A flight student from Egypt is facing deportation from the United States
after being investigated by federal agents for posting on his Facebook
page that he was willing to kill Donald Trump and the world would thank
him.
While U.S. prosecutors have not charged 23-year-old Emadeldin Elsayed
with a crime, immigration authorities arrested him last month at the
Los Angeles-area flight school he attended and now are trying to deport
him, attorney Hani Bushra said Wednesday.
Elsayed, who is being held in a jail in Orange, California, is
devastated at seeing his dreams of becoming a pilot dashed over what
Bushra acknowledged was a foolish social media post. An immigration
court hearing will determine whether Elsayed will be deported.
"It seems like the government was not able to get a criminal charge
to stick on him, so they used the immigration process to have him leave
the country," Bushra said. "The rhetoric is particularly high in this
election, and I just feel he got caught up in the middle."
Trump is leading the Republican presidential contenders and has used
especially tough talk on immigration to win over many voters. He has
vowed to build a wall along the entire Mexican border and has called for
temporarily banning Muslims from entering the country.
US Secret Service agents interviewed Elsayed in early February after
he posted a photo of Trump on Facebook and wrote he was willing to serve
a life sentence for killing the billionaire and the world would thank
him, Bushra said.
The agents returned eight days later and told him
federal prosecutors had declined to charge him but said his visa to
attend flight school had been revoked.
He was arrested by immigration
authorities.
Elsayed said he wrote the message because he was angered by Trump's
comments about Muslims. He said he immediately regretted it, and he
never intended to harm anyone.
"It's just a stupid post. You can find thousands of these every hour
on Facebook and the media," he told The Associated Press in a phone
interview from jail. "I don't know why would they think I am a threat to
the national security of the United States just because of a stupid
post."
Elsayed said the agent who interviewed him mentioned last year's
shooting rampage by a Muslim husband-and-wife couple in San Bernardino
and the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks, which were carried out by
Muslims who had sought flight training in the United States.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement said in a statement that Elsayed
was arrested because he violated "the terms of his admission to the
United States." The agency did not provide further details.
The State Department and Secret Service declined to discuss the case. A Trump campaign spokeswoman also declined to comment.
Elsayed is from Cairo, but he said he spent much of his life in Saudi
Arabia, where his father worked as a civil engineer. He came to the
United States for the first time last September to attend Universal Air
Academy with the hope of returning to Egypt and getting a job at an
airline, he said.
He said he'd like to continue his studies in the United States if the
government lets him stay. If not, he will seek a refund of some of the
$65,000 he has spent on his education and use it to study elsewhere.
Alex Khatib, owner of Universal Air Academy, said he knows little
about the case except that federal agents showed up at his school to
interview and later detain Elsayed. Officials asked him to terminate
paperwork he had issued so Elsayed could study for his pilot's license,
he said.
Khatib said he would take him back if the government allows.
"He is honestly a good student," Khatib said. "He seemed to be a good guy."
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