A terrorism suspect whose name appears on the "No Fly" list has been allegedly given a Class-A commercial driver's license, which would allow him to drive semi-trucks that he can fill with whatever seemingly legal item he chooses.
Amir Meshal had been attempting to get his Class A license from a South St. Paul Truck Driving School in Minnesota. The $4,000 tuition was paid for through the state workforce program.
The Minnesota Department of Public Safety confirmed he earned his license on Aug. 8 after the road test, according to the Canada Free Press.
The Department of Homeland Security has regarded this man as a terrorist threat and has the evidence to back it up, according to Cain TV.
In May 2014, Meshal was allegedly removed from a Bloomington, Minn., mosque after he was suspected of radicalizing younger people who would later travel to Syria. According to a police report, leaders at the mosque said, "We have concerns about Meshal interacting with our youth."
Meshal was asked to leave a mosque in Eden Prairie, Minn., for similar reasons.
Dating further back, 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.
The two 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," adding, "It has been determined that you [Amir Meshal] 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."
As if this story didn't raise enough red flags, a spokesman from the Minnesota Department of Public Safety also revealed that Meshal also wants to drive school buses!
Investigators asked why the Minnesota Department of Public Safety would fund the aspirations of someone who is believed to possess the "operational capacity" to carry out a terror attack, but it has yet to comment.