The keys to the asylum — Why you should fear terrorist watch lists

Not only are there many cases of mistaken matches against terrorist watch lists, but the lists are being used, must be used, by US businesses to screen their customers. So, we have business owners deciding who is a terrorist, who is not, and who might be, and they are forced to deny service in fear of huge penalties.

Ordinary Customers Flagged as Terrorists

“The way in which the list is being used goes far beyond contexts in which it has a link to national security,” said Shirin Sinnar, the report’s author. “The government is effectively conscripting private businesses into the war on terrorism but doing so without making sure that businesses don’t trample on individual rights.”The lawyers’ committee has documented at least a dozen cases in which U.S. customers have had transactions denied or delayed because their names were a partial match with a name on the list, which runs more than 250 pages and includes 3,300 groups and individuals. No more than a handful of people on the list, available online, are U.S. citizens.

Yet anyone who does business with a person or group on the list risks penalties of up to $10 million and 10 to 30 years in prison, a powerful incentive for businesses to comply. The law’s scope is so broad and guidance so limited that some businesses would rather deny a transaction than risk criminal penalties, the report finds.

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