A Somali man suspected of assisting al-Qaeda was held abroad on a US Navy ship for questioning for over two months without being advised of any legal rights, an administration official said.
The man, identified as Ahmed Abdulkadir Warsame, was brought to New York City on Monday to face charges in a US criminal court. He appeared in a New York court on Tuesday morning and pleaded not guilty to providing material support to al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula and the Somali group al-Shabaab, US prosecutors in Manhattan said on Tuesday.
Warsame was arrested in April by the US military in the Gulf, he was questioned about anti---terrorism “for intelligence purposes for more than two months” before being read his Miranda rights, the prosecutors said in a statement.
Miranda rights entitle suspects to a lawyer and the right to remain silent.
He was questioned by interrogators from the High-Value Detainee Interrogation Group and the US military, according to an administration official.
US President Barack Obama’s administration has come under fire by Republicans and even some fellow Democrats over his decision to prosecute some terrorism suspects in criminal courts and not in military courts, where rules for evidence are looser.
In Washington, another senior administration official said Obama’s national security team had unanimously recommended the prosecution of Warsame in a criminal court.
The senior Republican on the Homeland Security Committee, Senator Susan Collins, said she did not agree with this decision.
“A foreign national who fought on behalf of al-Shabaab in Somalia — and who was captured by our military overseas — should be tried in a military commission, not a federal civilian court,” she said in a statement.
After his interrogation, a fresh FBI team came in and was permitted to talk with him, at which time he waived his legal rights and continued to talk for several days, said the first official, who declined to be identified because he was not authorized to talk on the record about matters of terrorism.
Warsame was indicted on nine charges, including providing material support from at least 2007 to April this year to al-Shabaab and al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, two groups designated by Washington as terrorist organizations.
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