SFGate: John Doe vs. flying imams

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Sunday, July 29, 2007 (SF Chronicle)
John Doe vs. flying imams
Debra J. Saunders


   IMAGINE you're waiting to board a plane and you see fellow travelers
acting strangely and muttering words that you don't understand. Maybe
they're Muslim, maybe they're not. You're afraid that they are up to no
good. What do you do?
   Nothing. If you report the behavior, you might get sued. Or so Americans
had reason to believe after House Democratic leaders omitted from a
homeland security bill a measure by Rep. Peter King, R-N.Y. -- that passed
by a 304-121 vote in a different bill -- to grant immunity from civil
liability to people who report potential threats to or acts of terrorism
against transportation systems or passengers.
   Until late last week, that is, when King announced a deal with Democratic
leaders to put his amendment into the homeland security bill, which later
was approved by both houses.
   King wrote the measure because of a November 2006 incident at the
Minneapolis-St. Paul airport -- known as the "flying imam" story.
Passengers and crew members on a flight bound for Phoenix were concerned
after they saw imams praying by the gate, moving around the plane speaking
Arabic after boarding and requesting seat-belt extensions that observers
feared could be used as weapons. U.S. Airways kicked the six imams off the
plane.
   In March, the imams filed a lawsuit against U.S. Airways and the airport.
The lawsuit also targeted unnamed "John Doe" passengers who "may have made
false reports against plaintiffs solely with the intent to discriminate
against them on the basis of their race, religion, ethnicity and national
origin." That's ridiculous. Crew and passengers were concerned about the
imams because of their reported behavior.
   King wrote the immunity amendment to prevent the chilling effect that a
lawsuit might have on passengers who see suspicious behavior, but fear
losing their homes -- or being stuck with huge legal bills -- if they
report it. After all, citizen involvement could be key in preventing
another 9/11 attack.
   Remember the passengers who came to the aid of an American Airlines flig=
ht
attendant who asked for help in subduing Richard Reid, who had been trying
to ignite his explosive-laden sneakers? At the time, FBI special agent
Charles Prouty, told reporters, "The willingness of the flight attendants
and passengers to get involved with this incident helped avert a
potentially dangerous situation. This points to the importance of every
citizen staying involved and alert to ensure public safety."
   So why did the House leadership keep the King amendment out of the bill?
Bay Area Democrats -- with the exception of Reps. Tom Lantos and Jerry
McNerney -- were among the 121 Democrats who voted against the measure;
105 House Dems, and 199 Repubs, voted for it. When the Senate passed a
companion measure by a 57-39 vote, it lacked the 60 votes to make it to
the floor. But the deal set the stage for the Senate to approve the
measure Thursday.
   Brendan Daly, spokesman for Speaker Nancy Pelosi, said that leaders fear=
ed
individuals reporting other passengers based on racial stereotypes, but
they worked out a compromise. But it is not clear how the King amendment
changed.
   It may well be that Democratic leaders realized that they should heed the
likes of New York Democratic Sens. Hillary Clinton and Chuck Schumer, who
voted for the Senate bill, rather than side with the likes of the Council
on American-Islamic Relations, which supported the imams' suit to help the
imams, a spokesman told me in April, "clear their names."
   Sorry, but suing "John Does" won't clear the imams' names; instead, the
suit bolsters the suspicion that the imams were being deliberately
provocative in the hope that airline staff would act -- so that the imams
could proclaim themselves victims of discrimination.
   Let me be clear. I do not believe that airlines should discriminate
against Muslims, the vast majority of whom are good law-abiding citizens.
   Nor do I believe it is wise for security to profile Muslim men. That mak=
es
it too easy for potential terrorists to succeed by breaking with the
profile. But it also is unwise to pass laws that deter citizens from
reporting suspicious behavior by individuals who belong to groups more
likely to support terrorism.
   After Reid's attempted shoe bombing, Indiana humanities and law professor
Fedwa Malti-Douglas wrote in the New York Times, that although she had had
been the target of ethnic profiling, "I believe this scrutiny is a
defensible tactic for picking out potential problem passengers." After
all, screening procedures "also protect me from terrorism."

   E-mail: dsaunders@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx -------------------------------------=
---------------------------------
Copyright 2007 SF Chronicle

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