Leading Ohio Imam Gets Two Months in Prison for Hiding Terror Ties
NewsMax.com Wires
Monday, Sept. 20, 2004
AKRON, Ohio The leader of Ohio's largest mosque was
sentenced Monday to two months in federal prison and four months of
house arrest for lying about his connections to terrorist groups
when he applied for U.S. citizenship.
Palestinian-born Fawaz Damra, imam of Islamic Center of
Cleveland, could have received up to five years in prison on the
charge of obtaining U.S. citizenship in 1994 by providing false
information.
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Prosecutors had requested the maximum sentence, but U.S.
District Judge James S. Gwin said he did not view the citizenship
application offense as a terrorism issue the way prosecutors had
tried to suggest.
Sentencing guidelines for first-time offenders called for
probation to six months in prison.
Prosecutors urged Gwin to immediately revoke Damra's
citizenship, but Damra's attorneys asked him Gwin not to take such
a step until after the appeal, which could take years. Gwin did not
immediately rule on the matter.
Prosecutors say the law requires deportation for such a crime,
but said they would not seek it until after Damra has finished with
appeals.
Gwin allowed Damra to remain free on bond. He said the imam
could start serving his sentence after the Muslim holiday of
Ramadan ends in November.
Damra, 41, who also was fined $5,000, stood upright with his
hands folded in front on him, wiping his face with a handkerchief
while the sentence was announced.
Damra was convicted June 17. The government said that when Damra
applied for citizenship, he concealed ties to Afghan Refugee
Services, Islamic Committee for Palestine and Palestinian
Islamic Jihad, groups the U.S. government classifies as terrorist
organizations.
The defense, which called no witnesses, said that Damra might have
supported certain groups but that he did not consider himself a member
or affiliate of them.
At the trial in June, prosecutors showed video footage of Damra
and other Islamic leaders raising money for an arm of
Palestinian Islamic Jihad, which has been listed as a major
terrorist group by the State Department since 1989.
Jurors also were shown footage in which Damra called Jews "the
sons of monkeys and pigs" during a 1991 speech and said
"terrorism and terrorism alone is the path to liberation" in a
1989 speech.
Gwin earlier rejected Damra's request for acquittal based on
what the defense called insufficient evidence.
Throughout the trial and afterward, Damra has continued to lead
the mosque in the Cleveland suburb of Parma, where about 800 or 900
people attend Friday prayer services and up to 5,000 come on
holidays.
Some mosque members unsuccessfully tried to oust him. Dozens of
other members have supported the imam during his legal woes,
including some who wrote Gwin asking for a lenient sentence.
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