Watching
the Watch List: Landmark Case Goes to Trial over Massive U.S.
Terrorism "No-Fly" Database
Democracy Now!
Democracy Now!
2
December, 2013
With
hundreds of thousands of people now on the government’s terrorist
watch lists, a closely watched trial begins today in San Francisco.
Stanford University Ph.D. student Rahinah Ibrahim is suing the U.S.
government after she was barred from flying from Malaysia back to the
United States in 2005 to complete her studies at Stanford after her
name was placed on the list.
The
New York Times reports that the federal government’s terrorist
watch list, officially called the "Terrorist Screening
Database," has grown to at least 700,000 people, and those on
the list are often subjected to extra scrutiny, prohibited from
flying, and interrogated while attempting to cross borders.
The
government refuses to divulge who is on the list, how one can get off
the list, and what criteria is used to place someone on the list in
the first place.
Oftentimes,
people have no idea their name is in the database until they attempt
to board a flight.
We
speak with Anya Bernstein, associate professor at the SUNY Buffalo
Law School and author of the article, "The Hidden Costs of
Terrorist Watch Lists."
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