Pubdate: Mon, 16 Dec 2013 Source: News-Item, The (PA) Copyright: 2013 Austin American-Statesman Contact: http://www.newsitem.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3556 Author: Eric Dexheimer, Austin American-Statesman LAW ENFORCEMENT CLAIMS OF KHAT, TERRORISM CONNECTION QUESTIONED Chewable Narcotic Plant Grown and Used in Somalia, Illegal in US AUSTIN, Texas (MCT)- Eighteen months ago, a Texas Department of Public Safety trooper making a routine traffic stop of two men driving on a highway northeast of Houston noticed both were chewing on a wad of green leaves. His subsequent search of the car launched a yearlong investigation involving local, state and national lawenforcement agencies that has so far resulted in more than a halfdozen arrests in the Houston area. In response, Muslim civil rights groups are questioning whether the Austinbased state agency has crossed a line by unfairly portraying the defendants as terrorists. The oval-shaped leaves were khat, according to police reports, a plant grown and used primarily by residents of countries in or around the Horn of Africa, particularly Somalia, Ethiopia and Yemen. It is used there openly and socially, mostly chewed or made into tea. Although the chemicals in the plant are illegal in the United States, drug officials said prosecutions here are uncommon. In reports and court filings, however, the DPS, which is leading the investigation, has suggested the current operation is of high importance because proceeds from khat sales have been linked to terrorist groups. "Texas is a regional center for the trafficking of the illegal drug known as khat, a chewable narcotic plant grown in the Horn of Africa whose sale abroad is suspected to benefit Africa-based terrorist organizations such as al-Shabaab," the agency's Public Safety Threat Overview2013 declared. There is wide disagreement over how strong the link is, however, or even if there is one at all. Likely link The DPS threat assessment claim is based in part on congressional testimony given more than a decade ago by a then-FBI assistant director, who briefly mentioned khat in a longer report about drug trafficking and terrorism, stating "it is likely" khat proceeds "pass through the hands of suspected (Islamic militants) and other persons with possible ties to terrorist groups." That same FBI official, Steven McCraw, is now the DPS director. The United Nations has issued several reports on a suspected link between khat proceeds and terrorists, warlords and pirates in Somalia and Kenya, where the plant is legal and a valuable cash crop. Those reports typically note the same groups seek to profit off many other legal businesses, through taxation or extortion. In England, where khat is currently legal (it is scheduled to become illegal next year), lawmakers recently asked drug researchers to review issues surrounding the plant and make recommendations. In its report, issued this past January, the Independent Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs stated it couldn't establish any link between khat and international terrorism. "ACMD has not been provided with any evidence of Al Shabaab or any other terrorist groups' involvement in khat export/sale, despite repeated requests for this information from a number of national and international official sources, including various Government bodies," it concluded. The evidence directly connecting the 18-month-and-counting Houston khat investigation to terrorism funding is also unclear. DPS spokesman Tom-Vinger said he couldn't comment other than pointing to the agency's most recent threat assessment. He said the investigation hasn't yet yielded any terrorism-related criminal charges. But an attorney representing four of the defendants said the Harris County prosecutor didn't mince words with him. "Almost the very first words out of his mouth were, 'You knowyour clients are terrorists, rightUKP' " defense attorney Mark Correro recalled. Aspokesman for the district attorney's office said the prosecutor was unavailable for an interview. Khat seizures Islamic civil rights groups, meanwhile, have begun looking into the DPS khat investigation. While the Council on American Islamic Relations condemns illegal drug use, "Initial vague references to terrorism usually don't pan out in court," said Ibrahim Hooper, national spokesman for the civil liberties advocacy group. "But the damage is done to Muslims." Nationwide, the Drug Enforcement Administration seized about 138,500 pounds of khat in 2012, about 15,000 fewer pounds than the year before. Locally, drug officials say khat cases have been scarce and a low priority. A spokeswoman for the DEA's Houston office said she knew of none recently. "It's very, very rare for us to see," added David Patino, a spokesman for U.S. Customs and Border Protection's Houston office, which also covers Dallas, San Antonio and Austin. Over the past two years, Patino said his office has confiscated less than 2 pounds of khat. Many of the details surrounding the recent DPS investigations and khat arrests are hidden; the agency has requested that court documents be sealed because of the ongoing investigation. Correro declined to make his clients available for an interview, but he said all are Ethiopians who are in the country legally, work as cab drivers or in construction and use khat socially. The amount of the plant confiscated from each ranged from a few ounces to 5 pounds, he said. The DPS says its investigation has yielded much bigger results than those described in public records. Vinger said the operation has led to the seizure of 1,000 pounds of khat. Maj. George Rhyne, who oversees the DPS unit heading up the khat team, said more than 800 pounds of that total were confiscated elsewhere and "likely destined for delivery to the Houston area." "Not all drug seizures are immediately tied to arrests, especially in long-term, ongoing investigations," Vinger added in an email. A person who has viewed the sealed court documents said one way the DPS appeared to be linking the local khat cases to terrorism was through money transfers from some of the investigation's targets to a lengthy list of overseas destinations including Ethiopia, but also China, Egypt and Pakistan, among others. Hooper, of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, who hadn't seen the document, said the tie sounded weak. "It's a bit vague-sending money to a Muslim country that has been associated with terrorism." A U.S. Justice Department spokesman said he couldn't find any khat cases that had yielded terrorism charges. Past arrests have included money laundering charges based on transfers "to Somalia or other countries where khat originates from," Andrew Ames of the department's National Security Division wrote in an email. But "I am not aware of a case that alleges where that money goes." "Our concern is always when you start hearing references to terrorism," said Mustafaa Carroll, executive director of the Islamic council's Texas branch, who said he has interviewed several of the Houston defendants after the khat cases were brought to his attention. "Our concern is that it's not just a witch hunt." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom