https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.jsCheck out my latest FrontPage piece… US #Islamist Group #ICNA Wants Freedom for #CopKiller #HRapBrown; Calls Brown, a.k.a. #JamilAmin “one of America’s greatest historical and contemporary figures." https://t.co/lNWrmQ4EYc
— Joe Kaufman (@JoeKaufmanUSA) August 18, 2020
Imam Jamil Al-Amin: The Islamic “Rules for War” 1993 Islamic Society of North America ISNA Conference in Kansas City. Al-Amin was introduced by a founding member of the Islamic Society of Greater Kansas City and convert to Islam, brother Dawud Zwink. Zwink was also a founding member of the Muslim Youth of North America.
Mohammed El-Housiny was at one time the ISNA rep. for ISGKC and has travelled with HAMAS aid convoys to GAZA with George Galloway. El-Housiny posted on Facebook in 2012 that he had signed the petition for Jamil Al-Amin.
Mohamed El-Housiny was wounded in conflict with Egyptian police while aiding HAMAS. VIDEO BELOW
It should be no wonder that El-Housiny is the childhood friend of Mohamed Soltan. Soltan went to prison in Egypt for his role with the Muslim Brotherhood, and El-housiny started the “Free Soltan” movement. Imam Obama eventually arranged for the release of Soltan, the former student at the Islamic School of Greater Kansas City.
It should also be noted at this time, there is a new Islamic Center with School planned for Overland Park, KS that will be teaching more kids like El-Housiny and Soltan to support HAMAS and jihad. Anti-Semite Linda Sarsour is scheduled to be the featured speaker on January 11, 2020, you can see more about that here.
Daniel Pipes has been documenting the Jamil Al-Amin case for many years, required reading is below.
Jamil Al-Amin Goes to Jail
by Daniel Pipes
updated Jul 12, 2019
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My two accounts about Jamil Al-Amin (“The Curious Case of Jamil al-Amin” and “[Jamil Al-Amin:] A Muslim O.J.“) were both written before the man better known as H. Rap Brown went on trial. He has now been tried; a jury found Al-Amin guilty of all 13 counts against him, including murder, felony murder, aggravated assault on a police officer, obstructing a law enforcement officer and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. (March 9, 2002)Mar. 15, 2002 update: Al-Amin was sentenced to life in prison without parole.
May 24, 2004 update: The Georgia Supreme Court unanimously turned down Al-Amin’s appeal, meaning that he will spend the rest of his life in prison.
Sep. 15, 2006 update: My original article documented the bevy of Islamist organizations that turned out for Al-Amin, including CAIR, the Islamic Society of North America, and the Muslim American Society. Now, Steven Emerson reveals that the Muslim Public Affairs Council did as well, in the person of its president, Maher Hathout, who spoke on September 9, 2001, at a “Justice for Imam Jamil Al-Amin Benefit Dinner” at the University of California-Irvine campus. Emerson recounts:
No fewer than a half-dozen times in the speech Hathout referred to Al-Amin as “our brother.” He said he would always take Al-Amin’s word over that of supposedly untrustworthy police. And he veered off into generalized charges of racism against the United States, and even piggybacked on the Al-Amin case his standard charges of “apartheid racial slaughtering” of Palestinians by Israel. …
Speaking before the trial, Hathout had said, “There are two stories for this case. One story, told by our brother Imam Jamil Al-Amin; the other story is a different one, told by the police of Atlanta. It just happened that we believe the story of Imam Jamil Al-Amin, and we don’t believe the story told by the police of Atlanta.” The reason, he explained … was that “The track record of our brother is one of integrity and straight-forward speaking and a bold stance.” The Atlanta police, on the other hand—like police “in so many other places” including New York and Chicago—have “not a very good track record,” he charged. “Let us face it,” Hathout continued. There are so many sugary talks about court, about justice, about legal system, etc. but we know and we can prove it, that in America , the legal system is not color blind and is not money blind.”
Nor did the efforts on Jamil Al-Amin’s behalf by MPAC and its senior adviser, Hathout, end with his conviction on the charges he faced. MPAC was a member—indeed, MPAC political advisor Mahdi Bray served as chairman—of a “Support Committee for Imam Jamil Al-Amin,” which took issue with the trial outcome. In a statement issued March 9, 2002, after the largely African-American jury reached its verdict, the support committee said: “We do not believe the facts presented in court warranted a guilty verdict against Imam Jamil. His defense team offered credible evidence indicating that he was not the person who shot the deputies. We believe Imam Jamil will be exonerated on appeal.”
“Because the death penalty has been disproportionately applied to minority defendants in America ,” the committee statement added, “we oppose its use in this, or any other trial.”
MPAC then cosponsored a Los Angeles “Rally for Justice” in support of the convicted killer on March 24, 2002. An advertisement for the rally declared that “Despite inconsistencies and lack of evidence, Imam Jamil was convicted of these crimes on March 9 …(and) is now faced with life in prison without parole.” The ad urged readers to “Join us in support of Imam Jamil!” Hathout, for his own part, argued that the issues went beyond the Al-Amin case itself to “the situation in America in general and we have to be very aware about that.”
“There is an organized system of injustice. It is intact. It is effective. It is viable, vibrant, and strong, and it depends on a triangle. That triangle, three-limb triangle, is racism, exploitation, blinding propaganda,” Hathout continued. “You take that satanic triangle and you apply it to any case, and justice is sacrificed. To any case, to Imam Jamil Amin, to Malcolm X, to Martin Luther King, to anybody that can be subject to that malignant triangle and you can destroy that person, unless the voice of conscience within the people and within the public can object and can reject that,” he said.
Jan. 25, 2007 update: His supporters have not given up getting Al-Amin out of jail. Today’s e-mail brings a missive from “Br. Jamaaluddin, program director, Radio Raw Deen” titled “Imam Jmail Al-Amin’s important Court Date”:
As salaamu alaikum.
The on-going effort to free Imam Jamil al-Amin needs our financial support now more than ever. There is an upcoming court date in the month of February. These new court proceedings are crucial because they involve exculpatory evidence that was excluded from the original proceedings. Insha’Allah, upon viewing this evidence, the court may decide to exercise its authority to exonerate our brother and release him or grant him a new trial.
As many of you know, Imam Jamil’s original lawyers have been replaced by a new legal team. Legal fees must be raised and paid in order to put on a vibrant defense. We want Imam Jamil home amongst his family and community. Let us please do our part by putting put our “twos and fews” together and sending it to Imam Jamil’s legal defense fund. A link to the fund is on the Radio Raw Deen mainpage at www.rawdeen.com
For those who would like some background on the case, read an article I wrote weeks after the Imam was setup and framed by the government conspiracy. http://www.imamjamil.com/articles/uncoveringconspiracy.asp
Fi-Aman’Allah,
May 25, 2007 update: Fourteen years after it was posted, I finally note this report, “Historic Muslim Rally,” written by Abaidullah A. Choudry for Message International Magazine on a rally for Bosnia that took in Washington D.C. on May 15, 1993, at which Jamil Al-Amin delivered a speech.
Imam Jamil Al-Amin spoke of the need for Muslims to prepare themselves for everything. As a police helicopter ominously circled overhead, he declared to the massive crowd, “We come here today in peace, with banners and placards. But tomorrow we may come in full armament.”
Jan. 7, 2009 update: A pro-Jamil Al-Amin website purports to carry an “Imam Jamil al-Amin Statement on Gaza” which says nothing surprising about Gaza (indeed, it is notably restrained in primarily expressing grief for Gazans rather than attacking Israel) but which does contain one element of the most extreme school of Islamism. Reporting a hadith, Al-Amin quotes Muhammad saying:
“the nations are about to call one another and descend upon you just as those who are eating invite others in sharing their food.”
Someone asked [Muhammad], “will that be because we are few in number at that time?”
He answered, “no, at that time you will be numerous. But you will be froth/scum carried by the torrent. ALLAH (swt) will remove the fear of you from the hearts of your enemies and will put a weakness into your hearts.”
Then someone asked, “What is that weakness?”
He replied, “Love of the world and hatred of death.”
Comment: There is no deeper sickness than this notion that Muslims should love death.
Feb. 20, 2009 update: Al-Amin’s stalwarts say he has been locked up in “the hole”: if true, one wonders what trouble he got into this time.
From: Free Imam Jamil Al-Amin <freetheimam@yahoo.com>
Sent: Friday, February 20, 2009 2:11:49 AM
Subject: URGENT-CALL TO ACTION! PLEASE HELP JAMIL AL-AMIN!Jamil Al-Amin has been moved to what is known in prison as “the hole”. He was strip searched and placed in a cell with no bed, no control over the lights and no shower. They have taken his Qur’an and all of his other personal property.
Please take some time contact the warden, and to get the word out to all of your contacts. We all need to write, call, fax or email Ron Wiley Warden ADX to inquire as to why Jamil Al-Amin has been placed in the hole. No information has been given as to why this transfer was made, but nothing could justify this inhumane treatment.
In the past when action has been taken by the public on Jamil Al-Amin’s behalf, changes have been made that benefited him. Please remember to keep your correspondence brief and to the point, and avoid threats, rambling etc. We want positive changes to be made.
The letter then provides contact information for the warden of the United States Penitentiary Administrative Maximum Facility, known as the supermax prison in Florence, Colorado, the prison with some of the country’s most notorious criminals, including such potential friends for Al-Amin as Omar Abdel-Rahman, Mahmud Abouhalima, Wadih el-Hage, Jeff Fort, Zacarias Moussaoui, and Ramzi Yousef.
Mar. 12, 2009 update: How did Al-Amin get to the supermax prison in the first place? The Nation of Islam newspaper, the Final Call, explains:
Karimah Al-Amin, his attorney and wife, reported that towards the end of 2008 her husband was transferred from a Georgia state prison to a supermax facility in Florence, Colo. “This stems from a March 1990 agreement between Georgia and the federal prison system that people they cannot handle could be sent to a federal facility, and Georgia would pay for it,” Ms. Al-Amin explained to The Final Call.
She said the imam was recently “stripped searched and placed into a cell with no bed, no shower and no control over the lights. They have also taken his Qur’an,” Ms. Al-Amin said. “When he asked a guard when he could make a phone call, the guard told him in 90 days. … The continued harassment of the imam is a continuation of the government’s COINTEL program,” Ms. Al-Amin said. The government is also angry that he continues to preach Islam whenever he enters the prison population, she said. “It’s just the way they have treated him over the past 40 years,” Ms. Al-Amin said.
Oct. 28, 2009 update: Al-Amin’s malign legacy lives on, as described in a U.S. Department of Justice press release today, “Eleven Members/Associates of Ummah Charged with Federal Violations.” It announced the unsealing of a federal complaint
charging Luqman Ameen Abdullah, a.k.a.Christopher Thomas, and 10 others with conspiracy to commit several federal crimes, including theft from interstate shipments, mail fraud to obtain the proceeds of arson, illegal possession and sale of firearms, and tampering with motor vehicle identification numbers. The eleven defendants are members of a group that is alleged to have engaged in violent activity over a period of many years, and known to be armed.
During the arrests, when ordered to surrender, “Abdullah did not surrender and fired his weapon. An exchange of gun fire followed and Abdullah was killed.” The press release goes on to tell something about Abdullah:
Abdullah was the leader of part of a group which calls themselves Ummah (“the brotherhood”), a group of mostly African-American converts to Islam, which seeks to establish a separate Sharia-law governed state within the United States. The Ummah is ruled by Jamil Abdullah Al-Amin, formerly known as H. Rapp [sic] Brown, who is serving a state sentence in USP Florence, CO, ADMAX, for the murder of two police officers in Georgia.
As detailed in the affidavit in support of the criminal complaint that was unsealed today, Abdullah has espoused the use of violence against law enforcement, and has trained members of his group in use of firearms and martial arts in anticipation of some type of action against the government. Abdullah and other members of this group were known to carry firearms and other weapons.
May 3, 2019 update: Jamil Abdullah Al-Amin, now 75, seeks a retrial on the grounds that his constitutional rights were violated at trial. Appealing to the Atlanta-based 11thU.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, the Associated Press reports,
Al-Amin argues a prosecutor violated his right not to testify by directly questioning him during closing arguments in a sort of mock cross-examination. Al-Amin also says the trial judge should have let his lawyers question an FBI agent who was at his arrest about another incident involving the agent. …
In September 2017, U.S. District Court Judge Amy Totenberg found that Al-Amin’s constitutional right not to testify was violated by the prosecutor’s questioning. She also found that the trial court’s attempt to mitigate the prosecutor’s violation was insufficient and may have actually been harmful. But “there is ‘weighty’ evidence supporting his conviction,” she wrote. …
Overall, Totenberg found there wasn’t “sufficient cumulative error” to find his imprisonment unconstitutional. While the violation of his right not to testify was “serious and repeated,” Totenberg said she was constrained by the “onerous standards” imposed by the law and Supreme Court case law.
Al-Amin’s lawyers want the 11th Circuit to reverse Totenberg’s ruling.
Posted on December 26, 2019