Moose-Lamb*a 'Moslem'
Moose-Lamb*a 'Moslem'
I gotta figure at least some of the time there is no rest of the story
There's always a rest of the story, no matter how minor. But in this case, the logic of going from A to E, in relation to the printed story, makes little sense, operationally speaking. If what is reported from one side is factually correct, then something had to bridge the gap of Ali showing up to the desk, then to the leap to then being asked a religious question. That's nowhere in any SOPs that I know of, unless its somehow material to the situation at hand. But alot of things would have had to happen for the situation to go to that direction. It's not something that happens right out the gate. Unless this was the worst of the worst trained OFO personnel that were involved here, and no higher ranking people were around to supervise the situation.
It doesn't say whether or not they actually found the alleged person.The story says they were looking for someone at the request of ICE, however one would think they have a description to go off of and perhaps a photo too. And be waiting maybe at the top of the jetway and looking as pax normally disembark. Unless there's more to the story.
I have a common name and it was not uncommon for me to get pulled aside for secondary screening before I got global entry. I think everyone is on edge right now that some things that people wouldn't think twice about our now fearful that it's the begin of some sort of iron curtain. I've never been treated poorly by a customs agent.
Sometimes longer than others, but I don't think I waited two hours. Longest was probably about 45 min. But it wasn't 45 min in front of an officer it was 40 min waiting and 5 min with an officer asking we all sorts of questions that pertained to the other (same named) person. "Do you have any tattoos, have you ever lived in Arizona" etc. all of which did not pertain to me.For two hours? With questions about your religious affiliations?
Mohammed?I have a common name and it was not uncommon for me to get pulled aside for secondary screening before I got global entry. I think everyone is on edge right now that some things that people wouldn't think twice about our now fearful that it's the begin of some sort of iron curtain. I've never been treated poorly by a customs agent.
LEO on a power trip, (the likes of what @Derg described in his JFK story). Or maybe just a Trump true believer, thinking that he's single-handedly doing what he feels he needs to do to protect the U.S. of A.
Shrugs shoulders.
Possible, But that's the thing, it would have to be a whole group of them including the first-line supervision of that port. As a single officer wouldn't be acting on his own here in this case. Supervisor staff would have become involved, especially at the point it allegedly got to. Would be big news if there is that kind of collusion going on there. I suppose anything is possible, but I can't see how any officer would think to be able to articulate that "Mr Ali showed up to the Customs desk, and I then decided to immediately ask him his religion", and think that be considered reasonable in any way, without something having led to that path. That's why more info and more specifics about this would be nice to see. As it stands now, it just has the appearance that one side or both, are leaving out some facts.
So was the supervisor 'inexperienced' here as well? 10 hours? Really?
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...h-historian/?tid=sm_fb&utm_term=.17cd374770bf
Why do you bother asking me questions, if you've already predisposed yourself to what you think is going on?
Because he knows the truth and he's educating us.
How would a person's religion, per se, be material to a case? Are there any examples of this that have been or could be constitutionally defensible?If its material to a case for some reason. Be interesting to see an actual transcript of the interview, pending there is one. Generally speaking, don't know what would be material here in this case, but again, I don't know this case firsthand. Or what was and wasn't actually said or asked, besides what's claimed in the article.
How would a person's religion, per se, be material to a case? Are there any examples of this that have been or could be constitutionally defensible?
But how would the religion, per se, be of benefit in linking someone to a criminal organization that may have a link to a religion? What kind of link would that be unless it could be proved that the particular religion was itself criminal? Asking about membership in a particular church, mosque, synagogue, perhaps could make sense in certain investigations, but the religion itself?? I mean we didn't identify Mafia Dons by their Catholicism even though most of them at least pretended to adhere to the Catholic faith. Lots of bankers are Jews, but when investigating bank fraud, people of interest and suspects are not asked if they are Jewish. Further, the sheer scope of religious affiliation would seem to make any connection to religion extremely tenuous from a legal perspective or a practical one. About 85% of the world's ~7BB people claim religious affiliation. That's almost 6B people. Makes for a big haystack with almost as many needles as bits of hay.If linking someone, for example, to affiliation with a particular criminal group or organization that may have a tie or link to a certain religion. Often, terrorist organizations. Normally, this would be a part of a developed case of some kind, not necessarily a first encounter sort of thing, but that's not a guarantee.
But how would the religion, per se, be of benefit in linking someone to a criminal organization that may have a link to a religion? What kind of link would that be unless it could be proved that the particular religion was itself criminal? Asking about membership in a particular church, mosque, synagogue, perhaps could make sense in certain investigations, but the religion itself?? I mean we didn't identify Mafia Dons by their Catholicism even though most of them at least pretended to adhere to the Catholic faith. Lots of bankers are Jews, but when investigating bank fraud, people of interest and suspects are not asked if they are Jewish. Further, the sheer scope of religious affiliation would seem to make any connection to religion extremely tenuous from a legal perspective or a practical one. About 85% of the world's ~7BB people claim religious affiliation. That's almost 6B people. Makes for a big haystack with almost as many needles as bits of hay.