Check to see if your name is on the list...
A sheaf of documents that a federal court forced the Treasury Department to release indicate there have been repeated complaints from American consumers who have been falsely linked to terrorism or drug trafficking during routine credit checks, the organization that sought the documents in a lawsuit said Tuesday.
The more than 100 pages of documents released Monday to the organization, the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights in San Francisco, include a variety of complaints about the list maintained by the Office of Foreign Asset Control in the Treasury Department, said Philip Hwang, a lawyer for the group....
The documents include e-mail messages from a Navy veteran who had been unable to use the Internet service PayPal, and an 18-year-old who wrote to say that he was not a Libyan minister who was apparently on the list.
A client of a Maryland Toyota dealer reported being checked by a salesperson for tattoos because of a Treasury list match.
A Treasury Department official was baffled by the last claim, saying information on the list did not include physical characteristics....
Another official said the department did not have numbers on how many people might have been falsely identified, since institutions can check their clients’ identity against the list and ignore it if something like the date of birth obviously does not match the person in front of them.
1 comment:
Bin Laden is better protected by the HomeLand Security then any American. I checked I'm not yet on the list but who knows. I think it's a shame but when the US hires unqualified people and target people because of their race this is what you get. Now any terrorist is welcome to come walk right in the USA with no problem but an American is drilled.
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