United States vs. Chandia
Chandia was alleged to have provided material support to
Lashkar-e-Taiba, and helped
Ali al-Tamimi, the spiritual leader of the
Virginia Jihad Network, by scheduling speaking engagements, providing 50,000 paintballs to assist in training terrorists, and introducing Tamimi's Network to Lashkar-e-Taiba. after finding evidence of his involvement in terrorist organizations. FBI agents found books about violent
jihad and recordings in Chandia's home and car glorifying terrorism, an audiotape by al-Timimi justifying the
Taliban's
destruction of ancient
Buddhist statues, and a recording that asked God to "grant safety to
Osama bin Laden." FBI agents found a CD on the front seat of Chandia's Dodge Neon showing the
September 11 attacks with voices dubbed in shouting "
God is Great" in
Arabic. The trial judge sentenced Chandia to 15 years in prison, with three years of supervised release at the end of his incarceration for the three offenses. Chandia appealed his sentence, his attorney arguing on appeal that Chandia was not prohibited from freedom of association, even with terrorist organization, that evidence did not support the charges and that Chandia did not participate in violent acts and was therefore not eligible for a "terrorist enhancement" on sentencing. The Court of Appeals turned down the constitutionality, did not dispute the evidence, but did send the case back to the trial judge to be resentenced according to guidelines. Ultimately the Court of Appeals twice sent the judgment back to the trial judge to reconsider the long sentence, but the trial judge did not change the sentence and resentenced Chandia in 2011 to 15 years in prison.
Reactions Muddasar Ahmed, a Beltsville consultant and supporter of Chandia, said, "If this is how you deliver justice, you lose your trust in the justice system." According to Mary Beth Sheridan of
The Washington Post, "Ahmed and others have also argued that the prosecutions show a fundamental misunderstanding of Muslims in America: The local men wanted to help oppressed Muslims overseas, which isn't the same as backing bin Laden." Minhaj Hason stated "This is just one in a huge slew of cases like this. We feel the juries are making their decisions based on paranoia. From our perspective as a community... we're basically feeling besieged by overzealous prosecution." Timimi told the FBI in a voluntary interview prior to his arrest in 2004, that, "In those days, young men [in the D.C. area] were very interested in jihad and
martyrdom." Chandia, Timimi said, "used to ask hundreds of questions regarding jihad." McNulty said in an interview in 2005, when he was the U.S. attorney in Alexandria, "These individuals established strong relationships [and] received ideological and physical training" from Lashkar-e-Taiba. "At the very least, they became a kind of infrastructure of support for international terrorists."
Release Chandia was released from prison on July 19, 2019. ==References==