Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Feds share terror watch list with 1,400 private groups

-

WASHINGTON — Muslims who have been put on the government’s secretive terrorism watch list are demanding to know more about the 1,441 private entities that have access.

The number was revealed through litigation in federal court in Alexandia, Va. It’s one of a half-dozen lawsuits related to the watch list filed by the Council on American-Islamic Relations. On Friday, CAIR will ask a federal judge to force the government to release the names of the private entities and explain how they access the list.

The massive, classified database was created after the 9/11 terrorist attacks to track people deemed potentiall­y dangerous who had not committed crimes. In litigation, CAIR has argued that the terrorism database and the no-fly list that comes out of it ensnare and stigmatize innocent people.

In a deposition last October, an FBI official said he was “not aware of any” private entities that had access to the database through the National Crime Informatio­n Center.

In a court filing, the FBI acknowledg­ed that more than 1,000 actually did have that access.

These firms are providing criminal justice services, according to the FBI — for example, private prisons, university police and private security companies that work in government facilities or hospitals. The Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion also shares watch list informatio­n with airlines.

But lawyers for CAIR say they believe the disseminat­ion goes further, citing plaintiffs who say they have had trouble getting loans or keeping bank accounts open without explanatio­n.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States