U.S. Lax on Screening Muslim Chaplains
NewsMax.com Wires
Wednesday, May 5, 2004
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WASHINGTON Federal prison officials are failing to
adequately screen Muslim chaplains and others who provide Islamic
religious services to inmates to determine whether they hold
extremist views, Justice Department investigators say.
A report by Justice Department inspector general Glenn A. Fine
also found Muslim contractors and volunteers have ample opportunity
"to deliver inappropriate and extremist messages," which could
lead to terrorist recruitment, inside federal prisons because they
lack proper supervision.
Muslim inmates themselves sometimes lead Islamic services in
prisons, another potential source of terror recruitment and
dissemination of extremist doctrine, according to the report,
obtained Tuesday by The Associated Press. Formal release was set
for Wednesday.
"Religious providers are in a unique position to influence the
beliefs and conduct of inmates," the report said. "The presence
of extremist chaplains, contractors or volunteers ... can pose a
threat to institutional security and could implicate national
security if inmates are encouraged to commit terrorist acts."
About 9,000 of the estimated 150,000 federal prison inmates
identify themselves as Muslim. Since the terrorist attacks of Sept.
11, 2001, the FBI has been concerned that al-Qaida and other terror
groups might use prisons to radicalize inmates and recruit
operatives in the United States.
The 10 full-time Muslim chaplains at federal prisons told
Justice Department investigators they had not witnessed any such
attempts. Besides these chaplains, there are dozens of Islamic
contractors and volunteers who provide religious services to
inmates.
The Muslim chaplains, according to the review, "stated that
some inmates are radicalized in prison by other inmates."
Richard Reid, convicted of attempting to blow up an airliner
with a shoe bomb, converted to Islam while in a British prison.
Jose Padilla, being held as an enemy combatant on allegations he
was plotting to detonate a radioactive "dirty bomb" in the United
States, is believed to have turned to radical Islam while jailed in
Broward County, Fla., the report says.
The Pentagon last year arrested a Muslim chaplain, Army Capt.
James Yee, on suspicion of espionage and other crimes for allegedly
trying to take classified material into the military's detention
facility at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. The espionage allegations and
other charges were dropped, and Yee was cleared of wrongdoing in
April, when a military judge overturned an adultery and pornography
reprimand against him.
The Muslim chaplains, contractors and volunteers in federal
prisons all undergo criminal background checks. The chaplains and
contractors also must pass a drug-screening urinalysis.
Don't Ask
But prison officials told investigators they did not ask these
providers any questions about their Islamic doctrine because to do
so might violate the Constitution.
The Justice Department review, however, said prison officials
should be able to determine if a Muslim religious official
subscribes to a doctrine espousing violence, anti-American
activities or discrimination.
The report makes a number of other recommendations, including
tighter supervision by prison officials of chapel services and
control of religious materials, more staff training about Islam and
increased hiring of chaplains and other religious providers based
on referrals by local or regional Muslim organizations.
The Bureau of Prisons has made "significant improvements" in
many of these areas since the review began in March 2003, the
report says. Bureau officials did not immediately return a call
seeking comment Tuesday.
The review was prompted by concerns raised by several senators,
including Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., that prison officials
brought in Muslim religious providers from organizations that might have ties to extreme forms of Islam.
The Bureau of Prisons until recently accepted endorsements for
chaplains and other providers from Islamic Society of North
America. Now it has no national group to use for endorsements,
which has effectively frozen hiring of Muslim service providers.
The report drew no conclusions about allegations of
terrorism-related connections by ISNA or other groups. But a
classified version of the review includes an FBI assessment about
individuals and groups with such links.
Editor's note:
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