Paracha v. Bush

CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedMarch 27, 2020
DocketCivil Action No. 2004-2022
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Paracha v. Bush, (D.D.C. 2020).

Opinion

UNCLASSIFIED//FOR PUBLIC RELEASE

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMAIAY with Classified

Informati ecurity Officer SAIFULLAH ABDULLAH CISO 7 PARACHA, Date _ Zl gozre Petitioner, v. Civil Action No. 04-2022 (PLF)

DONALD J. TRUMP, et al.,

Respondents.

Nee mee ee ee ee ee ee ee ee”

OPINION

In July 2003, the United States apprehended petitioner Saifullah Paracha, a successful Pakistani businessman, on the belief that he had provided financial and other support to members of the Taliban and Al-Qaeda over the course of several years immediately before and after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. Mr. Paracha was taken to Bagram Air Force Base in Afghanistan for interrogation and then to the United States Naval Base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, where he remains to this day. More than sixteen years after his capture, Mr. Paracha has never been charged before a military commission or any other tribunal.

In November 2004, Mr. Paracha filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus challenging the government’s legal authority to detain him. See Dkt. No. 1. He amended the petition in December of that year. Dkt. No. 11. The parties have vigorously and capably litigated that petition, and the Court ultimately held a two-week long classified evidentiary hearing in October 2019, at which counsel presented hundreds of exhibits and made extensive argument on five disputed issues of material fact. Upon thorough consideration of the amended

factual return, the amended traverse, the pre-hearing merits and opposition briefs, the arguments

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and exhibits presented by counsel at the evidentiary hearing, the relevant legal authorities, and the entire record in this case, the Court will deny Mr. Paracha’s amended petition for habeas corpus.

Congress has granted the President expansive legal authority to detain individuals associated with the Taliban and Al-Qaeda, even those who have not directly participated in hostilities against the United States. In earlier Guantanamo Bay habeas corpus litigation, the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit has held that the government bears a low burden of proof to establish its detention authority. Petitioner’s objections to the prevailing standards for detention authority and the burden of proof are noted and preserved for appeal. As the law stands, however, the Court concludes that respondents possess the legal authority to detain Mr. Paracha because they have established by a preponderance of the evidence that he provided substantial support to the Taliban and to Al-Qaeda. The Court takes no position as to whether Mr. Paracha was a part of either the Taliban or Al-Qaeda,

Part I of this opinion sets forth the factual and procedural background of this case. Part II presents the legal framework under which the Court analyzes habeas corpus petitions from alleged alien unprivileged enemy combatants detained at Guantanamo Bay. Under this framework, determining whether the government has the authority to detain Mr. Paracha is “a mixed question of law and fact.” Barhoumi v. Obama, 609 F.3d 416, 423 (D.C. Cir. 2010). “Whether a detainee’s alleged conduct . . . justifies his detention . . . is a legal question[, and] whether the government has proven that [a detainee did engage in that] conduct . . . is a factual question.” Id. Part III discusses certain evidentiary issues raised by the parties. The Court’s

Findings of Fact appear in Part IV, while Part V contains the Court’s Conclusions of Law.

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I. BACKGROUND A, Factual Overview Saifullah Paracha is a western-educated businessman. He was born in a rural

village in Pakistan and, though raised in poverty, successfully pursued an education. Mr. Paracha received a student visa to travel to the United States, where he graduated from the New York Institute of Technology in 1974. Thereafter, he launched a travel agency in New York City, the first of his many business ventures. Mr, Paracha received a permanent resident visa from the United States consulate in Pakistan; over the next several decades, Mr. Paracha travelled frequently between Pakistan and the United States. Several of Mr. Paracha’s eleven siblings emigrated to the United States, and many of his extended family live in the United States to this day. Mr. Paracha is a practicing Muslim, and his counsel introduced evidence to demonstrate that Mr. Paracha has cosmopolitan and moderate sympathies. Mr. Paracha and his wife, Farhat, sent their children to private Catholic schools in Pakistan. The family travelled frequently, to the United States and elsewhere, and “enjoyed a comfortable life similar to that of many westerners.” Petitioner’s Classified Amended Traverse (“P. Am. Traverse”), at 4. He took business trips to Malaysia, Saudi Arabia, Iran, Iraq, Sweden, the United Kingdom, China, and India; he traveled for leisure to Japan, Yugoslavia, the Philippines, and the United Arab

Emirates. FBI Electronic Communication (“EC”) 7/16/03, JE 70-16, at 894,!

In citing to exhibits, the Court observes the following conventions. Unless

otherwise indicated in the citation, a particular report or set of notes concerns the petitioner. The date given in the citation is conveyed in MM/DD/YYYY format; the date listed is the date appearing on the title page of the exhibit or, if not available, the date on which an interview took place. Some of the FBI documents in this case refer to petitioner with the identifier “ISN 1094,” while Department of Defense documents often a E” refers to a Joint Exhibit, “PE” refers to a Petitioner’s Exhibit, and “RE” refers to a Respondents* Exhibit. Numbered attachments to exhibits are appended to the name of the exhibit: JE 70-12, for example, indicates Joint Exhibit 70, Attachment 12. Page numbers in the citations refer to the continuous Bates

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Several of Mr. Paracha’s business and charitable ventures are relevant to the conduct at issue in this case. See Part IV.A, infra. First, in the early 1990s, Mr. Paracha and Charles Anteby launched International Merchandise, Pvt. Ltd, which operated as a buying and selling agent coordinating garment purchasers in New York and textile manufacturers in Pakistan. “Mr. Paracha and Mr. Anteby did not ship merchandise; rather, the business facilitated connections between suppliers and purchasers.” P, Am. Traverse at 4. The company had 30 to 40 employees, and the petitioner managed its accounting and administrative functions. Uzair Paracha FD-302, 03/30/03, JE 55, at 415. Second, Mr. Paracha founded and ran Universal Broadcasting, a media company in Pakistan that “produced programming on current affairs, politics, and religion, as well as entertainment.” P. Am. Traverse at 4. The studio aimed to sell its programs for distribution to cable outlets around the world; it employed about 20 people. Uzair Paracha FD-302 05/01/03, JE 57, at 430. Third, Petitioner owned an industrial company, Abson Industries, which manufactured polypropylene bags for packaging heavy items like cement. Uzair Paracha FD-302 05/05/2003, at 435. Fourth, petitioner launched a real estate company, SS Associates, to manage the redevelopment, construction, and sale of a beachfront apartment complex called Cliftonia. FBJ EC 10/23/04, JE 70-32, at 964. The government does not dispute that International Merchandise, Universal Broadcasting, Abson Industries, and SS Associates were bona fide companies.

In addition to these business ventures, it is undisputed that Mr.

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