aviation radio. (A hotel security guard reported finding
the radio in a safe in his room.) Higazy denied owning the radio.
He was arrested as a material witness and locked up in solitary
confinement.
Higazy wanted
to clear his name so he agreed to take a polygraph test. FBI agent
Michael Templeton wired him up for the test but then proceeded to
browbeat him for three hours until he finally admitted to owning
the radio. Higazy said the FBI agent warned him, If you dont
cooperate with us, the FBI will ... make sure Egyptian security
gives your family hell. The FBI refused to permit Higazys
attorney, Robert Dunn, to be in the room while he was given the
polygraph. After the interrogation, Higazy was trembling and
sobbing uncontrollably, according to Dunn.
On January
11, 2002, Higazy was indicted for lying to a federal agent. U.S.
Attorney Dan Himmelfarb declaimed that the crime that was
being investigated when the false statements [about the radio] were
made is perhaps the most serious in the countrys history.
A radio that can be used for air-to-air and air-to-ground communication
is a significant part of that investigation. The Washington
Post noted that federal officials paraded [Higazy] before
the media as a terrorist. The feds never bothered checking
with the U.S. foreign-aid program to find out whether Higazys
story about why he was staying at the hotel next to the World Trade
Center was true.
The prosecutorial
celebration flopped three days later when an American pilot showed
up at the Millennium Hilton Hotel and asked for the aviation radio
he had left in his room when the hotel was evacuated on 9/11. It
soon became apparent that the hotel security guard (a former cop
who had been fired by the Newark Police Department) had lied about
finding the radio in Higazys room. The case collapsed and,
a few days later, Higazy was awarded $3 for subway fare and released
from jail. The FBI conducted an internal investigation and absolved
Templeton of any wrongdoing.
In
late 2002 Higazy sued, asserting that the FBIs coercive interrogation
violated his Fifth Amendment rights against self-incrimination.
Federal judge Naomi Buchwald dismissed his case, declaring, [Agent]
Templetons conduct and threats as a matter of law cannot be
classified as conscience-shocking or constitutionally oppressive.
Perhaps Buchwald believed that as long as Higazys mother and
sister were not brutalized in front of him during the interrogation,
the FBI had done nothing wrong.
A federal appeals
court overturned this decision on October 19, declaring that Higazys
case deserved to go to trial. The original version of the decision
detailed the tactics Templeton purportedly used to get Higazys
confession. Two hours later, the court removed that portion of the
decision from the Internet. The redacted portion of the decision
(captured by bloggers before it was taken down) noted that the FBI
agent admitted to knowing that Egyptian laws are different
than ours, that they are probably allowed to do things in that country
... yeah, probably about torture, sure. Thus, Templeton was
aware that his threat would terrify Higazy.
The
revised court decision replaced such key details with the following
mundane notice: For the purposes of the summary judgment motion,
Templeton did not contest that Higazys statements were coerced.
The FBI has
long taught its agents that subjects of their investigation have
forfeited their right to the truth, according to the
ethics study guide at the FBI Academy. Perhaps, according to federal
lawmen, it is a small step from lying to suspects to threatening
to have their kinfolk tortured. The agency has done nothing in the
nearly six years since this case began to indicate that the methods
used in the Higazy case did not receive the full approval of FBI
headquarters.
The
initial Higazy arrest and release were landmarks showing how far
feds would go to gin up evidence and headlines for the war on terror.
The fact that the FBI approved of its agents methods
and the fact that a federal judge saw no problem with the interrogation
are further warning signs of constitutional decay. Keep your
eyes on this case, because it could help determine how far feds
can go to destroy innocent people.
October
27, 2007
James Bovard
[send him mail] is the author
of the just-released Attention
Deficit Democracy, The
Bush Betrayal, and Terrorism
& Tyranny: Trampling Freedom, Justice, and Peace to Rid the
World of Evil. He serves as a policy advisor for The
Future of Freedom Foundation. Visit his
website.
Copyright
© 2007 The Future of Freedom Foundation
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