TESTIMONY
OF ALI AL-MAQTARI
BEFORE THE COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY
OF THE UNITED STATES SENATE
DECEMBER 4, 2001
Senators, Mr. Chairman, I want to thank you very much
for letting me testify before your committee today. My
name is Ali Al-Maqtari, and I want to tell you the story
of how I was jailed by the INS for almost eight weeks.
Thanks to the fairness of your immigration court and
appeal system, and the hard work of my wife, Tiffinay,
and my attorneys, my story has a good ending. However,
even though I did nothing wrong, and cooperated with the
INS, FBI, and Army in every way possible, I spent many
weeks in harsh jail conditions, cut off from my wife, and
my wife had to give up her army career. I tell you my
story in the hope that it will help other innocent people
avoid the problems that I had.
I came to the United States in June 2000 for a long
visit. I had just spent a year in France where I had
completed a diploma as a teacher of French. Before going
to France, I had worked as a French teacher at the Kuwait
High School in Sana'a, Yemen for several years. I
graduated from Sana'a University with a degree in French
in June 1997.
I have an uncle, who is a U.S. citizen, who lives in
Brooklyn, New York, with his family. Visiting my uncle
and his family was my first goal on my trip, but I also
wanted to see what the United States was like and improve
my English. I also hoped that perhaps I would have an
opportunity to student teach or teach French. Gaining
this experience in the United States would be something
that would really help my career as a teacher in Yemen,
because American education is highly-respected in my
country.
I spent about a month in New York, visiting my Uncle's
family and sightseeing. I liked it very much. My uncle
has a close friend - so close to our family that I call
him "uncle" too, even though he is not actually
a member of our family, who lives in New Haven
Connecticut. My uncle urged me strongly to visit him. I
did, and the visit worked out very well. My
"uncle" owned a small market and had a second
apartment where several young men lived. It was easy for
me to stay there without inconveniencing him or his
family. I was able to attend English classes at a local
adult education center, and I helped out at the market.
Although I was not paid a salary, my "uncle"
gave me money for my expenses, and I bought a computer
that a customer of the store was selling. I discovered
the internet, and this helped improve both my English and
French. I was really enjoying my visit, and I wanted to
extend it. A friendly woman, who was a mentor to many of
the students at the adult education center, helped me by
filling out the INS application to ask for a longer
visit, and I sent it in to the INS in Vermont.
In my first few months in New Haven, I also made contacts
about student teaching or teaching French. I visited Kay
Hill, the language coordinator of the New Haven Public
Schools several times. She invited me to visit several
schools in New Haven and gave me advice about taking the
TOEFL test and studying here. Later on, in May or June
2001 I had my degrees evaluated and applied for admission
to a language teaching program at Southern Connecticut
State University in New Haven, which accepted me.
However, the most important thing which happened to me in
the United States, is that I met my wife, Tiffinay. We
first met in a French language internet chat room in
March or April 2000. Tiffinay also speaks French well.
Like me, she has studied in France. We met only once in
the chat room. We traded email addresses and began to
exchange emails. Then we spoke by telephone.
Because we speak French, we were able to communicate
well. My wife had previously become a Muslim, and this
was something else that we shared and was important to
us. It continues to be now, as we share the holy month of
Ramadan. In May 2001, Tiffinay invited me to visit her in
North Carolina. I stayed with her and her parents, and
invited her to visit me in Connecticut. She did this very
quickly, and this showed me that her intentions were
serious. We decided to get married and were married in
Hamden, CT on June 1, 2001. Neither of us is in favor of
extended social dating or living together before
marriage. We wanted to marry and begin our life together.
This is common for Muslims. My own parents met only a day
before their wedding and have been happy for many years.
After our marriage, Tiffinay moved to New Haven, and we
rented our own apartment. At first, we thought that both
of us would get jobs in New Haven, and Tiffinay would
transfer from the North Carolina National Guard to the
one in Connecticut. (I didn't really know exactly what
the National Guard was. Tiffinay explained to me that it
was like the part-time army.) We went to an attorney to
begin work on a marriage application to allow me to stay
here. She told us to write to the INS to withdraw my
request to extend my tourist visit, because I now planned
to live here, not just to visit. We did this in early
July.
Because of delays with transferring Tiffinay's National
Guard membership from North Carolina to Connecticut, she
thought that it would be best if she enrolled in the
full-time army. I agreed. This would mean living in
another part of the country further away from my uncle
and his family, but we are young, and I wanted to respect
Tiffinay's decision. In August, we learned that Tiffinay
would be in the army at Fort Campbell, Kentucky for a
long time, for up to three years, starting in the middle
of September, and we made plans to move there. We also
filed our marriage application with the INS.
On September 12, the local Army recruiting office called
Tiffinay to let her know that the recruiting center in
Springfield, Massachusetts where she was to pick up her
final orders was closed, but that she should go there on
September 13 to pick up her orders. When we went there, a
sergeant at the recruiting center spoke to each of us
separately about Tiffinay not wearing a hejab - the head
scarf that many Muslim women wear. . He was not
unfriendly to either of us. We explained to him that
Tiffinay would be wearing her uniform when she got to
base, and soon after, we left. We did not think that
anything was wrong, and we began the three day drive to
Fort Campbell. We had ended our lease in New Haven, and
we had all of our things packed in Tiffinay's car.
When we arrived at Fort Campbell on September 15,
Tiffany's car was stopped as soon as we got to the gate.
We were separated and taken by officers to separate cars,
and Tiffinay's car was emptied and searched three or four
times by bomb-sniffing dogs.
We were then taken to a building like a police station
and separately interrogated by INS, Army, and FBI
investigators - nine of them, I think - for more than
twelve hours. Although we were separated, we had the same
thought: to cooperate and answer all the questions they
put to us. We did this although the questioning was very
harsh. An INS agent screamed at me that I was illegal and
could be deported immediately and he refused to listen to
me when I told him about my applications. He said I was
lying, that there was nothing about me in the computer,
and that I would be deported. An FBI investigator, Bill
Frank, also told me that the Springfield, Massachusetts
recruiting center where Tiffinay had received her orders
had been blown up by terrorists twenty minutes after we
left it. (He told Tiffinay that there had been a bomb
alert and that they found suspicious materials after we
left.) They told her that we were suspicious because she
was wearing a hejab and we had been speaking in a foreign
language. French was the only language other than English
that we had spoken together, but it must have made them
nervous. The investigators said many, many times that our
marriage was fake, and that Tiffinay must be married to
me because I was abusing her. These accusations were
totally false and very painful for me. They also made
many negative remarks about Islam, things like Islam
being the religion of beating and mistreating women. One
acted out a fist hitting his hand, another said my wife
had written a letter saying that I beat her, which I knew
was false, and another insisted he would beat me all the
way to my country because I mistreated my wife.
They asked us about the box cutters that we had among our
things, and we explained how I had used mine in the
store, and Tiffinay had used hers when she worked in the
shipping department of a nursery. The interrogators were
so angry and wild in their accusations that they made me
very frightened for what might happen to me. I learned
later that Tiffinay was asked very similar questions.
They also asked her if I spent large amounts of time on
the internet and/or sent emails to terrorists. The
interrogators also had the letters that I had brought
with me from my a family, and from a friend in Yemen who
is a doctor. These letters were in Arabic. They had a
translator review them. He would read passages from the
letters, and Bill Frank from the FBI insisted that the
letters from my friend, the doctor, showed that she was
my terrorist controller and that I was somehow involved
with terrorists from Russia. This was silly and
completely false, and I think they knew it, but at the
same time it made me frightened because it seemed like
they intended to accuse me of being involved with all the
enemies of the United States.
After this long interrogation, at about 4:00 am, they let
us speak to each other in a room for a few minutes while
they waited outside. We would not be alone again until
November 8.
Tiffinay was taken to a barracks where she was kept on a
separate floor apart from the other women soldiers. From
that time through Wednesday of the following week, she
had three guards with her at all times, day and night, no
matter what she did: even bathing and sleeping. All of
these soldiers but one were men. After that she was not
so mistreated. She was able to live with the other women,
and she started to make friends with people. Still, she
learned many negative things: that her photo had been
distributed to the gates of the base before we arrived,
that handmade posters with her photo were circulated
around the base, and that many people had heard local
television news broadcasts that said that I was a spy at
Fort Campbell.
I was taken to a hotel near the base, where I spent the
weekend. People watched me from the parking lot.
On Monday, September 18, both of us were taken were taken
to the FBI office in Nashville, Tennessee, where they
gave us polygraph tests. Although many of the questions
were very strange (Have you ever embarrassed your family?
Have you ever lied?
) we both answered them the best
that we could. I was given deportation papers charging me
with overstaying my visa. In what seemed like a positive
thing, both the INS agent and Mr. Frank from the FBI said
that they knew that I had told the truth and that I would
probably be released the next day. I learned later that
Tiffany had been told the same thing by army people, and
the INS had given similar news to Attorney Maria
Labaredas, who works with Attorney Boyle and who faxed
copies of all my immigration papers to the INS. It was
strange that these men, who had been wild and full of
anger on Saturday, were now very calm.
However, I was not released. Army people told Tiffinay
that someone in the FBI had ordered that I not be
released. I really do not know what happened. I was never
spoken to again by the FBI, Army or INS, but I spent more
than seven weeks in jail.
At the jail near Nashville where I spent my first week in
detention, one guard was very difficult. He kept saying
that I was a terrorist and asking if I knew bin Laden.
Then I was transferred to a jail in Mason, Tennessee,
near Memphis. For my first two weeks there I was put with
normal inmates, and the staff and other inmates treated
me normally. However, it was upsetting to be in jail. I
had never been arrested or had any kind of problem with
the police anywhere. I did not want to be in jail, and
was concerned that I had not been released quickly, once
the INS and FBI had confirmed that I had told them the
truth. I was also unable to speak to my wife, and was
worried about her.
I learned later that my wife was also very upset and
concerned about what was happening to me. She was afraid
that I would still be in jail when she was sent overseas.
Also, she was concerned that some people seemed to
distrust her because she was my wife and that many people
at Fort Campbell seemed to believe the local television
reports about me being a spy. When her officers suggested
to her that she should request a discharge because of
these problems, she agreed. She was granted an honorable
discharge on Friday morning, September 28, and drove to
the prison to visit me that afternoon.
Things were harder for me after that. The prison moved me
to a segregated unit with very serious criminals. They
said that it was for my protection, but it made me feel
very unsafe. The other prisoners had committed very
serious crimes, and a guard there accused me of being a
terrorist. He would whisper to these bad criminals, and
they would threaten me and taunt me. One, who said that
he had murdered someone and spent twenty-five years in
jail threatened me in the shower. Others told me that I
should confess, that I would never leave the jail, and
things like that. Because I was in the segregated unit, I
could only make one phone call a week. One of my
attorneys, Michael Boyle, visited me twice and could call
me before I had hearings. However, things were very
frightening and very difficult. What was happening to me
was totally different than how I thought America worked.
As things seemed to get worse and worse, I became fearful
of what would happen to me.
My first bond hearing, early in October, was difficult.
Tiffinay and I answered questions for a long time, and
the INS presented no evidence. Still, the Judge set a
very high bond, $50,000. The INS said that they would
immediately try to stop even this high bond from taking
effect, and they did. It was very hard to wait while the
appeals board considered the case. My next bond hearings
were also disappointing, as the Judge said that he was
giving the INS a "last chance" to bring in more
evidence. I was glad that he said he was thinking of a
lower bond, but I was concerned that the INS seemed to
get so many chances even when they had told me that
Monday in Nashville that they knew that I had told the
truth.
My lawyers assured me that things would get better for
me, that the Judge and the appeals board judges had to be
very careful because of what happened on September 11,
and would be very generous to the INS at first, but that
they would not let the INS hold me for months without
having any evidence.
I am very grateful that in the end this is what happened.
I am grateful that the appeals court judges were willing
to make a decision based on the facts, not on fear. And I
am grateful that the INS was worried that the Immigration
Judge in Memphis would give me a low bond and decided to
settle my case. Still, I spent almost eight weeks in
jail, and my wife lost her army career because people
were angry and nervous and I am from Yemen. My experience
with the INS was very bad. They lied to me and locked me
in jail for eight weeks with no evidence against me. I
told them all there is to know about my life, my lawyer
gave them many documents from Yemen and France to prove
the truth of what I said, and my wife testified all about
our marriage. I should not have been held for weeks. In
the end, we had to agree to the $10,000 bond that the INS
offered because there is a new rule that could have let
the INS keep me for many more weeks if the Judge had
given me a lower bond than the INS wanted. Because
Tiffinay had saved enough money to pay the bond, this was
not a problem for me, but I am worried that there will be
many other people whose wives do not have $10,000.
I hope you will do whatever you can to try and fix these
problems. I have been back together with my wife for
almost a month, and our lives are healing, but I hope
that you will protect other innocent people from the
INS.
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