A Minnesota terrorism suspect, kicked out of his mosque reportedly for radicalizing young people and who is not permitted to fly commercially, apparently won't be prevented from driving semi-trucks – or even a school bus.
In fact, he got his commercial Class A driver's license from a St. Paul driving school and his $4,000 tuition was paid for by a state workforce program.
Amir Meshal got his license this month from the Minnesota Department of Public Safety following a successful road test.
Now Meshal, who is reportedly on the Department of Homeland Security's no-fly list, says he wants to drive school buses.
According to reports, Meshal was booted out of a Bloomington, Minnesota, mosque for inciting younger attendees to radicalism. He was also reportedly asked to leave a mosque in Eden Prairie, Minnesota, for similar reasons.
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In 2007, Meshal was arrested in Kenya by the FBI after he was believed to have attended a terror training camp in Somalia. Meshal and the American Civil Liberties Union recently sued the U.S. government for detaining him for three months after he was arrested in Kenya. According to the lawsuit, the FBI had tried to convince him to become an informant.
Meshal and the ACLU also sued TSA and Homeland Security to have Meshal removed from the "no fly" list, reported Fox Minnesota affiliate Fox 9. However, Homeland Security responded in a letter saying, "[Meshal] may be a threat to civil aviation or national security. ... It has been determined that you are an individual who represents a threat of engaging in or conducting a violent act of terrorism and who is operationally capable of doing so."
A spokesman for the Minnesota Department of Public Safety said Meshal now wants to drive school buses.