Here comes the sharia. Remember, Alan Dershowitz is on the defense team.
Source: Dr. Jumana Nagarwala tries to toss counts in genital mutilation case
Three doctors accused of cutting the genitalia of prepubescent girls want key charges dismissed, arguing that a law banning female genital mutilation is unconstitutional.
The request,
filed Friday in federal court, is the first legal challenge to a
22-year-old law that went unused until April 2017. That’s when Dr.
Jumana Nagarwala of Northville was arrested and accused of heading a
conspiracy that lasted 12 years, involved seven people and led to
mutilating the genitalia of girls as part of a religious
procedure practiced by some members of the Dawoodi Bohra.
Congress lacked authority to enact a law criminalizing
female genital mutilation in 1996, lawyers for Nagarwala and Farmington
Hills couple Dr. Fakhruddin Attar and Dr. Farida Attar.
The law “impermissibly expanded the scope and
authority of the federal government’s powers beyond constitutional
parameters, and the current prosecution cannot proceed without violating
the Constitution of the United States,” the lawyers wrote.
The filing is the latest attempt to dismiss charges
filed by federal prosecutors. In January, U.S. District Judge Bernard
Friedman
dismissed the most serious count against Nagarwala and Fakhruddin Attar, a sex charge punishable by up to life in federal prison.
A trial is set for January 2019.
Now, the trio are targeting two additional charges
that carry penalties of up to five years in federal prison: female
genital mutilation and conspiracy to commit female genital mutilation.
Defense lawyers cite several reasons that Congress lacked authority to enact the female genital mutilation law:
• The law could not have been enacted pursuant to a
section of the 14th Amendment because the section only applies to state
actions.
• Congress also could not have enacted a female
genital mutilation ban under the Commerce Clause because the
procedure has nothing to do with interstate commerce, the lawyers claim.
“Notably, (female genital mutilation) is not an economic or commercial activity,” defense lawyers wrote in the filing Friday.
If the doctors are successful in their legal
arguments, they would still face an obstruction charge that could send
them to federal prison for up to 20 years.
Locally, most members of the Dawoodi Bohra sect belong to the Anjuman-e-Najmi mosque in Farmington Hills.
Nagarwala is accused of mutilating the genitalia of two Minnesota girls at a Livonia clinic in February 2017.
Prosecutors estimate up to 100 girls were cut during
the 12-year conspiracy. So far, the indictment references six victims:
two 7-year-old girls from Minnesota and four girls from Michigan ages
8-12.
Prosecutors say the girls were cut but defense lawyers
say the procedure performed on the girls was benign and not female
genital mutilation. They accuse the government of overreaching.
Nagarwala is accused of mutilating the Minnesota girls
Feb. 3, 2017, at the Burhani Medical Clinic in Livonia, owned
by Fakhruddin Attar.
Farida Attar is accused of helping arrange the procedure and being in the examination room while it was performed.
The couple were arrested last year and accused of
accused of committing female genital mutilation, trying to cover up the
crime and conspiring with Nagarwala to cut girls.
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