Get PolitiFact in your inbox.

Joshua Gillin
By Joshua Gillin February 7, 2017

Trump's executive order on immigration did not lead to ISIS leader's arrest in New York

A fabricated news story claiming Donald Trump’s controversial executive order on immigration led to the arrest of a suspected terrorist doesn’t pass inspection.

"Executive order leads to capture of ISIS leader, Rasheed Muhammad," reads the headline on a Jan. 31, 2017, story at USAPoliticsZone.com. The post was flagged by Facebook as part of the website’s efforts to identify potentially contrived news stories.

The story is false, however, and appears to have originated on a website chock full of fabricated content.

Trump’s Jan. 27 order barred citizens of Iraq, Syria, Iran, Yemen, Somalia, Sudan and Libya from entering the United States for 90 days. It also puts Syrian refugee admissions on hold indefinitely. The order drew protests at airports nationwide.

Trump fired acting Attorney General Sally Yates on Jan. 30 for refusing to enforce the order.

The action is currently on a nationwide temporary restraining order pending judicial review. You can review some key issues about the order in this explainer.

The next day, the website Times.com.mx posted the story that a suspected terrorist named Rasheen Muhammad had been arrested at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York. It included a photo of a handcuffed man flanked by men in FBI windbreakers.

The story said stricter screening procedures in place because of the order were to credit, and said Yates apologized via Snapchat for being wrong. The story also quoted FBI Director James Comey as saying details would not be released as the agency investigates.

None of these things happened.

Featured Fact-check

There was no arrest of any person named Rasheen Muhammad at JFK, terrorist or otherwise. The only Rasheen Muhammad we could find in a news search during the proper time frame was a 19-year-old gang member in Chicago being held in Cook County Jail on Feb. 4 for a juvenile warrant.

Yates, who had said she was not sure Trump’s order was legal, also did not apologize for refusing to enforce it. There are no reports of such an apology, whether on Snapchat or otherwise.

Comey also did not address the arrest, seeing as how the arrest never happened.

Times.com.mx is another website that attempts to imitate legitimate news outlets with fake stories to lure readers. USAPoliticsZone.com and several other sites copied the story verbatim.

None of the photographs are of someone named Rasheen Muhammad. Anyone with eyes can see that the three photos are actually of different people:

One photo, which also ran on Times.com.mx, is of Najibullah Zazi, an Afghanistan-born Denver man arrested in September 2009 for ties to an al-Qaida plot to commit suicide bombings on the New York subway.

USAPoliticsZone.com also added this image, which is of Sajmir Alimehmeti. The Bronx, N.Y., man was arrested in May 2016 on charges of providing material support to a terrorist organization for failed attempts to join or aid ISIS.

Finally, USAPoliticsZone.com included this image, a still from a video of Abu Mohammad al-Adnani, who really was an ISIS leader. Al-Adnani, considered the official spokesman for the Islamic State, was reportedly killed while fighting in Syria last fall.

This post has been passed off as a true news report, but it can’t clear a background check. We rate it Pants On Fire!

https://www.sharethefacts.co/share/c9633303-5511-4f4e-8acf-2178c587e6dc

Browse the Truth-O-Meter

More by Joshua Gillin

Trump's executive order on immigration did not lead to ISIS leader's arrest in New York

Support independent fact-checking.
Become a member!

In a world of wild talk and fake news, help us stand up for the facts.

Sign me up