On a cold December morning five years ago, FBI agents knocked on the door of a basement apartment in northeast Minneapolis, and Mohamed Abdullah Warsame answered.
He let the agents in to talk, and later they took him to another location to talk more. He hasn't been home since.
For five years, Warsame, now 35, has been awaiting trial on charges that he provided material support to Al-Qaida. A Canadian citizen of Somali descent, he has done most of the waiting alone in a jail cell, under special restrictions that limit his contact with the outside world.
His pretrial detention is one of the longest for a terrorism- related case since Sept. 11, with the delays stemming from a variety of sources.
Authorities have needed extra time for security clearances. Attorneys have argued over Warsame's detention conditions and debated access to facts and witnesses. Some information is classified by the federal government, and defense attorneys have no legal access to it. An appeals court is also considering whether some of Warsame's statements to authorities, thrown out by the district judge, should be allowed to be used against him.
Warsame was one of 46 still awaiting trial as of mid-2007, among the 108 charged since Sept. 11 with providing material support to a terrorist organization, according to one analyst who tracks such cases.
The length of Warsame's case raises questions about how the courts handle terrorism cases.
The federal courts are "being used the same way that the prosecutions in Guantanamo are being used ... based on the accusation of terrorism, the normal rules don't seem to apply," said Peter Erlinder, a professor at the William Mitchell College of Law in St. Paul and who has been involved in Warsame's defense and at least one other terrorism-related case. Some Guantanamo detainees are being released in less time than Warsame has been held, Erlinder said.