By Martha Waggoner
Associated Press
RALEIGH, N.C. — A former North Carolina police chief whose mother is Italian and father is Somali said Sunday that he’s disappointed with his country of 42 years after he was detained at John F. Kennedy International Airport.
Former Greenville Police Chief Hassan Aden of Alexandria, Virginia, who now works as a law enforcement consultant, said he was detained March 13 on his return trip from Paris for his mother’s 80th birthday. He supports the officers of the U.S. Customs and Border Patrol, but he believes his 90-minute detention was unreasonable, he said in a telephone interview.
Aden said a customs officer told him that his name was used as an alias by someone on a watch list. He said one officer told him that he wasn’t being detained even though he couldn’t use his phone and he had to remain seated.
“When it goes to 90 minutes with no phone ... and you can’t move around, it seems more than an investigation to check your passport,” he said. “It begins to feel like you are in custody.”
Aden described the scene in a Facebook post Saturday, adding that the officer who told him that he wasn’t being detained has an “ignorance of the law and the Fourth Amendment” of the U.S. Constitution that should disqualify him as a customs officer.
“I certainly was not free to leave,” Aden said.
Aden’s detainment comes after President Donald Trump’s initial travel ban signed in January sparked chaos at U.S. airports and widespread criticism around the world. It was later blocked by a judge in Washington state, a ruling that was upheld by an appeals court. Following that loss, the administration revised the ban rather than appeal, setting off another round of court cases. The revised travel ban was signed March 6 and was to go into effect March 16 before it was blocked.
Aden, 52, said he became a naturalized U.S. citizen at the age of 10 when he was an Italian citizen. He worked for the police department in Alexandria for about 25 years, then as Greenville police chief for about two years.
Clients of the consulting firm he now owns include the U.S. Justice Department, he said.
With family in Italy, France and England, Aden travels often travels overseas. He says that won’t change. But he is rethinking plans to send his 12- and 15-year-old children overseas as unaccompanied minors to spend the summer with relatives because he wouldn’t want them to go through the same situation on their own.
“This is my country and with things I see happening, I see certain rights eroding in the name of national security. It’s worrisome,” he said.
A U.S. Customs and Border Patrol spokesperson said the agency doesn’t comment on individual cases.