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  • Let Judges Be Judges 11/27/07
    12-15-2007 02:52:47
  • Terrorism in our courts
    02-09-2007 06:50:43
  • LA Times: Free speech prevails for the L.A. 8
    02-06-2007 03:30:48
  • Balancing Security and Civil Liberties
    11-30-2006 06:47:22
  • Civil Liberties: A cause worth fighting for
    11-30-2006 05:49:19
  • Wiretap mosques, Romney suggests, Pushes gathering of intelligence
    09-27-2005 10:43:23
  • The FBI Fails (For Now) to Grab Subpoena Powers
    09-27-2005 10:25:24
  • Lives of Worry, Sadness, 'Why?'
    07-01-2005 07:51:51
  • Drop the Case: The Washington Post Company, 2003
    06-29-2005 02:10:12
  • The New York Times : UNJUST DEPORTATIONS
    06-29-2005 02:08:43
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    Media
  • Free speech prevails for the L.A. 8
    12-16-2007 15:50:40
  • November 3, 2007 Editorial: End to a Shabby Prosecution
    12-15-2007 16:07:17
  • Editorial: Land of the Freed
    12-15-2007 15:00:26
  • Michel Shehadeh, Charges Dropped Against Last Of "Los Angeles Eight"
    12-15-2007 14:27:17
  • Aiad Barakat: An Immigrant's Lost Years
    02-23-2007 20:47:06
  • Various Major Editorials
    02-01-2007 15:49:03
  • ADC Press Release:Immigration Court Terminates "L.A. 8" Case; ADC Calls on Government to Drop 20-Year Old Case
    01-31-2007 18:46:56
  • Remembering the L.A. 8.The INS and Its Critics Take Lessons From a Relentles Pursuit of Immigrants
    09-28-2005 02:02:10
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    Legal Documents
  • Supreme Court Ruling 1999
    11-20-2006 06:56:35
  • Government's Pre-Trial Brief
    11-16-2006 03:36:43
  • Respondent's Response to the government Pre-Trial Brief
    11-16-2006 03:35:11
  • Judge Wilson Order 1989
    11-16-2006 03:29:36
  • Judge Wilson Order 1996
    11-16-2006 03:26:38
  • Motion To Terminat, July 13 2005
    11-16-2006 03:22:07
  • The McCarran-Walter Act:A Contradictory Legacy on Race, Quotas, and Ideology
    09-28-2005 03:47:54
  • Government's Pre-trial Brief February 2005
    08-19-2005 03:33:54
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    Media
    Published in: Washington Post
    Editorial: Land of the Freed ( 12-15-2007 15:00:26 )
    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/11/06/AR2007110602026.html


    Land of the Freed
    For two members of the 'Los Angeles Eight,' America finally acts to right a wrong.
    Wednesday, November 7, 2007; A20

    LAST WEEK, after almost 21 years, the U.S. government agreed to drop its case against Khader Hamide and Michel Shehadeh. The two men, who are of Palestinian descent, were permanent legal residents of the United States when they were targeted for deportation because of their alleged affiliation with a terrorist group. The government's evidence was so flimsy and its legal arguments so bizarre that many in the immigrants' rights, civil liberties and Arab American communities came to see the case as an overt act of hostility by the government toward people of Arab descent -- and understandably so.
    The saga began in 1987 when Mr. Hamide and Mr. Shehadeh, along with six others who came to be known as the Los Angeles Eight, were arrested and accused of supporting the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), an extremist offshoot of the Palestine Liberation Organization. The PFLP is, in fact, a loathsome group that relies on violence and terrorist tactics as strategic tools. The men had raised money for the group and distributed its magazine, although they consistently denied they were members and claimed to have donated money to fund the group's humanitarian work in assisting displaced Palestinians. Apparently the government recognized from the beginning that its case was weak, because it decided to try to deport the men under a Cold War-era law prohibiting membership in an international communist organization; the PFLP espoused Marxist ideology.
    The law, under fire from court challenges, was repealed in 1990. But that didn't stop the government, which in 2003 tried to remove the two men from the country by retroactively applying a law that did not exist in 1987. This law, which prohibits "material support" of a terrorist organization, was passed in 1996 -- almost a decade after the men were arrested.
    In dropping the case, the government conceded only that neither Mr. Hamide nor Mr. Shehadeh are "currently" believed to be dangerous. Yet in 20-plus years of federal court filings and immigration proceedings, prosecutors were unable to produce a shred of evidence to show that the men were a threat.
    Mr. Hamide and Mr. Shehadeh have lived lawfully in this country with their families for decades. Now that the case against them has been dropped, they will be allowed to apply for citizenship in three years. Both have said they will do so. It speaks volumes about these two men -- and, we'd like to hope, about the ideals of the United States that were violated in the execution of this case -- that Mr. Hamide and Mr. Shehadeh still wish to be bound as citizens to a country that has treated them so shabbily.

     
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