
U.S. Customs, Homeland Security Records
Reveal Somalis Given Security Briefings, ‘Community Engagement Tours’ in
Secured Areas at Major U.S. Airports
Somalis
Given Access to Sensitive Information
(Washington, DC) – Judicial
Watch today released 31
pages of records from U.S. Customs and Border Protection revealing
that the Department of Homeland Security has given Somalis “community
engagement tours,” including security briefings, in secured areas at least
three major U.S. airports – Los Angeles, Minneapolis, and Columbus,
Ohio.
The records came in response to a May 2016
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request, which sought records, documents
and communications regarding a “Community Engagement Tour” in Minneapolis-St.
Paul Airport on February 18, 2016.
The briefings provided to the Somali groups
were so sensitive that in 14 instances the agency redacted portions of the
records under Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) exemption
(B)(7)(e), the law-enforcement “risk circumvention”
exemption, which reads:
Exemption 7(E) of the Freedom of Information
Act affords protection to all law enforcement information that would disclose
techniques and procedures for law enforcement investigations or prosecutions,
or would disclose guidelines for law enforcement investigations or
prosecutions if such disclosure could reasonably be expected to risk
circumvention of the law.
In another instance, Customs and Border
Protection exempted under (B)(7)(e) a portion of a February 16, 2016, “Minute
by Minute Agenda” provided during a tour/briefing of the Minneapolis-St.
Paul International Airport (MSP). The material that was withheld from
Judicial Watch as too law-enforcement sensitive – but provided in full to the
Somali group – included a section entitled: “TSA Overview — Processing
[Redacted].” The invitees were provided briefings of the Global Entry
system, APC [Automated Passport Control] system, secondary screening
procedures, baggage-screening procedures and given tours of the holding
cells/interview rooms.
Notes from the February Minneapolis St. Paul
Airport tour include: “Current CBP and TSA job
vacancies were discussed. Attendees responded with requests for DHS
outreach efforts during Somali community events to further advertise these
positions to interested individuals.”
The newly released records also reveal:
- In addition to the
Minneapolis Airport tours/briefings given to Somalis during 2014 and
2015 – and first revealed by Judicial Watch in
August 2016 – tours of U.S. airports and security briefings
also have been provided to other groups at airports in Los
Angeles and Columbus, Ohio: “Once we agree on the dates we will
select the time based on prayer schedules. Another idea could be the
roundtable to take place at the airport after the tour. We have done
that before in LA and Columbus and it worked well both times”.
- The timing of the
Minneapolis Airport tour given to a group of Somalis in February
2016 was
scheduled between 6-8pm because it would “accommodate prayer
times well”
- During the “annual”
tour, federal authorities granted excursions of the facility’s “secure
areas.” It is also noted that two parties in the previous year “did
not pass vetting.”
- The invitation
extended to the Somalis for the Minneapolis Airport tour addressed them
as “Dear Colleague,” and promised “walking people through CBP’s process,
walking people through TSA’s process” and provide “a step-by-step
tour of our operations, designed to offer a greater understanding
of airport processes and procedures.”
Eight senior ranking Homeland Security and
Customs officials were tasked with accompanying and briefing the Somalis on
the February 18, 2016, Minneapolis Airport tour, including the Minneapolis
Area Port Director, the Assistant Port Director, the Watch Commander, a
Homeland Security Civil Rights and Civil Liberties Senior Policy Advisor
(flown in from Washington), the TSA Federal Security Director and TSA Deputy
Federal Security Director.
The documents show Customs officials reporting
that one of the invited individuals had given “CBP
Chicago a hard time” following the last tour and noted three of the
invitees had had investigations against them, which had since been
closed. Another invitee had an active investigation pending.
“Logically, information that is too sensitive
to provide to Judicial Watch and the public should not have been given to a
‘community engagement tour,’” said Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton.
“The U.S. government has been aware for years that Minnesota is a hotbed of
Somali terrorist-cell activity. The behind-the-scenes tours and security
briefings of the Minneapolis airport very well could have created a threat to
public safety.”
In August 2016, the Judicial Watch blog, Corruption
Chronicles, reported on the Muslim airport tour story: “The Obama
administration gave Somali Muslims behind-the-scenes tours at a major U.S.
airport after the group complained to Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson
about feeling harassed and profiled, government
records obtained by Judicial Watch reveal. The special security
tours not offered to any other group occurred at the Minneapolis-St. Paul
International Airport after Department of Homeland Security roundtable
meetings with local Somali leaders to obtain feedback for ‘modifications to
practices that would allow for operations to be more culturally sensitive.’”
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