Four Major Questions That Remain about the Saudi National Tagged as 212(A)(3)(B), “Terrorist Activities”

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Breaking News yesterday April 26, 2013 at Fox News:

JUST IN: Investigators Not Ruling Out 3rd Suspect in Boston Marathon Attack

Catherine Herridge reports details on how the bombs were triggered.

Link to video

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From The Blaze:

4 MAJOR QUESTIONS THAT REMAIN ABOUT THE SAUDI NATIONAL TAGGED AS 212(A)(3)(B), ‘TERRORIST ACTIVITIES’

April 26, 2013

By  Madeleine Morgenstern

Why was Saudi national Alharbi tagged as 2123b for terrorist activity?

It’s been nearly a week since Glenn Beck first revealed additional information about Abdul Rahman Ali Alharbi, the Saudi national briefly considered a person of interest in the Boston Marathon bombing. According to Blaze sources, Alharbi was tagged as a 212(a)(3)(B) — the U.S. immigration designation for terrorist activities.

In the last week, TheBlaze has learned (among other things) that Alharbi’s event file was altered last Wednesday, two days after the bombings, and the 212(a)(3)(B) designation was removed; that Alharbi was, in fact, placed on a watch list after the attack; that he was at one time listed as “armed and dangerous”; and that he was not properly vetted before he was allowed into the country under a “special advisory option.”

Despite those revelations, here are four major questions remaining about Alharbi:

1. What was the evidence that triggered the 212(a)(3)(B) filing?

There is nothing automatic about a 212(a)(3)(b) filing. Every piece of information must be manually entered, line by line, and the decision cannot made by any single person or even a “rogue agent.” Simply being on a no-fly list is not enough to trigger a 212(a)(3)(b). One source told TheBlaze that even in one case where the filing was ultimately incorrect, it still took six months to remove.

Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano did not address Alharbi’s 212(a)(3)(b) status during a House hearing this week. She admitted that the Saudi national was temporarily put on a watch list while he was interviewed following the Boston bombings, but added it was quickly determined Alharbi was not involved in the attack. The DHS head did not indicate that any other information was uncovered that identified Alharbi as a potential terror threat.

The question for the Department of Homeland Security and Immigration and Customs Enforcement is, what did you find that was so damning that you included such a designation in the file? Or is there another explanation for including it?

2. Why was Alharbi not fully vetted upon entering the United States?

Alharbi was admitted to the United States under a “special advisory option,” generally reserved for visiting politicians and diplomats. Who is he that he was permitted entry without a full vetting?

3. Why the continuing secrecy?

If this Alharbi is innocent and this has been one big misunderstanding, why won’t the Department of Homeland Security publicly come forward to clear everything up?

4. ​Where is Alharbi now?

No one has publicly admitted they know where Alharbi is. Is he still in the United States? Is he back in Saudi Arabia? Where is he now?

A more complete understanding

In order to understand the 212(a)(3)(b) better, TheBlaze spoke with Bob Trent, a retired senior special agent for U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services. He revealed yet another twist, telling us on Friday that 212(a)(3)(b) is not a deportation charge, but an immigration designation meant to block dangerous individuals from ever entering the United States.

That makes sense when looking at the relevant section on the Department of Justice’s website. There, the section is listed under Inadmissibility” and preceded by the sentence, “Except as otherwise provided in this Act, aliens who are inadmissible under the following paragraphs are ineligible to receive visas and ineligible to be admitted to the United States.” [Emphasis added.]

Why was Saudi national Alharbi tagged as 2123b for terrorist activity?

Trent said that if Alharbi was tagged as a 212(a)(3)(b) the day of the bombing, it could have been done in haste, perhaps by FBI agents who didn’t understand immigration law and didn’t realize that applying that label essentially meant Alharbi should never have been admitted into the U.S. in the first place. He said that if an immigration agent discovered the mistake, that could explain its quick removal and subsequent attempts to try and make the possible blunder go away.

But Trent doesn’t believe it was a simple mistake — he thinks it’s more likely that the 212(a)(3)(b) was in place while Alharbi was still in Saudi Arabia, but that someone stepped in to expedite his entry into the U.S.

“Either they screwed up and they picked 212 because they didn’t really know any better, or that file was opened before he ever came as a student…he should never have been allowed in and they only way they got around it is because they did some sort of expedited or direct call from, say, the White House or from State Department,” he theorized.

Keep reading here……

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From Investor’s Business Daily:

Bombers’ Mosque In Boston A Factory For Terrorists

April 25, 2013

Homeland Insecurity: The New York Times thinks the Boston bombers “self-radicalized” on the Web. But it didn’t look at their mosque, which has churned out other terrorists, too.

USA Today, on the other hand, did look at their mosque — the Islamic Society of Boston — and found “a curriculum that radicalizes people,” according to a local source quoted in the paper’s investigation. “Other people have been radicalized there.”

In fact, several ISB members and leaders have been convicted or suspected of terrorism, including:

• Abdurahman Alamoudi, the mosque’s founder and first president, who in 2004 was sentenced to 23 years in federal prison for plotting terrorism as al-Qaida’s top fundraiser in America.

• Aafia Siddiqui, an MIT scientist-turned-al-Qaida agent, who in 2010 was sentenced to 86 years in prison for planning a New York chemical attack.

• Tarek Mehanna, who in 2012 was sentenced to 17 years for plotting to use automatic weapons to murder shoppers in a suburban Boston mall.

• Ahmad Abousamra, an ex-mosque official’s son, who fled the country after the FBI charged him with conspiring with Mehanna to kill Americans.

• Yusuf al-Qaradawi, a mosque trustee and Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood leader banned from the U.S. after issuing a fatwa that OK’d killing U.S. soldiers.

• Jamal Badawi, a former ISB trustee who in 2007 was named an unindicted co-conspirator in a plan to funnel $12 million to Palestinian suicide bombers.

In justifying mall attacks, the FBI said Abousamra stated “civilians were not innocent because they paid taxes to support the government and because they were kaffir (non-Muslims).”

The Tsarnaev brothers, who killed three and injured some 200 spectators, appeared to share that rationale.

In 2009, ISB invited Yasir Qadhi to speak, even though the Saudi radical advocates turning the U.S. into an Islamic state and calls Christians “filthy” polytheists whose “life holds no value in the state of jihad.”

The Tsarnaev brothers, who began radicalizing in 2009, posted YouTube videos featuring imams exhorting the death of Christians and Jews and calling for the establishment of the caliphate.

ISB leaders have defended its rotten apples, including Siddiqui and Mehanna, despite overwhelming evidence against them.

USA Today reports the mosque gets millions from the Saudis, who push an anti-Western strain of Islam.

Continue reading here…….

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WALL OF TRUTH

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