This is from an e-mail - my Jordanian friend who was on some kind of a list. It looks like a news report but it wasn't supplied. Maybe it will clear up what happened.
Incident began with message from passenger
Wednesday Nov. 22, 2006
A police report shed new light on what caused passengers to become suspicious of six Islamic clerics who were subsequently removed from a flight departing the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport on Monday.
Read witness statements to the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport's police department
Read officer statements from the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport police department's incident report
"People are scared of us," Imam Mohamed Ibrahim said Wednesday after viewing a copy of the 24-page airport police report.
According to the report, Ibrahim and five other Muslim religious leaders were removed from the Phoenix-bound flight after a passenger slipped a note to the pilot that described six "suspicious Arabic men spread out in their seats."
Two of the men were sitting in the front, two in the middle and two near the back of the plane, according to the police report.
"All were together, saying " .... Allah ... Allah ..." cursing U.S. involvement with Saddam Hussein before the flight," read a note a passenger sent to the pilot.
But Ibrahim said Wednesday that the men only said Allah when they recited their prayers before boarding the flight. Ibrahim was one of three of the men who said the sunset prayer in the terminal before boarding the flight.
"In the traditional way of making prayers as Muslims, the imam in every movement says Allahu akbar, Allahu akbar," Ibrahim said. "I think (the notewriter) misunderstood the Muslim prayers."
Ibrahim also denied discussing Iraq or anything about Saddam or U.S. involvement in Iraq.
"During my conversations with the imams, we never talked about that at all," said Ibrahim, a 31-year-old, bearded man, originally from Egypt. "We were talking about the results of the conference. We're talking about our community. I found somebody among the group, I didn't know him before. He's from Egypt, I'm from Egypt, I was asking him about his village, his city."
Ibrahim also said the men's seating arrangements were incidental.
The six were among about 155 imams who attended the North American Imams Federation's annual meeting in Minneapolis last weekend. Ibrahim said he didn't even know he would be on the same flight with the men from the Phoenix area until they started talking on the hotel shuttle bus that morning.
Behavior caused suspicion
When the pilot received the passenger's note, he requested airport security remove the six men from the plane, the police report said.
The airport police and a U.S. federal marshal agreed the seating configuration, the fact that three of the men had one-way tickets and no checked luggage and the praying in the gate area was suspicious, the report said.
Patrick Hogan, the airport's spokesman, said it's common practice for airport police to contact federal authorities when there's a security concern.
In this case, he said, the FBI asked police to detain the six men.
The men were handcuffed and taken to the airport police station, where they were questioned by the FBI, the Secret Service, U.S. Marshals and Transportation and Security Administration officials.
Ibrahim said the men were questioned by federal authorities separately.
Ibrahim said his bags were taken to a separate area and he didn't know if they were searched. Federal officials asked him to hand over everything in his pocket -- including his wallet and cell phone.
During the interview, Ibrahim was asked about the conference, and what he did before leaving the hotel and arriving at the airport.
Federal authorities also told Ibrahim they heard the men had been discussing the safety of President Bush.
"I told him we didn't even mention his name in our discussion," Ibrahim said.
After about six hours, the authorities apologized to the men and released them.
No charges were filed.
Meanwhile, police took written accounts from passengers and crew members aboard the plane.
According to those statements, listed in the airport police report:
* A ticket agent at the gate found it suspicious that the men were so loud as they recited their prayers in the terminal.
* A flight attendant became suspicious when one of the imams seated in first class requested a seat belt extension, because he wasn't "overly heavy." Shortly after that, two imams seated in seats 9C and 9D also requested extensions. The flight attendant also mentioned that the imam in first class got up several times after boarding to go talk to other imams seated farther back on the plane.
* A flight attendant who was flying as a passenger on the plane saw the three men praying in the gate area, but "didn't think this was too unusual." Once on the plane, however, the flight attendant thought it was unusual that two of the imams seated in front of her asked for seat belt extensions, because they did not seem to need them. "Then the imam in (first class) came back and spoke to them in Arabic," the flight attendant wrote. "This is when it just did not seem right."
* A passenger who sat next to Ibrahim wrote that she travels to Turkey frequently and knows many Muslims, but the behavior of the six imams was "atypical."
She said some of the men engaged in "aggressive eye contact" with her when she watched them pray in the terminal before boarding the flight.
The woman said she talked with Ibrahim and the "he expressed views I consider to be extreme fundamentalist Muslim views." Ibrahim discussed the problems of governments that did not follow Islamic law, the woman said. Ibrahim said Turkey repressed Muslims and Turkey and Egypt should be operating under Islamic law.
She also wrote that Ibrahim "indicated that it was necessary to go to whatever measures necessary to obey all that's set out in the Quran."
Suspicion refuted, not condemned
Ibrahim said he told the woman sitting next to him that Turkey was a secular country and "the secular system is not a very good system."
His comments about obeying what is set forth in the Quran only had to do with living a complete life, which included a government run by Islamic law, he said.
Ibrahim said he did not request a seat belt extension, but said the men who did needed them because they're overweight.
"It's very normal for them. They are fat," he said. "But the rest of the thin people like me, we didn't ask for one."
One of the men who requested a seat belt extension is 6 feet 1 inch tall and weighs 206 pounds, according to the report. The other was 6 feet tall and weighs 200 pounds.
Ibrahim had a roundtrip ticket and did not know which of the other imams had one-way tickets or why.
Despite what happened, Ibrahim said he symphathizes with Americans who are concerned about safety on their flights.
"I feel compassionate with the American people in this country when they go to the airplane and they feel scared, skeptical about every motion, about everybody," he said. "They are afraid all the time."
Ibrahim said he is more upset with US Airways for refusing to reissue the men tickets or even allow thenm to purchase a new ticket to fly home.
US Airways did not return calls Wednesday seeking comment.
But according to ABC News, the airline's policy after a security incident is to put the passengers involved on another airline.