LOS ANGELES — A former Syrian military official who oversaw a prison where human rights officials say torture and abuse routinely took place has been arrested, authorities said Wednesday.
U.S. Department of Homeland Security agents took Samir Ousman al-Sheikh into custody last week at Los Angeles International Airport, said agency spokesperson Greg Hoegner.
The 72-year-old has been charged with immigration fraud, specifically that he denied on his U.S. visa and citizenship applications that he had ever persecuted anyone in Syria, according to a criminal complaint filed on July 9 and reviewed by The Associated Press. Investigators are considering additional charges against al-Sheikh, the complaint shows.
He was in charge of Syria's infamous Adra Prison from 2005 to 2008 under President Bashar Assad. Human rights groups and United Nations officials have accused the Syrian government of widespread abuses in its detention facilities, including torture and arbitrary detention of thousands of people, in many cases without informing their families about their fate. Many remain missing and are presumed to have died or been executed.
''This is the highest-level Assad regime official arrested anywhere in the world. ... This is a really big deal," said Mouaz Moustafa, executive director of the Syrian Emergency Task Force, a U.S.-based opposition organization.
Moustafa said Wednesday that one of his staff members, a former Syrian detainee, was first tipped off in 2022 by a refugee that there was ''potentially a war criminal'' in the United States. His organization alerted several federal agencies and began working with them to build a case against al-Sheikh.
His attorney, Peter Hardin, called it a ''simple misunderstanding of immigration forms'' that has been politicized and said al-Sheikh ''finds himself being made a pawn caught up in a larger international struggle."
"He vigorously denies these abhorrent accusations,'' Hardin said.