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That has rankled many at the Justice Department and FBI. Congress has designated the FBI as the nation's lead domestic counterterrorism agency, while questioning whether the FBI's reliance on Miranda warnings and adherence to U.S. civilian law makes them incapable of handling terrorism cases. Warsame is not believed to be a senior member of either organization, but court documents unsealed Tuesday say he fought with and helped train al-Shabab in 2009, then helped support and train al-Qaida in Yemen until 2011. That makes him a potentially valuable intelligence asset, since he had unique access in both groups. Senior administration officials said the intelligence interrogations were conducted by the High-Value Detainee Interrogation Group, a team of people from the military, intelligence agencies and Justice Department. Because those sessions were conducted before Warsame was read his rights, the intelligence can be used to underpin military strikes or CIA actions but are not admissible in court. That's why the FBI restarted the interrogations from the beginning. Warsame pleaded not guilty at his arraignment Tuesday. His lawyer, Priya Chaudhry, did not immediately return a phone message for comment. Warsame next court appearance was scheduled for Sept. 8. Court documents unsealed Tuesday show that the Justice Department plans to use a laptop computer, handwriting analysis, USB drives and a memory card as evidence against Warsame at trial.
[Associated
Press;
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