On April 19, Chief Judge Beryl A. Howell of the U.S.
District Court for the District of Columbia entered an order that revoked the
naturalized U.S. citizenship of a confessed al-Qaeda operative, restrained and
enjoined him from claiming any rights, privileges, or advantages of U.S.
citizenship and ordered him to immediately surrender and deliver his
Certificate of Naturalization and any other indicia of U.S. citizenship to
federal authorities, the Justice Department announced.
“The Justice Department is committed to protecting our
nation’s national security and will aggressively pursue denaturalization of
known or suspected terrorists,” said Attorney General Jeff Sessions. “This case
demonstrates the Department’s commitment to using all tools at its disposal,
both criminally and civilly, to strategically enforce our nation’s immigration
laws and to disrupt international terrorism. I congratulate the aggressive and
effective investigation and prosecution by the Department of Justice team. We
will protect our national security and our borders, and when we identify
individuals tied to foreign terrorist organizations who procured their U.S.
citizenship by fraud, we will initiate denaturalization proceedings - whether
you reside here or abroad - and ensure you are denied entry into the United
States.”
Khaled Abu al-Dahab, 57, an Egyptian-born naturalized U.S.
citizen and former Silicon Valley car salesman is a confessed member of the
Egyptian Islamic Jihad (EIJ) terrorist organization. Al-Dahab admitted to attending
a training camp near Jalalabad, Afghanistan, where he received military-style
training and taught foreign fighters to fly hang gliders in preparation for
terrorist attacks. Moreover, al-Dahab told the FBI that, during the period in
which he was supposed to establish the good moral character to naturalize under
the Immigration and Nationality Act, he operated a communications hub for EIJ
operatives out of his Santa Clara, California apartment. He facilitated the
transfer of fraudulent passports, documents, money and other items by, between
and among EIJ members, and researched communications devices and helicopter
piloting at the direction of EIJ leadership. Al-Dahab’s communication hub
materially assisted in the perpetration of terrorist attacks in Egypt and
Pakistan.
Additionally, al-Dahab admitted to recruiting Islamic
Americans into the al-Qaeda terrorist organization during his 12-year residence
in California. Al-Dahab told the investigators that Osama bin Laden was eager
to recruit American citizens of Middle Eastern descent because their U.S.
passports could be used to facilitate international travel by al Qaeda
terrorists, and that bin Laden personally congratulated him for this work.
Al-Dahab was naturalized as a U.S. citizen on Feb. 7, 1997. Upon departing the
United States sometime in 1998, al-Dahab was arrested by Egyptian authorities.
He was tried, convicted and sentenced to 15 years in prison for terrorism
related offenses.
On April 8, 2015, the United States filed a civil action seeking
the revocation of al-Dahab’s naturalized U.S. citizenship on the grounds that
he illegally procured his citizenship on account of his false written
statements and testimony during his naturalization proceedings regarding his
current and past addresses; employment history; travel outside the United
States; marital history; prior false testimony; prior claims of U.S.
citizenship; commission of crimes for which he had not been arrested; and
membership in or association with EIJ, as well as his affiliation with an
organization that advocated terrorism. The United States also alleged al-Dahab
should also be denaturalized because he procured his citizenship by concealment
of a material fact or by willful misrepresentation due his concealment of these
matters. The United States obtained the district court’s permission to serve
the complaint on al-Dahab in Egypt via Facebook and electronic mail.
“The Department’s Office of Immigration Litigation –
District Court Section will continue to pursue denaturalization proceedings
against known or suspected terrorists who procured their citizenship by fraud,”
said Acting Assistant Attorney General Chad A. Readler of the Justice
Department’s Civil Division. “The U.S. government is dedicated to strengthening
the security of our nation and preventing the exploitation of our nation’s
immigration system by those who would do harm to our country.”
Under the Immigration and Nationality Act, a naturalized
U.S. citizen’s citizenship may be revoked, and his certificate of naturalization
canceled, if the naturalization was illegally procured or procured by
concealment of a material fact or by willful misrepresentation.
This case was investigated by the Civil Division’s Office of
Immigration Litigation, District Court Section (OIL-DCS) and the FBI. The
litigation was handled by Christopher W. Dempsey, Chief of the National
Security and Affirmative Litigation Unit within OIL-DCS, with substantial
assistance by FBI Special Agent Rami G. Nimri.
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