U.S. fires ‘Arabic Assassin’ as luggage screener
By Mark Babineck
HOUSTON (Reuters) – Bassam Khalaf was paid to help keep
U.S. air travel safe as a baggage screener. His alter ego, the
Arabic Assassin, rapped about flying a plane into a building.
The Transportation Security Administration could not
reconcile the two and fired him last week, saying his free
speech rights as an aspiring rap singer did not extend to his
right to check luggage at Houston Intercontinental Airport.
“I was one of the ones screening the bags thoroughly,”
Khalaf said on Friday. “I wouldn’t let a bomb get on a plane.”
He also was the self-proclaimed “Arabic Assassin,” who
didn’t do songs about love but preferred to sing about killing,
raping and blowing things up.
Or, from the same song, “my name is Bassam, a one-man band,
I came from sand, affiliated with the Taliban.”
Khalaf, a Houston native of Palestinian descent, said the
incendiary lyrics about rape, murder and mass attacks were
meant only to get attention and help get his first album,
“Terror Alert,” a distribution deal.
Instead, the TSA fired Khalaf, 21, after six months on the
job and gave his name to other federal agencies for
investigation, spokeswoman Andrea McCauley said.
“There is a certain level of integrity employees are asked
to maintain,” she said. “He’s been tasked with protecting the
very people he’s talking about harming.”
“We wonder what the public would think if we didn’t fire
him,” she said.
Khalaf believes his Arab-American ethnicity played a role
in the firing, but McCauley said that was not true.
Khalaf said publicity about his controversial rapping had
brought lots of phone calls from both admirers and detractors,
but none from record distributors.
He also admitted to being a little worried about his future
employment possibilities now that word is out about his music.
“I better make it (as a rapper) now because there ain’t no
turning back,” he said.
