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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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April 3, 2017
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Odeh
Claims "Torturous Ordeal" Led to Guilty Plea
IPT News
April 3, 2017
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Editor's Note: For greater detail on the Rasmieh Odeh case, her
elevation to hero by Palestinian advocates and the impact on her victims,
please watch the Investigative Project on Terrorism's five-part video
series, "Spinning a Terrorist Into a Victim."
In what could be one of her last public appearances in the United
States, convicted terrorist Rasmieh Odeh blamed her naturalization fraud prosecution on "law
enforcement oppression."
Odeh spoke Sunday afternoon to the Jewish Voice for Peace conference,
receiving extended standing ovations and shouts of, "We love you,
Rasmieh."
Outside the
conference, the pro-Israel group StandWithUs held a memorial service honoring the memories of Leon Kanner and Edward Joffe. The two Hebrew University
students were killed in 1969 when a bomb went off inside a Jerusalem
grocery store. Israeli investigators arrested Odeh, and later convicted her
for the terrorist attack, after finding explosives matching those used in the grocery
store and in a separate attack on the British consulate, in her bedroom.
She also confessed within a day and identified other members of
the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) terrorist group
which was responsible for the bombings.
Odeh failed to disclose that history or her PFLP membership when she
came to the United States and later applied for naturalization as a citizen
despite specific questions about any record of arrest,
conviction or imprisonment.
A jury in Detroit convicted Odeh in 2014 and sentenced her to 18 months
in prison. But she won a new trial after an appeals court ruled that
testimony supporting Odeh's unsubstantiated claim that abuse she suffered
in Israeli custody left her with post-traumatic stress brought – and that
that somehow contributed to her false immigration answers – was improperly
barred.
That new trial was scheduled to start May 16. Last month, however,
Odeh's attorneys announced that she will plead guilty in exchange for avoiding prison time. As a
result, she will be stripped of her citizenship and deported relatively
soon.
"I survived
another torturous ordeal because of all the incredible supporter (sic)
people everywhere, [including] you," she said.
During her 2014 trial, immigration officials were adamant that Odeh never would have been allowed into
the United States had she been honest about her terrorist past. She
therefore enjoyed a benefit, life in the United States for 20 years, which
she never deserved.
But to the JVP, Odeh is a victim, and she played that card heavily on
Sunday.
Palestinians and their allies in the United States "have had to
face government repression because of our effective organizing for peace
and justice," she said. She never mentioned her conviction, Kanner and
Joffe's deaths, or the fact that she hid her past from U.S. immigration
officials.
Authorities always target "those who want to make a difference in
the world," she said. "We are those people. We have to understand
that we are targets, but also that we have the support of millions of
others around the world who share our vision of historical Palestine
liberation from Zionists where all Palestinian refugees can return to their
original homes, and where everyone there can live with dignity and equal
rights."
Her dream of liberating "historical Palestine" from Zionists
leaves no room for the state of Israel. That vision of a Zionist-free,
Israel-free world was common during the weekend-long JVP conference. On
Saturday, speakers cast Zionism as a form of white supremacism
that fuels global injustice.
"A world without Zionism is a world without oppression" would
create "equality, dignity and human rights," said Lubnah Shomali
of the Badil Resource
Center for Palestinian Residency & Refugee Rights.
Odeh, who fought back tears throughout her remarks, said she faces
"a similar unjust Nakba [catastrophe]" as Palestinians
faced in 1948, when Israel was created. "But I will continue my
struggle for justice for my people where ever I land. I will continue the
struggle for the right of return, for self-determination, and for the
establishment of a democratic state on the entirety of the historic land of
Palestine."
The plea agreement has not been posted on the case docket as of Monday
morning, so the only information available comes from Odeh and her legal
team. It is not known what facts Odeh will agree to which prove her guilt,
or whether the no-jail provision is guaranteed. If it is merely a
recommendation the government and the defense are making to U.S. District
Judge Gershwin A. Drain, he may want to see her take responsibility for her
actions before agreeing to send her on her way.
She certainly didn't deliver that Sunday afternoon in Chicago.
Related Topics: Prosecutions,
Rasmieh
Odeh, Spinning
a Terrorist Into a Victim, Supersol
bombing, naturalization
fraud, PFLP,
Jewish
Voice for Peace, Leon
Kanner, Edward
Joffe, Gershwin
A. Drain, Prosecutions
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