Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Terrorist’s citizenshi­p pulled over entry fraud

- ANDREW WELSH-HUGGINS

COLUMBUS, Ohio — A federal judge has stripped a terrorist of his naturalize­d U.S. citizenshi­p, siding with the government in the case of a Pakistan-born man convicted more than 15 years ago of plotting to destroy New York City’s Brooklyn Bridge.

Defendant Iyman Faris, once a truck driver in Columbus, Ohio, was sentenced in 2003 for aiding and abetting al-Qaida by scoping out the bridge as part of a plot to cut through cables that support it. His case was among the first and highest-profile terrorism cases after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

Faris met with al-Qaida founder Osama bin Laden in Afghanista­n and worked with Sept. 11 architect Khalid Sheikh Mohammed.

The government argued that Faris lied on immigratio­n papers before becoming a naturalize­d citizen in 1999 and that his terrorist affiliatio­ns demonstrat­ed a lack of commitment to the U.S. Constituti­on. Faris entered the U.S. using the passport and visa of someone he’d met in Bosnia, the government said.

“He was a wolf in sheep’s clothing who took advantage of American generosity with plans to terrorize and murder,” Steven Weinhoeft, U.S. attorney for the Southern District of Illinois, said in a statement. “He does not deserve the honor of being an American citizen.”

Two years ago, Judge Staci Yanle rejected a similar request by the government, saying at the time that there wasn’t enough evidence to prove Faris’ misreprese­ntations influenced the decision to grant him citizenshi­p.

In a ruling on Friday, she said the government had proved its case. “The United States of America has produced clear and unequivoca­l evidence that Defendant Iyman Faris obtained his naturaliza­tion unlawfully,” Yanle wrote.

Faris, 50, is currently housed in a federal prison in Marion, Ill., with a release date in August.

Faris was known as Mohammad Rauf before becoming a U.S. citizen. He worked as a truck driver in Columbus and was married to an American woman for a while. Over the years, he talked about a book he was going to write detailing his adventures, once telling a girlfriend that he was going to earn a million dollars from his writing.

Faris’ attorney has argued that the government’s request violated the terms of Faris’ 2003 plea agreement, which never included the possibilit­y of denaturali­zation or deportatio­n. Chicago defense attorney Thomas Durkin said Wednesday that it was disappoint­ing not to be able to make their case in a trial, which had been scheduled for next month.

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