Docs To Date On Mike Hawash Case

For journalists and researchers trying to read everything you can on this case in a hurry, here is a quick list of links to every article available so far — that I know of, at the time of this writing, of course.
Free Mike Hawash Website
http://www.freemikehawash.org
FAQ On Free Mike Hawash Website
http://www.freemikehawash.org/press/genfaq.html
Mike Hawash’s Bio
http://www.freemikehawash.org/press/fullbio.htm
Steven McGaedy’s Bio
http://www.mcgeady.com/mcg/prof/mcgbio.htm
Free Mike Hawash Mailing List Info
http://www.freemikehawash.org/hostmaster.htm
March 20, 2003 FBI Press Release
http://portland.fbi.gov/pressrel/2003/searches.htm
ACLU CRITICIZES USE OF MATERIAL WITNESS
LAW TO DETAIN HILLSBORO MAN

http://www.aclu-or.org/issues/terrorism/Hawashcase.html
FBI jails ex-Intel worker
By Matthew Yi for the SF Chronicle.
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2003/04/02/BU291043.DTL
Ex-Intel VP Fights for Detainee
By Leander Kahney for Wired News.
http://www.wired.com/news/conflict/0,2100,58326,00.html

Joint Terrorism agents search home in Hillsboro

By Mark Larabee and Les Zaitz for the Oregonian
http://www.oregonlive.com/search/index.ssf?/base/news/104825159914540.xml?oregonian?lcps
Terrorism Task Force
Detains an American Without Charges

By Timothy Egan for the NY Times
http://www.nytimes.com/2003/04/04/international/worldspecial/04DETA.html
Senator Ron Wyden
(Said he’d bring up Mike’s case with the FBI)
http://wyden.senate.gov/contact.html
Background on the Material Witness Law (November 2002 – Not specifically abot Hawash’s case)
Material Witness Law Has Many In Limbo
Nearly Half Held in War On Terror Haven’t Testified
http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A31438-2002Nov23

NY Times On The Mike Hawash Case

Terrorism Task Force Detains an American Without Charges
By Timothy Egan for the NY Times.

The case has drawn the attention of civil liberties groups nationwide, who say Mr. Hawash’s case is an example of how the Bush administration is holding a handful of American citizens without offering them normal legal protection.
Although at least two American citizens are being held without normal legal rights as “enemy combatants,” Mr. Hawash has not been categorized as such. As a material witness, he is being held to compel testimony. But supporters say he has not been told anything about what the government may want from him…
Civil liberties groups say material witness statutes are being abused by the Bush administration to hold people like Mr. Hawash indefinitely. “The government doesn’t have and should not have the power to arrest and detain someone without charging them,” said Lucas Guttentag, director of the American Civil Liberties Union’s Immigrants Rights Project. “If this kind of thing is permitted, then any United States citizen can be swept off the street and locked up without being charged.”
Since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, the courts have made conflicting rulings on the legality of holding material witnesses without charging them. A federal judge in Manhattan, Shira A. Scheindlin, said such detentions were “an illegitimate use of the statute,” but another ruling in the same court, by Chief Judge Michael B. Mukasey, said detaining witnesses to compel testimony was a legitimate investigative tool.

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Wired News On Hawash Case


Ex-Intel VP Fights for Detainee

By Leander Kahney for Wired News.

Hawash, a U.S. citizen, was arrested last month by the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force. For nearly two weeks, he has been held as a so-called “material witness” in solitary confinement in a federal lockup in Sheridan, Oregon. The designation allows authorities to hold him indefinitely without charging him with a crime.
The Department of Justice has required a federal court to seal Hawash’s case. He has only limited access to his family and lawyer.
A friend and former colleague at Intel, Steven McGeady, is championing Hawash’s case. McGeady, a former vice president at the chipmaker who hired Hawash as a programmer in 1992, was a high-profile witness in the Microsoft antitrust trial.
“People say this doesn’t happen in this country,” McGeady said, “but one of my neighbors has been disappeared. It’s not what he might have done that matters to me — they disappeared him. They need to question him and let him go, or charge him. It’s like Alice in Wonderland meets Franz Kafka.”
…”I’m completely puzzled,” he said. “He has family in the West Bank, but he’s not political. He worked at Intel Israel for two years, for heck’s sake. His most political act was setting up an ISP on the West Bank, and in my opinion that’s not political. I don’t know. Maybe it’s a case of mistaken identity. Maybe it’s something beyond my comprehension.”
Hawash, 38, was born in the West Bank but became a U.S. citizen in 1988. His wife, two of his children and his stepchild are all American-born.
Hawash co-authored a book on multimedia programming. He was laid off from Intel in 2001, but was later rehired as a contract programmer.

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“Terrorism” Just Doesn’t Mean What It Used to

So at first glance, the punishment seems fitting enough: life imprisonment for acts of terrorism.
Trouble is, this law would effectively reduce the definition of “terrorism” to “blocking traffic in front of a government building.”

A BILL FOR AN ACT
Relating to terrorism; creating new provisions; and amending
section 19, chapter 666, Oregon Laws 2001.
Be It Enacted by the People of the State of Oregon:
SECTION 1. { + (1) A person commits the crime of terrorism if
the person knowingly plans, participates in or carries out any
act that is intended, by at least one of its participants, to
disrupt:
(a) The free and orderly assembly of the inhabitants of the
State of Oregon;
(b) Commerce or the transportation systems of the State of
Oregon; or
(c) The educational or governmental institutions of the State
of Oregon or its inhabitants.
(2) A person commits the crime of terrorism if the person
conspires to do any of the activities described in subsection (1)
of this section.

Relating to terrorism; creating new provisions; and amending section 19, chapter 666, Oregon Laws 2001

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San Francisco Chronicle On The Mike Hawash Case


FBI jails ex-Intel worker

By Matthew Yi for the SF Chronicle.

Hawash was picked up by FBI agents at about 7 a.m. on March 20 as he arrived at the parking lot for his job at Intel’s Hawthorne Farms office in Hillsboro, Ore., said Steven McGeady, Hawash’s former boss and friend, in a telephone interview with The Chronicle on Tuesday.
At about the same time, armed federal agents wearing bullet-proof vests stormed into Hawash’s home and seized his computers and files, said McGeady, who spoke with Lisa Hawash about the incident.
Hawash’s wife and their three young children were asleep when authorities arrived at their home, McGeady said.
“Lisa wasn’t taken into custody, but they seized all their computers, files and left her with a grand jury subpoena,” he said.
Intel spokesman Chuck Mulloy said FBI agents also have searched Hawash’s cubicle and computer system at work.
Although Lisa Hawash has been able to visit her husband a couple of times a week, neither of them has been told by authorities why he is being detained, McGeady said…
Hawash, born in the West Bank city of Nablus, grew up in Kuwait, McGeady said. He arrived in the United States in 1984 to attend the University of Texas at Arlington, where he earned both bachelor’s and master’s degrees in electrical engineering.
Hawash became a U.S. citizen in 1988, a year before he graduated and landed his first job at Compaq Computers in Houston. He was soon transferred to Seattle.
In 1992, he was hired to work at Intel’s Multimedia Software Technology Group, said McGeady, who was Hawash’s boss at the time.
Hawash was laid off in 2001 but has since been working at Intel as a contract software engineer, he said.

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First Article To Run On Hawash Case From The Oregonian

FBI, Joint Terrorism agents search home in Hillsboro
By Mark Larabee and Les Zaitz for the Oregonian.

A software designer was being held Thursday as a material witness in a terrorism investigation after FBI agents searched his Hillsboro home and his office at Intel.
According to neighbors and co-workers, Maher Mofeid Hawash, 38, was the target of Thursday’s searches by the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force.
Hawash was booked into the Multnomah County Detention Center on Thursday afternoon and put on a “material witness hold” at the request of the U.S. Marshal’s Service, a sheriff’s department spokesman said. A material witness designation allows the government to hold someone in order to compel testimony.
The FBI issued a short statement Thursday morning saying that in an “ongoing investigation,” the Joint Terrorism Task Force had executed four federal search warrants in the Hillsboro area and that the Hillsboro Police Department assisted in the searches.
Prosecutors and investigators refused to say who the target of their search was or what they were looking for. The federal search warrants filed in the case are sealed, meaning the information in them is secret. Asked whether anyone was taken into custody as a result of the searches, officials said they could not answer the question because of a court order.
Hawash’s neighbors on Northeast Aurora Drive said they saw several FBI agents arrive about 7 a.m. Thursday. They said the agents were there about four hours, removed several boxes from Hawash’s house and canvassed surrounding homes asking fairly routine questions about Hawash and his activities.
Two women who asked not to be identified said they’ve known Hawash and his wife, Lisa, for four years and consider them friends. They said the couple have three children and are good neighbors who socialize regularly at neighborhood functions, such as barbecues. The women said they never noticed anything out of the ordinary.
An Intel engineer contacted by The Oregonian said agents came to the company’s Hillsboro offices looking for Hawash on Thursday morning. He said he did not know why the agents were there.

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Oregonians: Show Your Support For Mike Hawash Monday Morning

Oregonians: Show Your Support For Mike Hawash Monday Morning
I just spoke to Steven McGeady, the friend and former employer of Mike Hawash, a long-time US citizen who has been imprisoned under a secret warrant as a material witness by the Joint Terrorism Task Force in Portland, Oregon.
So far Mike has been held for over 14 days (since Thu, March 20) in Oregon’s Sheridan Federal Prison.
He has been a U.S. citizen for 15 years, and lived in the U.S. for nearly 20 years.
Mike is 38, and is married to a Roseberg, Oregon woman. They raise their three children in Hillsboro, Oregon where Mike worked as a software engineer at Intel Corp up until his arrest.
Mike’s finally getting a hearing this Monday morning at Hatfield Federal Courthouse in Portland, Oregon.
Mike’s friends and family ask that you show your support by gathering in front of the Federal Courthouse for a peaceful demonstration of support.
Important Note: It is important to not block the entrance to the Courthouse or get in the way of the cars driving in the street — because of anti-war protests, the police are on heightened alert, and we don’t want anyone to get in trouble.
A peaceful rally by well-mannered friends and supporters will show the Justice Department and media the depth of support for Mike, and our outrage over the trampling of his civil rights.
We expect Mike’s wife, Lisa, to come through on her way into the Courthouse.
Day: Monday, April 7, 2003
Time: 8:15-8:30 AM or so until about 9:15.
Mark Hatfield U.S. Courthouse
100 SW 3rd Ave
Corner of SW Salmon/3rd
Portland, OR
Parking is available nearby at 4th and Yamhill.
For those of you that don’t live in the Oregon area (like me), I’ll be posting a letter soon that you can FAX to your Reps and local newspapers over the weekend. Thanks!
For those of you who aren’t sure yet what all of the fuss is about, stay tuned on this blog-channel: much documentation to follow!

Keep Those Rep Contacts Handy!

Boy oh boy are there a whole lotta letters that need to be written to our representatives this coming week. And fast!
The Electronic Frontier Foundation has a great Legislative Directory where such contact information can be obtained easily.
I’ll be preparing drafts letters on the various issues that you can use as a starter page to save time.
Note: This time we need to take an extra step and send a copy of the emails/faxes we sent to our representatives to a local newspaper or two as well.
These letters can really matter when there are a lot of them.
Let’s make this week the week that our Reps start talking about all the mail they are getting.