http://columbiamissourian.com/news/story.php?ID=21689
<http://columbiamissourian.com/news/story.php?ID=21689>



Missourian News

September 19, 2006
FBI searches Islamic leader's home
By DEREK KRAVITZ and ANNA SCIANNA



FBI agents searched the home of a prominent Islamic community leader
Monday, three days after FBI officials met with community members at the
Columbia mosque to improve the bureau's often frosty relations with
Muslims.

A dozen agents searched the home of Shakir Abdul-Kaf Hamoodi and his
wife, Lamya Mukhlef Najem, on Monday, said FBI spokesman Jeff Lanza.
Agents showed up at Hamoodi's southwest Columbia home about 8 a.m.
Monday, seizing boxes and computer equipment throughout the day,
neighbors said, before leaving the quiet residential neighborhood about
4 p.m.

Lanza said agents only searched Hamoodi's home, located at 2701
Woodberry Court, in The Pines subdivision, in connection with the search
warrant. The reason for the raid has not been disclosed because details
of the warrant are sealed.

On Monday, federal agents also raided the offices of a Southfield,
Mich., Muslim charity organization, Life for Relief and Development.
Lanza would neither confirm nor deny whether the two searches were
connected.

Last February, Stephens College held a tsunami relief concert and gave
all the proceeds to the Life for Relief and Development.

Muslim leaders said that the timing of the two searches raised
suspicions.

"After learning about the Columbia raid, I have to say the timings
are odd," said Ibrahim Hooper, the national communications director
for the Washington, D.C.-based Council on American-Islamic Relations.

Reached at his home by phone Monday afternoon, Hamoodi said he
cooperated fully with federal investigators.

"They came in, asked questions, I told them the answers and they
left," he said. He declined to discuss the nature of the questions
he was asked.

Hamoodi, 54, grew up in Anah, a town in central Iraq, and studied in
Iraq, Scotland and France. After he immigrated to Columbia in 1985 with
his wife, Lamya, 40. Hamoodi studied at MU and worked as an assistant
research professor for the school's College of Engineering, before
leaving that position. According to an article published in the
Missourian in March 2003, Hamoodi has hundreds of relatives still in
Iraq, including his parents and several brothers and sisters. Hamoodi
and Najem have five American-born children.

Hamoodi has owned and operated a grocery store, World Harvest
International and Gourmet Foods, on Nifong Boulevard, since 2004. Najem
is a teacher at the Islamic School of Columbia Missouri.

Hamoodi was the former outreach coordinator for the Islamic Center of
Central Missouri, organizing interfaith meetings with community leaders
and peace demonstrations. Corey Brand, the center's president,
described Hamoodi as a prominent and well-respected member of
Columbia's Muslim community.

"I've known him for a number of years, and to think he'd be
capable of anything criminal. ... I just can't possibly believe
that," Brand said.

Brand said Hamoodi actively spoke out against the war in Iraq and was
involved with several charitable organizations.

"I've been opposed to sanctions, and I'm opposed to the
United States' current foreign policy in the region," Hamoodi
said in the 2003 Missourian article following the U.S. invasion of Iraq.
"I sincerely do not find any justification for this."

Monday's raid came three days after FBI agents met with Muslim
community members at the Islamic Center of Central Missouri.

At the meeting, community members raised concerns about being racially
profiled following the October 2004 federal raid of the Islamic American
Relief Agency's U.S. headquarters in Columbia. Hamoodi attended the
meeting, organizers said.

The U.S. Treasury Department has linked the IARA charity to the
Sudan-based Islamic African Relief Agency, which they say has ties to
Osama Bin Laden, al-Qaida and Hamas. No one has been charged in
connection with that case. Brand said he did not know if Hamoodi donated
any of his time or money to the IARA, which housed its U.S. headquarters
in offices at 201 E. Cherry St.

Several Columbia Muslim leaders said they felt personally targeted after
the raid, which they said caused lasting damage within the Muslim
community.

Brand said he hopes the ongoing federal investigation doesn't undo
the progress made at the last week's forum.

"I think it has the danger of erasing the whole purpose of Friday
— to reassure the Muslim community," Brand said.





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