Five Muslim-Americans sued the U.S.
Department of Homeland Security Wednesday alleging racial profiling
when they were detained and fingerprinted by border agents after
returning from a religious conference. The suit, filed in U.S. District
Court, named Homeland Security chief Michael Chertoff among four
defendants in what the New York Civil Liberties Union called a case of
profiling. A U.S. Customs and Border Protection spokeswoman declined
comment since the case – involving the reentry of the five U.S.
citizens by car from Canada – is in litigation. Court papers said that
on their way back from the Reviving the Islamic Spirit (RIS) conference
in Toronto in December 2004, the plaintiffs were detained for up to six
hours with other Muslim-Americans and searched, photographed and
fingerprinted, the lawsuit said. U.S. Customs and Border Protection
spokeswoman Kristi Clemens defended the government's actions and said,
"Our priority mission is to prevent terrorists and their weapons from
entering this country." In the past the agency has denied the use of
profiling on the borders but said intelligence has shown that
conferences similar to the one in Toronto have been used by terrorist
organizations. The suit charged the Muslim-Americans were taken aside
after being asked if they attended the religious conference and were
then subjected to unlawful treatment at a border crossing near Buffalo,
New York, under a new Homeland Security policy. [more]
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