What a GREAT democracy America is!
NDAA
critic stranded in Hawaii after turning up on no-fly list
Wade
Hicks was en route to a US Navy base in Japan to see his wife when
armed military guards informed him that they had other plans. Hicks,
an American citizen with no criminal record, had just been put added
to a federal no-fly list.
RT,
17
October, 2012
After
being escorted off his plane during a routine re-fueling stop on the
Pacific Island of Oahu, Hicks, 34, was left stranded in Hawaii this
week. In an interview, he suggests that his opposition to a
newly-created law that allows for the indefinite detention of US
citizens at military prisons without charge or trial could be to
blame for his mistreatment.
"I
was very, very vocal about the National Defense Authorization Act
(NDAA) and I did contact my representative”about
it, Hicks tells talk show host Doug Hagmann. "I
do believe that this is tied in some way to my free speech and my
political view."
According
to Hicks, he has little reason to believe otherwise. He tells Hagmann
that he formerly worked as a contractor for the US Department of
Defense and has undergone extensive background checks in order to
obtain an enhanced license that allows him to carry a concealed
firearm. Hicks says he also holds on to a special identification card
issued by the Transportation Security Administration (TSA), the US
Homeland Security Department sub-agency that administers pat-downs
and screenings at airports across the country. An investigation
carried out by Hagmann has led him to locating no criminal history
for the man whatsoever.
In
fact, the only “dirt” the host has managed to dig up on Hicks, he
writes, is his occasionally vocal identification as an American
patriot.
Hicks,
says Hagmann, “appears
to be a law abiding member of society.” He
adds, however, that preliminary research has led him to link the man
as being “an
outspoken ‘patriot’”
who is “openly
critical of the NDAA,” a
bill US President Barack Obama signed into law on December 31 despite
openly acknowledging that he had “serious
reservations”
about provisions that allow the military to indefinitely detain
anyone on mere suspicion of ties with terrorists. Hicks also tells
the radio host that he is critical of the government’s handling of
the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks and says,“I
think the evidence I've seen warrants a new investigation, and I'm
very vocal about it as well,"
“He
is a former talk-show host of a small, local radio station known for
its ‘patriotic bias.’ He is a member of ‘Patriots for America’
and the Mississippi Preparedness Project. He is openly vocal about
the erosion of our rights – and it certainly looks like he has
been proven correct. Is that now a crime worthy of being denied the
ability to travel freely within the United States?” Hagmann
writes.
The
Mississippi Preparedness Project, according to the group’s official
website, strives “to
encourage and train others to prepare for any situation, whether it
be political or disruptions in the infrastructure and civil structure
of the communities in which we live and work.”
“We
intend to prepare and train for all foreseeable aspects of personal
preparedness including Political, Basic and Emergency Medical, Food
and Water Storage, Equipment, Local, State and Nationwide
Communications, Personal, Home and Community Defense,” their
mission statement continues.
Hicks’
incident occurred on October 14 when a military plane Hicks had
boarded to visit his wife, a lieutenant in the US Navy, stopped in
Oahu to refuel. Although he had no issues with gaining admittance to
the aircraft during the first leg of his trip, things went amiss in
Oahu.There two heavily-armed officers entered the plane and escorted
him to a small interrogation room at a military base and told him
that he had showed up on the US “no-fly” list, despite having
boarded a flight earlier that day in San Francisco where he had been
subjected to military-sanctioned security screenings reportedly more
stringent than the TSA treatment. He was hoping to visit his wife of
only eight months when the mishap unraveled.
"They
have given me no reason. They just basically are telling me, 'You
can't fly because we said so,'" Hicks
tells Hagmann this week. "They
didn't know how I even left Travis Air Force Base."
"I
said, 'If I could find a way off the island, I could leave'? They
said, 'Yes, as long as you don't fly.”
Hicks
adds that he has since met with a Navy lawyer in Hawaii who attempted
to resolve the case with so far no avail. He reports that the
attorney reached out to US Immigration and Customs Enforcement hoping
that the incident has been the result of a case of mistaken identity,
but,
"They said, 'No, we have the right person that is in our
database. His social security [number] matches and his birth date
matches.'"
"I
have no idea how long I'm going to be stranded in Hawaii or if I'm
going to be able to leave out of here on an aircraft,”
Hicks adds. "Try
to get back from Oahu . . .. It's a long swim and it's a long boat
ride.”

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