Eight years, four hearings, eighteen witnesses and no 
					support for his longstanding allegations against American 
					Muslims
				
				June 2012
				Some of the material in this report was originally published 
				in written testimony CAIR submitted to Rep. King’s first 
				hearing.
				 
				
				Introduction……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………4
				Summary…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………4
				Before the Hearings: King Places an Entire Community Under 
				Suspicion………………………………………5
				Hearing 1: The Extent of Radicalization in the American 
				Muslim Community and that Community’s 
				Response……………………………………………………………………………………………………………….8
				Hearing 2: The Threat of Muslim-American Radicalization in 
				U.S. Prisons…………………………………10
				Hearing 3: Al Shabaab Recruitment and Radicalization within 
				the Muslim American Community and the Threat to the 
				Homeland……………………………………………………………………………………………….11
				Hearing 4: Homegrown Terrorism the Threat to Military 
				Communities Inside the
				United 
				States…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….13
				Evidence Available Prior to the Hearings Contradicts King’s 
				Allegations Against American 
				Muslims…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….14
				
				Conclusion………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..16
				Appendix: Rep. King’s Questions to Witnesses During the First 
				Four Hearings…….…………………18
				Appendix: Hearing 
				Witnesses…………………………………………………………………………………………….……..21
				 
				
					KING’S CONTRADICTORY MESSAGE ON MUSLIMS
					King: Muslim community makes “tremendous contributions”
					“…there's no desire on anyone's part to denigrate the 
					tremendous contributions made by the Muslim American 
					community. We're talking about a very small, small minority, 
					but a lethal minority.”
					–Rep. Peter King, during the fourth hearing, December 7, 
					2011.
					King: Muslim community “does not cooperate”
					“When a war begins, we’re all Americans. But in this 
					case, this is not the situation. And whether it’s pressure, 
					whether it’s cultural tradition, whatever, the fact is the 
					Muslim community does not cooperate anywhere near to the 
					extent that it should.”
					–Rep. Peter King interview on Secure Freedom Radio 
					With Frank Gaffney, January 6, 2011.
					King: “There is a real threat to the country from the 
					Muslim community”
					There is a real threat to the country from the Muslim 
					community and the only way to get to the bottom of it is to 
					investigate what is happening."
					-Rep. Peter King, interview with Associated Press, 
					February 22, 2011.
				 
				 
				
				Established in 2002, the House Homeland Security Committee’s 
				mission is to “better protect the American people against a 
				possible terrorist attack.”[i] 
				A sober and objective examination of violent extremism and the 
				threat it presents to our nation is the committee’s legitimate 
				business. Sweeping indictments of an entire religious community 
				are not.
				Since 2004, current committee Chairman Peter King (R-NY) has 
				maintained two sweeping indictments of the American Muslim 
				community: that its leadership is overwhelmingly extremist and 
				that its members do not cooperate with law enforcement. 
				CAIR believes that eighteen witnesses and four hearings were 
				more than enough opportunity for the chairman to prove his case. 
				This paper examines his results.
				
				In 2011, Rep. Peter King, chairman of the U.S. House Homeland 
				Security Committee, held four hearings investigating 
				radicalization within the American Muslim community.
				For seven years prior to the first hearing, King had 
				maintained that “80%, 85% of the mosques in this country are 
				controlled by Islamic fundamentalists"[1] 
				and that average Muslims "are loyal," but "don't come forward, 
				they don't tell the police what they know. They won't turn in 
				their own."[ii] 
				In December 2010, he staunchly announced that he will “stand-by” 
				the 85 percent number.[iii] 
				King substitutes other terms for “Islamic fundamentalists” such 
				as “Islamic radicals” or “radical imams.”
				After announcing the hearings, King wrote, “Federal and local 
				law enforcement officials throughout the country told me they 
				received little or - in most cases - no cooperation from Muslim 
				leaders and imams.”[iv] 
				King promised Fox News that during the hearings, “There will be 
				law enforcement familiar with the facts.”
				
				[v]
				Today, after eight years, four hearings and eighteen 
				witnesses, King has failed to produce the promised evidence to 
				support his stigmatization of America’s Muslims.
				Not a single witness attempted to factually validate the 
				allegation of a Muslim community run by extremists. King made 
				only one foray into backing up his allegation during the entire 
				series of hearings. He asked Zuhdi Jasser if extremism is a 
				“systemic problem” in the American Muslim community.  
				Jasser, a physician who works closely with the anti-Muslim 
				movement, is not an expert and has conducted no research on the 
				topic. Jasser’s response: “It's a minority, but there's an 
				ideology that exists in some mosques -- not all, not a majority 
				-- but in some mosques. And it's a significant number.”
				Five of the six law enforcement representatives who testified 
				did not support King’s assertion that Muslims do not cooperate 
				with law enforcement. Instead, these witnesses described “strong 
				relationships” with Somali Muslims, “strong bonds” with the 
				American Muslim community and “outreach and engagement with 
				Muslim communities…” Prior to the hearings, FBI Director Muller 
				had told the House Judiciary Committee, “that many of our cases 
				are a result of the cooperation from the Muslim community in the 
				United States."
				Over the course of four hearings, King did prove what was 
				already known: that a small number of individuals within the 
				American Muslim community are susceptible to violent extremism.
				King’s record of leveling unsubstantiated allegations and 
				biased attacks on the Muslim community and habit of naming 
				people with records of anti-Muslim bias as potential witnesses 
				and information sources denies him any current credibility in 
				discussions about American Muslims and homeland security.
				King’s committee is charged with helping better protect the 
				homeland against terrorist attacks. Al-Qaeda and its allies 
				remain the most significant terrorist threat to our nation, but 
				other groups have carried out attacks. King’s decision to give 
				these other groups a free pass allows them a safer space to 
				operate outside the light of his committee’s scrutiny.
				 
				
					Before the Hearings: King Places an Entire Community 
					Under Suspicion
				 
				In December of 2010, as the incoming chairman of the U.S. 
				House Homeland Security Committee, King announced his intention 
				to hold a series of congressional hearings examining the 
				“radicalization of Muslim Americans.”
				The announcement generated broad-spectrum disapproval 
				centered on two main themes that persisted through the year: 1) 
				King’s record of leveling unsubstantiated allegations and biased 
				attacks on the Muslim community; 2) King placing an entire 
				community under suspicion.
				Additional concern was generated prior to the first hearing 
				as King repeatedly named people with records of anti-Muslim bias 
				as potential witnesses and information sources.
				King’s record of leveling unsubstantiated allegations and 
				biased attacks on the Muslim community
				In February of 2004, Rep. King was promoting a novel he had 
				written when he told interviewer Sean Hannity, "You could say 
				that 80%, 85% of the mosques in this country are controlled by 
				Islamic fundamentalists" and that average Muslims "are loyal," 
				but "don't come forward, they don't tell the police what they 
				know. They won't turn in their own."[vi] 
				In December 2010, he staunchly announced that he will “stand-by” 
				the 85 percent number.[vii]
				In 2007, he said, "Unfortunately, we have too many mosques in 
				this country.”[viii]
				In December 2010, after announcing the hearings, King wrote, 
				“Federal and local law enforcement officials throughout the 
				country told me they received little or - in most cases - no 
				cooperation from Muslim leaders and imams.”[ix]
				In early 2011, King added more to the allegation of 
				non-cooperation and implied that American Muslims are not 
				“American” when it comes to protecting our nation during times 
				of war:[x]
				“…when a war begins, we’re all Americans. But in this case, 
				this is not the situation. And whether it’s pressure, whether 
				it’s cultural tradition, whatever, the fact is the Muslim 
				community does not cooperate anywhere near to the extent that it 
				should. The irony is that we’re living in two different worlds. 
				One is the real world that I find when I’m talking with police 
				officers, talking with federal law enforcement authorities. And 
				when I raise the question of Muslim cooperation, they look at me 
				like ‘oh of course not, no there’s no cooperation, we don’t 
				anticipate that.’ You know, ‘We never expect cooperation.’ They 
				try but hardly ever get it.”
				Concerns that King is Putting an Entire Community Under 
				Suspicion
				Criticism has abounded regarding the repercussions King’s 
				hearings would have on innocent American Muslims tainted by the 
				acts of a tiny minority of violent extremists.
				Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.) the Homeland Security 
				Committee’s most senior Democrat sent a letter to King in 
				February urging him to expand the focus of the hearings to cover 
				ideological-based violence of all kinds. In his letter, Thompson 
				cited a 2008 survey of state police by a DHS entity that found 
				local police naming “neo-Nazi groups” as a “serious threat” in 
				more states that “Islamic extremist groups.”[xi]
				The Hill later reported that, “…nearly 100 of [King’s] 
				Democratic House colleagues pleaded with him to cancel it.”[xii] 
				Among those appealing to King was Rep. Mike Honda (D-CA) who 
				spent time in his youth in a WWII internment camp for Japanese 
				Americans. In an op-ed posted on CNN’s web site, Honda 
				wrote, “These hearings do little to keep our country secure and 
				do plenty to increase prejudice, discrimination and hate. I 
				thought we learned a lesson or two from my internment camp 
				experience in Colorado. I hope I am not proven wrong.”[xiii]
				In early February, a coalition of 51 interfaith and human 
				rights groups, led by Muslim Advocates, sent a letter to the 
				House of Representatives Speaker John Boehner and Minority 
				Leader Nancy Pelosi, asking the congressional leaders to“...urge 
				[King] to address violence motivated by extremist beliefs, in 
				all its forms, in a full, fair and objective way. The hearings 
				should proceed from a clear understanding that individuals are 
				responsible for their actions, not entire communities."[xiv]
				The Leadership Conference on Civil 
				Rights, a coalition of over 200 organizations, sent their own 
				letter to congress in February, stating that they “strongly 
				believe that as currently framed, these hearings will inevitably 
				stoke anti-Muslim sentiment and increase suspicion and fear of 
				the American Muslim community.”[xv]
				Similarly, two days before the first hearing on March 10, 
				2011, the American Civil Liberties Union, along with over forty 
				other civil liberties groups, sent a letter to King saying, 
				“Treating an entire community as suspect because of the bad acts 
				or intolerant statements of a few is imprudent and unfair and in 
				the past has only led to greater misunderstanding, injustice and 
				discrimination.”[xvi]
				Additionally, over 80 faith leaders from across Long Island, 
				King’s home district, followed suit and also sent a letter to 
				King with comparable appeals.[xvii]
				Rep. Keith Ellison (D-MN), the first Muslim to be elected to 
				Congress called the hearings a “witch hunt,” likening them to 
				the Cold War-era McCarthy hearings.[xviii]
				Media critics of the hearing made their voices heard, too. A
				New York Times editorial called the hearings a “sweeping 
				slur on Muslim citizens.”[xix]
				In advance of the second hearing, the National Jewish 
				Democratic Committee issued a statement saying, "Once again, 
				King has singled out the adherents of the Muslim faith, calling 
				into question the loyalty of an entire community."[xx]
				Naming People with Questionable Records as Potential 
				Witnesses and Information Sources
				In January, King told Politico that Ayaan Hirsi Ali 
				was a potential witness. The Politico article was 
				subsequently placed on the House Homeland Security Committee’s 
				web site belaying any arguments that the reporter was 
				misinformed.
				After this announcement several groups called King’s 
				attention to Ali’s extreme anti-Muslim and anti-Constitution 
				rhetoric. For example, during the course of a single 2007 
				interview with Reason Magazine Ali said, “I think that we 
				are at war with Islam” and called for Islam to be “defeated.” 
				Later in the interview, Ali suggested that the U.S. Constitution 
				should be amended to allow for discrimination against Muslims. 
				King dropped Ali, but the question of where he was getting his 
				advice about potential witnesses was in place.
				Subsequently, a National Review article–again posted 
				on the House Homeland Security Committee’s website–announced 
				that Walid Phares was a planned witness for the first hearing.
				In a letter to King, CAIR noted that Phares is a former 
				official with a Christian militia implicated, by Israel’s 
				official Kahan inquiry and other sources, in the 1982 massacre 
				of civilian men, women and children at the Sabra and Shatila 
				refugee camps in Lebanon.
				In the late 1990s, leading members of Phares’ World Lebanese 
				Organization (WLO) included the deputy commander of a group 
				known for systematically torturing prisoners during the Lebanon 
				conflict. Another leading WLO member headed a militia known for 
				atrocities during the Lebanese civil war.
				Phares was dropped as well. However, even after learning of 
				Phares’ associations, King issued a statement saying he will 
				rely on Phares “for his advice and counsel as these hearings go 
				forward.”
				Ayaan Hirsi Ali and Walid Phares as either potential 
				witnesses gave reasonable pause to anyone who was still hoping 
				King’s plan was to hold sober and objective hearings.
				King was also comfortable appearing with known Islamophobes 
				in the lead-up to the hearings. In January, King appeared on 
				Frank Gaffney’s Secure Freedom radio program. Among other 
				things, Gaffney is known for birthing the conspiracy theory that 
				a military patch with a crescent on it was a sign that Islam is 
				taking over America. In February, King appeared on the debut 
				episode of ACT! For America’s new cable TV show according to a 
				press release issued by the group. ACT! Founder Brigitte Gabriel 
				is known for her belief that “every practicing Muslim is a 
				radical Muslim.”
				
					Hearing 1: The Extent of Radicalization in the 
					American Muslim Community and that Community’s Response
				 
				The first hearing was held on March 10, 2011. Given that the 
				Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life later called it the “top 
				Islam-related story of the year” this was King’s moment to have 
				government, law enforcement and expert witnesses support the his 
				allegations against the Muslim community.  
				Instead, three of the four witnesses on the hearing’s key 
				second panel had no homeland security or other professional 
				expertise relevant to the hearing’s topic. These men were not 
				the law enforcement familiar with the facts King had promised 
				Fox News. The only witness who did represent law enforcement 
				was selected by the Democrats.
				
				[2]
				Two of King’s witnesses offered anecdotal stories of personal 
				tragedy.
				Mr. Melvin Bledsoe related his tragic personal experience of 
				watching his son become a violent extremist who attacked a 
				military recruiting center in 2009.
				Mr. Abdirizak Bihi suffered the tragic experience of having a 
				nephew disappear from Minnesota only to later reappear with a 
				terrorist group in Somalia. Bihi has been described as a 
				“lightening rod” in the Minneapolis Somali community.
				
				[xxi] As a substitute for law enforcement or otherwise 
				expert verification of King’s charge of Muslim non-cooperation, 
				Bihi was an unusual choice given his own troubles with police.[3]
				Allegations Bihi made against against Minnesota Somali 
				leaders were not supported by the FBI. Special Agent E.K Wilson 
				of the FBI’s Minneapolis division was quoted the next day 
				saying: "At this point, we have uncovered no evidence to show 
				there was any effort of any mosque or mosque leadership or 
				mosque imam to take part in any recruitment or radicalization of 
				these young men.”[xxii]
				King’s third witness, M. Zuhdi Jasser, believes, 
				“…operationally, Islam is not peaceful.”[xxiii] 
				He has previously acknowledged that he is not an expert in 
				Islam, saying, “I reassert the fact that I am not a formal 
				expert in Koranic Arabic, or in sharia (Islamic jurisprudence).”[xxiv] 
				The New York Times said Jasser “has little following 
				among Muslims but has become a favorite of conservatives for his 
				portrayal of American Muslim leaders as radical Islamists.”[xxv]
				Jasser’s limited following among Muslims may be a result of 
				his close ties with known Islamophobes. Jasser narrates the 
				Clarion Fund’s anti-Muslim propaganda film Third Jihad. 
				His organization, the American Islamic Forum for Democracy 
				(“AFID”) “applauded” an anti-Muslim amendment to Oklahoma’s 
				constitution,[xxvi] 
				even though the U.S. Constitution clearly forbids the government 
				from singling out one religious faith.[4]
				In King’s only foray into backing up his “80%, 85% of the 
				mosques in this country are controlled by Islamic 
				fundamentalists” allegation during the entire series of hearings 
				he asked Jasser if extremism is a “systemic problem” in the 
				American Muslim community. Jasser, a physician, is not an expert 
				and has conducted no research on the topic. Jasser’s response to 
				King is unenlightening: “It's a minority, but there's an 
				ideology that exists in some mosques -- not all, not a majority 
				-- but in some mosques. And it's a significant number.”
				 
				Aftermath of the First Hearing
				Media and public attention on the first hearing was 
				significant. In Religion in the News: Islam and Politics 
				Dominate Religion Coverage in 2011, a report released on 
				February 23, 2012, the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life 
				called the hearing the “top Islam-related story of the year” and 
				noted that “media coverage of the hearing characterized it as 
				emotional and combative.”
				Analysis in the wake of the hearing echoed the concerns 
				leveled in weeks leading to the hearing:
				
					- “The fury surrounding New York Representative Peter 
					King’s March hearing on the radicalization of 
					Muslim-American communities was an embarrassment for the 
					House and its Homeland Security Committee. Not a single 
					meaningful recommendation came from the politically charged 
					investigation.” -Editorial Board, Rep. King finds a new 
					target,” Boston Globe, June 15, 2011
 
				
					- “This is the very definition of McCarthyism: false 
					allegations of subversion.” -Dana Milbank, “Rep. King’s 
					red scare,” Washington Post, March 13, 2011
- “By the end of hearing, Mr. King was claiming personal 
					courage in defying ‘political correctness.’ There is nothing 
					courageous about pandering or sowing hatred and fear.”
 
				-Editorial Board,” Mr. King’s sound and fury,” New York 
				Times, March 12, 2011
				 
				
					- “The committee's witch hunt for Muslim radicals will do 
					little to make our nation safer…The result is a conviction 
					in the trial of the public arena, giving some in our society 
					a chance to deepen their prejudices against Muslims.” 
					-Rep. Judy Chu (D-CA), “Anti-Muslim hearing is an affront to 
					patriotic Americans,” San Jose Mercury News, March 10, 2011.
- “[Minnesota Rep. Keith] Ellison charged that King was 
					‘stereotyping and scapegoating’ Muslims. Rep. Sheila 
					Jackson-Lee of Texas, shouting over King's pounding gavel, 
					labeled the proceedings ‘an outrage.’ Rep. Yvette Clarke, a 
					New York Democrat, dismissed the hearings as ‘great 
					congressional theater’ and ‘the equivalent of reality TV.’ 
					Rep. Laura Richardson of California compared King to the 
					notorious Sen. Joseph McCarthy of Wisconsin, who led the 
					anti-Communist witch hunts of the 1950s. -James Oliphant, 
					Muslim 'radicalization' hearing a success, say Rep. Peter 
					King, Republicans,” Los Angeles Times, March 11, 2011.
- “But King wasn’t going to let the heroism of a Muslim {Saleem 
					Hamdani, a first-responder who died on 9/11] in the face of 
					terrorism get in the way of a good witch hunt.”-Sarah 
					Posner, King Hearing Cast Muslims as Clueless, ‘not 
					intellectually equipped,” The Nation, March 11, 2011.
 
				
					- “Minnesota U.S. Attorney B. Todd Jones, who watched the 
					[hearing held by Rep. Peter King], also took exception to 
					[Minnesota Rep.] Cravaack's characterization [of CAIR]. "I'm 
					frustrated by the blanket condemnation of (the council)," 
					Jones said. He said his terrorism unit of prosecutors has a 
					working relationship with the council's local chapter as 
					well as other entities in sniffing out extremism or 
					wrongdoing. "I hope that (the hearing) does not have an 
					adverse impact on the good things happening here in 
					Minnesota with our Somali community," Jones said. "We are on 
					a good path with closer collaboration. -Rubén Rosario, 
					(Minnesota) Pioneer Press, March 11, 2011
 
				
					Hearing 2: The Threat of Muslim-American 
					Radicalization in U.S. Prisons
				 
				King’s second hearing, held in June, focused on prison 
				radicalization. The hearing did not feature any witnesses from 
				the Bureau of Prisons or the Department of Justice.
				In his opening remarks, King noted this was the third 
				Congressional hearing on the issue in recent years. King noted a 
				“large number” of prison radicalization cases.
				Seven months earlier, the Congressional Research Service 
				(CRS)—the non-partisan entity within the Library of Congress 
				that does research for Members of Congress—reported, “Based on 
				CRS analysis of the 43 violent jihadist plots and attacks since 
				9/11, only one involved radicalization in prison. A study of 117 
				homegrown jihadist terrorists from the United States and the 
				United Kingdom found only seven cases in which prison had a 
				significant impact on an individual’s radicalization process.”
				This led CRS to conclude, “The lack of conclusive 
				prison-based radicalization among the jihadist terrorism plots 
				and foiled attacks since 9/11 suggests that the threat emanating 
				from prisons does not seem as substantial as some experts may 
				fear.”[xxvii] 
				When CRS updated the report in November 2011 one of 53 plots 
				involved prison radicalization, the conclusion on prison 
				radicalization from the first report remained unchanged.
				Witnesses reflected this conclusion.
				Michael Downing, deputy chief and commanding officer of the 
				CounterTerrorism and Special Operations Bureau of the Los 
				Angeles Police Department's said it “remains a phenomena (sic) 
				of low volume.”
				In his written testimony, Professor Bert Useem of Purdue 
				University, whose work was funded by institutions affiliated 
				with the Department of Homeland Security and the Department of 
				Justice, concluded, “My core argument, then, is that U.S. 
				prisons are not systematically generating a terrorist threat to 
				the U.S. homeland.”
				Patrick Dunleavy a retired deputy inspector formerly with the 
				New York Department of Correctional Services and Kevin Smith, a 
				former U.S. attorney both addressed isolated cases of prison 
				radicalization. Duleavy’s testimony focused on the group Dar ul-Islam. 
				While Smith focused on Jam'iyyat Ul Islam Is Saheeh( JIS).
				Media coverage of the second hearing was minimal.
				In its reporting on the second hearing, Politico said, 
				“…though King painted the threat as serious, the evidence to 
				support that claim provided by witnesses was mixed.” According 
				to Politico “…all [the witnesses] seemed to emphasize the 
				low occurrence of such cases…”[xxviii]
				
					Hearing 3: Al Shabaab Recruitment and Radicalization 
					within the Muslim American Community and the Threat to the 
					Homeland
				 
				The third hearing in the series was held in July. Again, 
				there were no witnesses representing the federal government, the 
				most important entity engaged in protecting the homeland from 
				international terrorism.
				In the days prior to the hearing, Anders Breivik, a lone wolf 
				violent extremist in Norway, murdered sixty-nine people in an 
				anti-Islam rampage. Breivik’s writings showed significant 
				influence from U.S.-based anti-Muslim elements. Despite this 
				connection, King maintained his refusal to broaden the scope of 
				the hearing to include other forms of violent extremism.
				During the course of the hearing, witnesses also lent 
				credence to a need for vigilance against terror threats of all 
				kinds.
				William Anders Folk, former Assistant United States Attorney 
				for the District of Minnesota, said that his professional 
				experiences, “taught me that extremist views that fuel 
				terrorists, whether homegrown or foreign, al-Shabaab, Al Qaida, 
				or otherwise, are capable of extraordinary acts of violence. And 
				they require the unwavering attention of law enforcement.” 
				Questioned by Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee (D-TX) the Chief Tom Smith 
				of Police of Saint Paul, Minnesota also agreed about the need to 
				be concerned about domestic-based terror from groups such as 
				white extremists.  Mr. Thomas Joscelyn, senior fellow at 
				the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, replied “certainly” 
				to a question about Al-Shabaab attempting to recruit in 
				communities other than among Muslims.
				In his opening statement for the hearing, King cited an 
				incident in Minneapolis, saying, “When one cleric spoke out 
				against al-Shabaab inside the Minneapolis mosque where many of 
				the missing young Somali-American men had once worshipped, he 
				was physically assaulted, according to police.”
				The Islamic scholar, cleric in King’s words, was at the 
				mosque by invitation of its leadership. Hasan Jama, the mosque 
				director, was the victim of the attack. Prior to Jama’s 
				leadership, Federal authorities alleged that some young 
				attendees of the mosque had gone to join Al-Shabaab in Somalia. 
				Since taking the director position, Jama had been involved in 
				flooding the mosque with “positive and peaceful messages.”[xxix]
				A news report on the incident also noted, “[FBI] officials 
				say the mosque's leaders have been involved in ongoing 
				conversations between law enforcement and community members.”[xxx]
				King’s example gives another indication of a Muslim community 
				leadership that is engaged in defeating violent extremism.
				This mosque, the Abubakar as Saddique Islamic Center, was 
				soundly criticized during the first hearing by witness Abdirazik 
				Bihi. Bihi, who as noted earlier has had issues with law 
				enforcement, alleged that mosque leadership had been complacent 
				when the young men disappeared. In contrast, the Minneapolis 
				Star-Tribune had previously noted,  “FBI Special Agent Ralph 
				Boelter, who investigated the Somalis who fled Minnesota to join 
				the al-Shabaab terror group, said Muslim-Americans couldn't have 
				been more helpful.”[xxxi] 
				On the same day as the hearing, Minneapolis Mayor R.T. Rybak 
				issued a statement which said, in part, “Minneapolis’ large and 
				vibrant Somali community has been bravely dealing with this 
				problem [Al-Shabaab efforts to recruit local youths] head-on for 
				years, and I fully support their efforts to do so.”[xxxii]
				Turning back to Rep. King’s opening statement, the chairman 
				also attempted to make the argument that his hearings, “are also 
				liberating and empowering to the many Muslim-Americans who have 
				been intimidated by the leaders in their own communities, and 
				are now willing and able to come forward.” King asked witness 
				Ahmed Hussen, a Canadian, to support this. Hussen said “yes,” 
				but spoke only to shared values between Islam and the West, not 
				to the dubious claim of “benefits” of King’s hearings, saying, 
				“…our religion is not incompatible with American or Canadian 
				values.”   There is nothing in Hussen’s written 
				testimony supporting the notion of King “liberating and 
				empowering” Muslims.
				Hussen, the hearing’s first witness, discussed the 
				Canadian-Somali community at length. It is reasonable to 
				question why this witness was selected. After the first hearing, 
				Minnesota U.S. Attorney B. Todd Jones had called attention to 
				“the good things happening here in Minnesota with our Somali 
				community."[xxxiii] 
				FBI agent Boelter, quoted above, also indicated a “helpful” 
				Somali community. Why did King feel the need to go outside the 
				United States for a witness, given that law enforcement 
				officials had indicated a Somali community in Minnesota that was 
				concerned and helpful?
				Chief Smith also talked about a cooperative and supportive 
				community outlining a successful community engagement program 
				that had generated “positive relationships.” Smith also 
				mentioned “the [community] elders who regularly visit my 
				office.”
				According to the witnesses, groups like Al-Shabaab show no 
				compunction about killing Muslims.
				“More Muslims are killed by Shabaab than anybody. That's who 
				they target,” said Folk. Jocelyn concurred, “most of Shabaab's 
				terrorism is actually focused on Muslims, both in Somalia and 
				also the victimization of Muslims I would say internationally… 
				What they did is they found any Muslims that weren't willing to 
				work with them and they systematically killed them.”
				Folk summed up neatly, the sober and objective reality 
				regarding Al-Shebab: “The reality, Congressman, is that only a 
				very small number of Somalis that have left the United 
				States--or that have joined al-Shabaab--only a small number of 
				Somalis have joined al-Shabaab as compared to the total number. 
				But the reality is even that small number as compared to the 
				large population is too many.”
				The hearing received insignificant media and public 
				attention.
				
					Hearing 4: Homegrown Terrorism the Threat to Military 
					Communities Inside the United States
				 
				The fourth hearing was held jointly with the Senate’s 
				Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs committee in 
				December. This hearing featured two Department of Defense 
				witnesses.
				In his opening remarks, Rep. Bennie Thompson expressed the 
				ongoing concern that singling out a faith minority as the sole 
				threat could stigmatize Muslims.
				Rep. King responded saying, “…there's no desire on anyone's 
				part to denigrate the tremendous contributions made by the 
				Muslim American community. We're talking about a very small, 
				small minority, but a lethal minority.”
				This remark stands in stark contrast to King’s statement, 
				cited earlier in this report, to Frank Gaffney a few months 
				earlier: “When a war begins, we’re all Americans. But in this 
				case, this is not the situation. And whether it’s pressure, 
				whether it’s cultural tradition, whatever, the fact is the 
				Muslim community does not cooperate anywhere near to the extent 
				that it should.”[xxxiv](Emphasis 
				is CAIRs.)
				The issue of broadening King’s examination of threats to 
				homeland security received more attention than just Rep. 
				Thompson’s comment.
				When asked by Rep. Laura Richardson (R-CA) if the “threat to 
				U.S. communities is limited to Islamic extremists only, yes or 
				no?” All three Department of Defense witnesses on the first 
				panel said no.
				United States Army Senior Advisor on Counterintelligence 
				Operations and liaison to the Federal Bureau of Investigation 
				Jim Stuteville, said that the Army was training its personnel to 
				focus on “behavioral activity, not on any specific ideology, 
				religion, or ethnic group. We adopted that approach because we 
				want to make sure that we can account for any type of threat, 
				both those previously and those in the future.”
				Lt. Col. Reid Sawyer of the Combating Terrorism Center at 
				West Point cited the “Christian right movement and the identity 
				movement.” 
				While questioning the witnesses, Rep. Dan Lungren (R-CA) 
				probed the administration’s decision to identify Al-Qaeda and 
				its allies as our enemy. Lungren, King and some others prefer 
				“violent Islamic extremists” and dismiss any other terminology 
				politically correct. Assistant Secretary of Defense for Homeland 
				Defense and Americas' Security Affairs Paul N. Stockton 
				responded, “That is a prime propaganda tool. And I'm not going 
				to aid and abet that effort to advance their propaganda goals.” 
				Stockton added, “…I don't believe it's helpful to frame our 
				adversary as Islamic with any set of qualifiers that we might 
				add, because we are not at war with Islam.” The Assistant 
				secretary finished say, “This [use of terminology] is not about 
				political correctness. This is about defeating our adversaries.”
				The hearing’s final witness had a tragic personal story to 
				offer, but was not an expert on the subject a hand. Mr. Darius 
				Long is the father of a young soldier who was murdered by a 
				violent extremist. Mr. Long and his family have a long record of 
				honorable service to the nation and their loss is a national 
				tragedy.
				A report issued by King’s committee staff on December 7, 2011 
				does acknowledge the honorable military service of many members 
				of the American Muslim community:
				At least 6,024 U.S. service members who declared Islam as 
				their faith have served honorably in overseas war deployments 
				since the 9/11 attacks, and 14 Muslim-American troops have been 
				killed in action, all in Iraq, the Pentagon informed the 
				Committee’s Majority Staff. We honor these American heroes, four 
				of whom are buried in nearby Arlington National Cemetery, for 
				making the ultimate sacrifice in service of our nation.
				Media and public attention to the hearing was again limited.
				In its coverage of the hearing, CNN noted that “terrorist 
				threats against U.S. officials and police that have nothing to 
				do with Islamist militancy are surely also worthy of the 
				scrutiny of Congress, but neither the Senate nor House homeland 
				security committee, nor it seems any other congressional 
				committee, has examined the issue in any detail since 9/11.”[xxxv]
				
					Evidence Available Prior to the Hearings Contradicts 
					King’s Allegations Against American Muslims
				 
				In April 2008, FBI Director Robert Mueller, told the U.S. 
				House Judiciary Committee: "I re-affirm the fact that 99.9 
				percent of Muslim-Americans … are every bit as patriotic as 
				anybody else in this room, and that many of our cases are a 
				result of the cooperation from the Muslim community in the 
				United States."
				The following year, Mueller told a Senate committee the 
				Muslim community "has been tremendously supportive and worked 
				very closely with [the FBI] in a number of instances around the 
				country."
				The RAND Corporation’s Brian Michael Jenkins finds the 
				suggestion of “an American [Muslim] population that remains 
				hostile to jihadist ideology and its exhortations to violence” 
				in his 2010 paper Would-Be Warriors.
				Similarly, the December 2010 Congressional Research Service 
				report American Jihadist Terrorism: Combating a Complex 
				Threat cites numerous examples of Muslim community 
				activities and federal engagement and partnership activities 
				with Muslim-American communities.
				Quintan Wiktorowicz, senior director for global engagement at 
				the White House National Security Council, shattered stereotypes 
				about Muslims and radicalization when his research found that 
				religious Muslims are in fact the most resistant to 
				radicalization. “As part of his research,” NPR’s Dina Temple-Raston 
				reported on January 24, 2011, “Wiktorowicz interviewed hundreds 
				of Islamists in the United Kingdom. After, compiling his 
				interviews he came to the conclusion that—contrary to popular 
				belief—very religious Muslims were in fact the people who ended 
				up being the most resistant to radicalization.”
				"One of the important things about counterradicalization is 
				that about perhaps 10 percent of it is law enforcement and 
				intelligence, 90 percent of it are things that have relatively 
				little to do with that," said Wiktorowicz. "Counterradicalization 
				also has to include things like politicians visiting Muslim 
				communities, messaging and beefing up education about Islam 
				among Muslims themselves.”
				A 2010 report by scholars at Duke University and the 
				University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill recommended that 
				policymakers reinforce anti-radicalization activities already 
				underway in American Muslim communities.
				“Muslim-Americans organizations and the vast majority of 
				individuals that we interviewed firmly reject the radical 
				extremist ideology that justifies the use of violence to achieve 
				political ends,” said the report’s co-author David Schanzer, 
				director of the Triangle Center on Terrorism and Homeland 
				Security. Co-author David Kurzman also said, “Muslim-American 
				communities have been active in preventing radicalization.”
				In February, 2011 the scholars at Duke University and the 
				University of North Carolina published “Muslim American 
				Terrorism Since 9/11: An Accounting.” The study reports that:
				·         While 47 
				Muslim-Americans committed or were arrested for terrorist crimes 
				in 2009, the number dropped to 20 this past year.
				·         The number 
				of Muslim-Americans engaged in terrorist acts with domestic 
				targets declined from 18 in 2009 to 10 in 2010.
				·         Eleven 
				Muslim Americans have successfully executed terrorist attacks in 
				the United States since 9/11, killing 33 people.  This is 
				about 3 deaths per year.  There have been approximately 
				150,000 murders in the United States since 9/11.  According 
				to the FBI there were approximately 15,241 murders in the United 
				States in 2009.
				·         Tips from 
				the Muslim American community provided the source of information 
				that led to a terrorist plot being thwarted in 48 of 120 cases 
				involving Muslim Americans.
				Similarly, the Post 9/11 Terrorism Database created by 
				the Muslim Public Affairs Council in 2009 revealed that “Muslim 
				communities have stepped forward to help law enforcement foil 
				over 1 out of every 3 Al Qaeda-related terror plots threatening 
				America since 9/11.”
				These are sources anyone can verify that were available to 
				anyone with internet access prior to King’s first hearing.
				In the eight years since he first asserted the allegations of 
				fundamentalist control of the Muslim community and 
				non-cooperation with law enforcement, King has never pointed to 
				an evidentiary source for the “80%, 85%” figure that objective 
				observers can review.[5]
				Instead he cites a speech given at the U.S. Department of 
				State in the late 1990s by Hisham Kabbani, a figure who is 
				unknown to most U.S. Muslims.
				One man’s opinion. Kabbani to this day has not produced his 
				source for this allegation
				
				1) After four hearings, King has failed in proving 
				allegations against the American Muslim community is led by 
				fundamentalists and does not cooperate with law enforcement. 
				Evidence available prior to the first hearing, as well as five 
				of the six law enforcement officers he brought to testify do not 
				support these allegations.
				Not a single witness attempted to factually validate the 
				allegation of a Muslim community run by extremists. Zuhdi Jasser, 
				the only witness to attempt to back King up on the allegation, 
				gave a rambling response to the charge best summed up in the 
				contradictory positions taken in these sentences: “It's a 
				minority, but there's an ideology that exists in some mosques -- 
				not all, not a majority -- but in some mosques. And it's a 
				significant number.”
				Five of the six law enforcement officers brought to testify 
				at the hearings did not support King’s assertion that Muslims do 
				not cooperate with law enforcement.
				Chief Smith of Saint Paul, Minn. talked about “strong 
				relationships” with Somali Muslims.
				Sherriff Baca of Los Angeles described “strong bonds” with 
				the American Muslim community.
				LAPD Counter-Terrorism and Special Operations Bureau 
				Commander Michael Downing said, “Los Angeles is known for its 
				outreach and engagement with Muslim communities…”
				Neither of the two U.S. attorneys who testified criticized 
				Muslim leadership or mosques. Former U.S. attorney Kevin Smith 
				did describe a Muslim community committed to the Constitution: 
				“…in our outreach and engagement with Muslim communities, we 
				recognize, and the Muslim communities recognize, that the law of 
				the land is the Constitution. And that there may be sharia 
				principles in their community that they look at, similar to 
				Jewish laws, but the law of the land, the rule of law is the 
				Constitution of the United States.”
				Additionally, Assistant Secretary of Defense for Homeland 
				Defense and Americas’ Security Affairs Paul Stockton said in his 
				written testimony, “Muslim-Americans are important allies in the 
				effort to counter violent extremism in the United States.” 
				Speaking during the hearing, Stockton said, “And that is 
				recognizing the tremendous contributions of Muslim Americans to 
				national security and the armed forces in particular. We need 
				Muslim Americans in the United States military.”
				Evidence and public statements of senior law enforcement 
				officials available prior to the hearings also contradicted 
				King.
				To date, King has neither retracted his unsubstantiated 
				allegation nor sought to admit that he was wrong.
				Instead, even as recently as January 2012, he continues to 
				assert that Muslims somehow lack in their efforts to protect the 
				homeland. In a January 12, 2012 statement on the House Homeland 
				Security Committee’s web site King said, “The good citizen or 
				citizens who reported [Florida terror suspect Sami] Osmakac to 
				authorities deserve great credit for doing what too many leaders 
				in the Muslim American community too often fail to do. I have 
				long advocated for increased cooperation between Muslim leaders 
				and law enforcement, so this development is a positive sign.”[xxxvi] 
				(Emphasis is CAIR’s, given the evidence laid out in this 
				document the information from Florida represents a pattern of 
				constitutionally-informed cooperation and not a “development.”)
				King’s rhetorical smearing of an entire faith community is 
				not based in fact. He needs to explain how standing by the 
				allegations serves domestic security.
				2) Over the course of four hearings, King did prove what 
				was already known: that a small number of individuals within the 
				American Muslim community are susceptible to violent extremism.
				Over the last year King has proven—perhaps 
				unintentionally—what everyone already knew: a small number of 
				individuals within the American Muslim community are susceptible 
				to Al-Qaeda’s ideology. Given this lack of revelation, it is 
				difficult to justify both the time and expense of these hearings 
				to tax-payers and stigmatization of the American Muslim 
				community.
				American Muslims are aware that even a small fraction of 
				violent extremists represent a threat to their nation.
				Rather than joining Muslims and their representative 
				organizations in expanding efforts to deny Al-Qaeda and its 
				ideology any minute safe haven, King unapologetically continues 
				casts suspicion on the entire community.
				3) King’s record of leveling unsubstantiated allegations 
				and biased attacks on the Muslim community and habit of naming 
				people with records of anti-Muslim bias as potential witnesses 
				and information sources denies him any current credibility in 
				discussions about American Muslims and homeland security.
				 
				A sober and objective examination of terrorism and the threat 
				of violent extremism is important. King’s penchant for spicy, 
				self-serving sound bites makes for entertaining TV, but it 
				belittles the subject.
				CAIR asserts that Rep. King’s politically exploitive approach 
				to the subject resulted in both broad-spectrum pushback against 
				him and public disinterest in his hearings subsequent to the 
				significant attention given to the first one.
				Chairman King’s general response to criticism of his hearings 
				was that political correctness needed to be put aside for the 
				sake of examining this threat to the homeland. CAIR agrees. 
				However, we also believe that King’s broad brush indictments of 
				an entire religious minority can play no role in a serious 
				examination of threats to our nation.
				4) King’s committee is charged with helping better protect 
				the homeland against terrorist attacks. Al-Qaeda and its allies 
				remain the most significant terrorist threat to our nation, but 
				other groups have carried out attacks. King’s decision to give 
				these groups a free pass allows them a safer space to operate 
				outside the light of his committee’s scrutiny. 
				 
				Three Department of Defense witnesses agreed that threats to 
				military communities emanate from multiple sources, not just 
				violent extremists who claim to be acting in the name of Islam.
				William Anders Folk, former Assistant United States Attorney 
				for the District of Minnesota, said that his professional 
				experiences taught him that threats from multiple ideologies, 
				“require the unwavering attention of law enforcement.” Chief Tom 
				Smith of Police of Saint Paul, Minnesota also agreed about the 
				need to be concerned about domestic-based terror from groups 
				such as white extremists. Mr. Thomas Joscelyn, senior fellow at 
				the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, replied “certainly” 
				to a question about Al-Shabaab attempting to recruit in 
				communities other than among Muslims.
				 
				
					Appendix: Rep. King’s Questions to Witnesses During 
					the First Four Hearings
				 
				The text below is taken directly from official hearing 
				transcripts. During a congressional hearing, each committee 
				member is allotted a short time to ask questions of the 
				witnesses. The below questions were posed by King. They are 
				provided so the reader can evaluate King’s efforts to validate 
				his allegations against the American Muslim community during the 
				hearings.
				Hearing 1: The Extent of Radicalization in the American 
				Muslim Community and that Community’s Response
				 
				KING: Dr. Jasser, thank you for your testimony. You listened 
				to the testimony of Mr. Bledsoe and Mr. Bihi. I would ask you, 
				do you see these as isolated cases? Or as a part of a -- or is 
				it part of a
				systemic problem in the Muslim American community? And if it 
				is, how would that be impacted
				as far as mosques, as far as CAIR, and as far as overseas 
				funding?
				KING: Thank you, Dr. Jasser. In my final seconds, Mr. 
				Bledsoe, I was very moved by your testimony. In the lead-up to 
				these hearings, this hearing was attacked by everybody from CAIR 
				to Kim Kardashian to the New York Times as being such a 
				dangerous moment that we were going to have here today. Why did 
				you come to testify? What do you hope your testimony will bring 
				about? And what is your opinion of this hearing?
				Hearing 2: The Threat of Muslim-American Radicalization in 
				U.S. Prisons
				KING: Thank you very much, Professor, for your testimony. Mr. 
				Dunleavy, you, in your testimony, talk about what appears to be 
				the lack of proper vetting for chaplains in state prisons. And I 
				know our staff has visited the maximum security prisons, and we 
				have been impressed by steps taken at the federal level. But 97 
				percent of prisoners are in state and local prisons. And you 
				gave the example of the imam, the chaplain, in a New York 
				prison, who was arrested and convicted last year for smuggling 
				razor blades into Ryker's Island. He had been certified as a 
				chaplain by the Islamic Leadership Council, which actually is 
				located right outside my district in Wyandanch. And I know it 
				somewhat well, because the leaders are always picketing my 
				office. But the fact is you had an organization such as that 
				certifying a chaplain who is a convicted murderer, and yet he 
				was certified to be a chaplain in the state prison system. Has 
				that situation improved at all?
				KING: But he was still serving in 2007?
				KING: Professor Useem seemed to say that he does not believe 
				the threat is that significant from the prisons. And yet, Chief 
				Downing, you say it's a subject which (inaudible) great concern. 
				It's an important phenomenon relating to the evolving threat of 
				Muslim Americans radicalization in prisons, and prisons are in 
				fact communities at risk. As the person who's on the ground, who 
				has to deal with this issue  every day, you consider it to 
				be a serious issue?
				KING: I'm not asking you to divulge any facts of ongoing 
				investigations. But in your written statement you say there are 
				several ongoing cases whose story is yet to be told. However, 
				the common denominator in these cases is conversion to a radical 
				form of Islam while in prison. So are you concerned about 
				ongoing cases relating to Islamic terrorism?
				KING: Mr. Smith, in the Kevin James case, it seems it was the 
				perfect confluence of a radical form of religion, organized gang 
				members and almost an assembly line of radicalization in the 
				prison, going in post-prison to a mosque to recruit and 
				radicalize more, and then attempting to carry out terrorist 
				plots. Can you say what -- what makes -- is there anything 
				unique about a religious radical as opposed to a gang member, a 
				skinhead or a neo- Nazi?
				Hearing 3: Al Shabaab: Recruitment and Radicalization 
				within the Muslim American Community and the Threat to the 
				Homeland
				KING: Chief Smith, thank you for your testimony and your 
				service. I will begin the round of questions. Mr. Hussen, let me 
				begin with you, please. As you probably know, these hearings 
				have been attacked as anti-Muslim bigoted, biased, racist - pick 
				your terminology - that's come at us from all directions. You 
				said in your testimony these hearings have actually empowered 
				your community.
				KING: If you could expand on that? And in the course of doing 
				that, you also said that you believe the narrative has to be 
				changed that goes to the Somali-American community to show that 
				they should not be anti-Western. That in effect, they should 
				work with the governments of Canada and the United States. I 
				would ask you, first of all, to the extent these hearings have 
				helped out, but even more importantly, do you find that the 
				leadership in your community agrees with you? Has it changed? 
				Has it gone for the better? If you could just basically tell us 
				what the level of leadership is and how they react to what 
				you're saying about the narrative of being pro-Western?
				KING: If I could ask you, what is your relationship with CARE 
				in Canada?
				KING: Does CARE share your narrative?
				KING: OK. If I could ask Mr. Folk, how would rate the 
				severity of a possible attack on our homeland because of the 
				linkup between al- Shabaab and AQAP?
				KING: And we've heard various estimates of three dozen, four 
				dozen,  40 in the United States, 20 in Canada, maybe more, 
				who've gone over.  If we know who's gone over, what's the 
				threat about them coming back?
				KING: Mr. Joscelyn, do you care to comment on the potential 
				threat with al-Shabaab linking with AQAP?
				KING: The time of the gentleman has expired. I would ask the 
				Ranking Member to indulge me for a moment, and ask Mr. Folk if 
				you want the opportunity. You were asked about your testimony. 
				And did you consult with the Justice Department before your 
				testimony? And did they put any restrictions on you?
				Hearing 4: Homegrown Terrorism: The Threat to Military 
				Communities Inside the United States
				KING: Thank you, Colonel Sawyer. And also thank you for your 
				prepared statement, which I read last night. It was really a 
				treatise on terrorism. Thank you very much. Secretary Stockton, 
				in your prepared testimony and also in an article you write 
				entitled "Ten Years After 9/11: Challenges for the Decade to 
				Come," you said, among things, Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula 
				is actively recruiting U.S. military personnel to conduct lone 
				actor attacks on U.S. military targets. How significant do you 
				believe the threat is from within the military and how 
				successful has Al Qaeda been at recruiting members of the 
				American military?
				KING: Secretary Stockton, we're in an open session, so I'm 
				not going to ask for precise numbers, but are there cases within 
				the military right now involving prospective jihadists and 
				terrorists that you are aware of or monitoring?
				KING: OK. Senator Lieberman, we were going to call it (ph) in 
				closed session at the end of the second panel. OK. We'll 
				reconvene in closed session. Thank you very much. Mr. Stuteville, 
				as Senator Collins mentioned, during the 1990s when there were 
				white supremacists attacks within the military, when there were 
				right wing extremist attacks carried out within the military, 
				the military made it clear that right wing extremists and white 
				supremacists were the -- were those who carried out the attacks. 
				And that -- those ideologies were identified. And yet it appears 
				that the ideology of violent Islamic extremism is not identified 
				by name, including in your most recent documents. So I would ask 
				why does the Army now believe that it should not identify who 
				the enemy is when it was particularly appropriate to identify 
				the enemy 16, 17 years ago?
				KING: Mr. Stuteville, if we're relying on behavioral analysis 
				and ignoring a person's ideology, the fact is, as Senator 
				Lieberman said, the enemy here is extreme violent Islam. A small 
				minority, a tiny minority, but the fact is they're rowling (ph) 
				toward Christianity or Judaism or atheism or Buddhism or 
				Hinduism. The particular enemy today comes from a very violent 
				form of Islam, just as in the 1990s there were white 
				supremacists and there were skinheads and there were Klan 
				members. And it seemed the military never hesitated in targeting 
				that enemy and identifying that enemy. Yet it appears like, for 
				instance, again, in this new Threat Awareness and Reporting 
				Program, you know, yes, I'm not saying we go back to the Cold 
				War, but the fact is white supremacists, that was not the Cold 
				War. That was a particular virulent ideology that was I believe 
				rightly and correctly and effectively attacked by the military. 
				And it appears as if today we're being politically correct by 
				not identifying who the target is. And I would say the same 
				thing if we were talking about Irish Catholics who were carrying 
				out attacks.
				Identify them. Say who they are. I think we're sort of being 
				too politically correct here. I find that very frustrating. Let 
				me give you an opportunity to answer to that. And then also my 
				final question, and then I'll be out of time, will be we've 
				learned, the committee staff, that for instance in barracks that 
				Inspire magazine is available to members of the Armed Forces. 
				Now was that just as aberration? Is that policy? Because I know 
				for instance people can't fly federal flags or Nazi flags in a 
				barracks, and yet Inspire magazine is the propaganda organ of 
				the enemy. And a number of us, including myself, have actually 
				been named in that magazine by Al Qaeda in the Arabian 
				Peninsula. So I would ask you to answer the specific question 
				regarding Inspire and also why this change in policy to go from 
				naming someone -- naming an ideology to ignoring the ideology, 
				or Secretary Stockton.
				KING: But if it's reported, is a person allowed to keep it in 
				the barracks? Is it just put up as one more indicator or is it 
				removed?
				
					Appendix: Hearing Witnesses
				 
				Names and identifiers taken from witness lists posted on the 
				web site of the House Homeland Security Committee. CAIR 
				underlined the names of former and current law enforcement 
				officials. Because the fourth hearing was held jointly by House 
				and Senate committees, the usual House method for witness 
				selection did not apply. CAIR has identified witnesses selected 
				by the minority party by noting this next to their names.
				Of the eighteen witnesses to testify at the hearings, six 
				were former or current law enforcement representatives. Of those 
				six, two were asked to testify by the Democrats.
				Hearing 1
				1.       Hon. John D. Dingell, 
				A Representative in Congress from the 15th District of Michigan
				2.       Hon. Keith Ellison, A 
				Representative in Congress from the 5th District of Minnesota
				3.       Hon. Frank Wolf, A 
				Representative in Congress from the 10th District of Virginia
				4.       Dr. M. Zuhdi Jasser, 
				President and Founder, American Islamic Forum for Democracy
				5.       Mr. Abdirizak Bihi, 
				Director, Somali Education and Social Advocacy Center
				6.       Mr. Melvin Bledsoe, 
				Private Citizen
				7.       Sheriff Leroy Baca, 
				Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department (minority)
				Hearing 2
				8.       Mr. Patrick T. 
				Dunleavy, Deputy Inspector General (Ret.), Criminal Intelligence 
				Unit, New York State Department of Correctional Services
				9.       Mr. Kevin Smith, 
				former Assistant United States Attorney, Central District of 
				California
				10.   Mr. Michael P. Downing, Commanding Officer, 
				Counter-Terrorism and Special Operations Bureau, Los Angeles 
				Police Department
				11.   Professor Bert Useem, Department Head and 
				Professor, Sociology Department, Purdue University (minority)
				Hearing 3
				12.   Mr. Ahmed Hussen, Canadian Somali Congress 
				National President
				13.   Mr. Thomas Joscelyn, Senior Fellow, 
				Foundation for Defense of Democracies
				14.   Mr. William Anders Folk, Former Assistant 
				United States Attorney, District of Minnesota
				15.   Mr. Tom Smith, Chief of Police, Saint Paul, 
				Minnesota (minority)
				Hearing 4
				16.   The Honorable Paul N. Stockton, Assistant 
				Secretary of Defense for Homeland Defense and Americas' Security 
				Affairs, Office of Undersecretary of Defense for Policy, 
				Department of Defense
				a.       Stockton was 
				accompanied by Mr. Jim Stuteville, United States Army Senior 
				Advisor, Counterintelligence Operations and Liaison to the 
				Federal Bureau of Investigation
				17.   Lieutenant Colonel Reid L. Sawyer, Director, 
				Combating Terrorism Center at West Point
				18.   Mr. Daris Long, Private Citizen
				
					
					
						
						
						[1] In different interviews King substitutes other 
						terms for “Islamic fundamentalists,” such as “Islamic 
						radicals” or “radical imams.”
					 
					
						
						
						[2] In most House hearings, the majority party will 
						choose most witnesses, with the minority party selecting 
						usually only one witness. In this case, Jasser, Bledsoe 
						and Bihi were the Republican-majority witnesses and Baca 
						was selected by the Democrat-minority.
					 
					
						
						
						[3] In 2008, Bihi initially misled a police officer 
						after a car crash but later made admissions that 
						resulted in a driving while impaired conviction. In 
						2010, a warrant was sworn out for his arrest after he 
						failed to enroll in a required safe driving course.
					 
					
						
						
						[4] Following a legal challenge to the anti-Muslim 
						Oklahoma amendment, both the federal district court and 
						the Tenth Circuit of the U.S. Court of Appeals held that 
						it violates the First Amendment’s Establishment Clause. 
					 
					
						
						
						[5] For evidence that refutes King’s assertion, that 
						“fundamentalists” control most American mosques and 
						“Muslims do not cooperate with law enforcement” see the 
						end of this document.
					 
				 
				
					
					
					
						
						
						[ii] Editorial Board. “Politically Incorrect, but 
						King is Right,” New York Daily News, March 29, 
						2004.
					 
					
						
						
						[iii]Larry Cohler-Esses and Nathan Guttman.“Lawmaker 
						plans controversial hearings on Islamic threat,” 
						Forward, December 28, 2010.
					 
					
						
						
						[iv] Peter King. “What’s Radicalizing Muslim 
						Americans?” Newsday, December 19, 2010.
					 
					
					
						
						
						[vi] Editorial Board. “Politically Incorrect, but 
						King is Right,” New York Daily News, March 29, 2004.
					 
					
						
						
						[vii]Larry Cohler-Esses and Nathan Guttman.“Lawmaker 
						plans controversial hearings on Islamic threat,” 
						Forward, December 28, 2010. 
					 
					
					
						
						
						[ix] Peter King. “What’s Radicalizing Muslim 
						Americans?” Newsday, December 19, 2010.
					 
					
						
						
						[x] Peter King interview on Secure Freedom Radio 
						With Frank Gaffney, January 6, 2011.
					 
					
					
						
						
						[xii] Jordy Yager. “Thompson: No need for hearing on 
						radical Islam in US prisons,” The Hill, June 15, 2011.
					 
					
						
						
						[xiii] Rep. Mike Honda. “Muslim hearings recall my 
						life in internment camp,” CNN.com, June 15, 2011.
					 
					
					
					
					
						
						
						[xvii] David Freedlander, “Long Island Faith Leaders 
						Ask King to Call Off Hearings,” New York Observer,
						18 Feb 2011, 
						http://www.observer.com/ (accessed 27 July 2011).
					 
					
					
						
						
						[xix] Jillian Rayfield, “NY Rep. Peter King: ‘I Have 
						Nothing But Contempt For the New York Times,” TPM 
						Muckraker, 5 Jan 2011,
						http://talkingpointsmemo.com/ 
						(accessed 26 July 2011).
					 
					
						
						
						[xx] “Jewish Dems blast GOP for singling out 
						Muslims,” Jewish Telegraphic Agency, June 15, 2011.
					 
					
						
						
						[xxi] David Hanners. “Domestic terrorism hearing 
						witness from Minneapolis has had a troubled past,” St. 
						Paul Pioneer Press, March 10, 2011.
					 
					
					
					
					
						
						
						[xxv] Laurie Goodstein. “Muslims to be congressional 
						hearings main focus,” New York Times, February 7, 2011.
					 
					
						
						
						[xxvi] American Islamic Forum for Democracy. 
						“American Muslim organization applauds Oklahoma anti-shariah 
						law,” AIFD press release, November 5, 2010.
					 
					
						
						
						[xxvii] Jerome Bejelopera and Mark Randol. “American 
						Jihadist Terrorism: Combating a Complex Threat,” 
						Congressional Research Service, December 7, 2010. The 
						report was updated November 15, 2011.
					 
					
						
						
						[xxviii] Meredith Shiner. “Circus skips Muslim 
						radicals hearing,” Politico, June 15, 2011.
					 
					
					
					
						
						
						[xxxi] Star Tribune Editorial Board. “Terror 
						hearings fuel anti-Muslim fears,” Minneapolis 
						Star-Tribune, February 25, 2011.
					 
					
					
						
						
						[xxxiii] Rubén Rosario. “On day one of King's 
						circus, three Minnesotans take center stage,” St. Paul 
						Pioneer Press (Minnesota), March 10, 2011.
					 
					
						
						
						[xxxiv] Peter King interview on Secure Freedom 
						Radio With Frank Gaffney, January 6, 2011.
					 
					
						
						
						[xxxv] “Measuring the homegrown terrorist threat to 
						U.S. military,” CNN, December 7, 2011.
					 
					
						
						
						[xxxvi] “Chairman King Statement on Recent Terror 
						Arrests in Maryland and Florida,” House Homeland 
						Security Committee, January 12, 2012.