Homegrown Terror Threat “Manufactured”: NYU Study

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Re: Homegrown Terror Threat “Manufactured”: NYU Study

Postby elfismiles » Mon Jun 16, 2014 11:16 am

‘Inventing terrorists’: New study reveals FBI set up terrorism-related prosecutions
Published time: June 15, 2014 16:36
Edited time: June 16, 2014 11:43


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KpUkRchJxv0

Nearly 95 per cent of terrorist arrests have been the result of FBI foiling its own entrapment plots as a part of the so-called post-9/11 War on Terror, a new study revealed.

According to thereport entitled ‘Inventing Terrorists: The Lawfare of Preemptive Prosecution’, the majority of arrests involved the unjust prosecution of targeted Muslim Americans.

The 175-page study by Muslim advocacy group SALAM analyzes 399 individuals in cases included on the list of the US Department of Justice from 2001 to 2010.

“According to this study’s classification, the number of preemptive prosecution cases is 289 out of 399, or 72.4 percent. The number of elements of preemptive prosecution cases is 87 out of 399, or 21.8 percent. Combining preemptive prosecution cases and elements of preemptive prosecution cases, the total number of such cases on the DOJ list is 376, or 94.2 percent,” the report concluded.

The authors define ‘preemptive prosecution’ as “a law enforcement strategy adopted after 9/11, to target and prosecute individuals or organizations whose beliefs, ideology, or religious affiliations raise security concerns for the government.”

Nearly 25 percent of cases (99 of 399) contained material support charges. Another almost 30 per cent of cases consisted of conspiracy charges. More than 17 per cent of the analyzed cases (71 of 399 cases) involved sting operations. Over 16 percent of cases (65 of 399 cases) included false statement or perjury charges, and around six percent of cases involved immigration-related charges.

According to the report, since 9/11 only 11 cases posed “potentially significant” threat to the United States.

“Only three were successful (the [Tamerlan and Dzhokhar] Tsarnaev brothers and Major Nidal Hasan), accounting for 17 deaths and several hundred injuries,” the paper says.

One of the FBI’s strategies involved “using agents provocateur to actively entrap targets in criminal plots manufactured and controlled by the government.”

“The government uses agents provocateur to target individuals who express dissident ideologies and then provides those provocateurs 25 with fake (harmless) missiles, bombs, guns, money, encouragement, friendship, and the technical and strategic planning necessary to see if the targeted individual can be manipulated into planning violent or criminal action,” the report concluded.

The government could also choose to use “minor ‘technical’ crimes,” such as errors on immigration forms, an alleged false statement to a government official, gun possession, tax or financial issues, etc., to go after someone for their “ideology.”

“What they were trying to do is to convince the American public that there is this large army of potential terrorists that they should all be very-very scared about. They are very much engaged in world-wide surveillance and this surveillance is very valuable to them. They can learn a lot about all sorts of things and in a sense control issues to their advantage,” Steven Downs, an attorney for Project SALAM, which issued the report, told RT. “And the entire legal justification for that depends on there being a war on terror. Without a war on terror they have no right to do this. So they have to keep this war on terror going, they have to keep finding people and arresting them and locking them up and scarring everybody.”

In the conclusion, authors of the report offered the US government several recommendations that the DOJ "should employ" to change the present unfair terrorism laws. A total seven recommendations call on the US government to accurately identify people who offer material support for terrorism, strengthening the “entrapment” defense in the courts; abolish “terror-enhanced sentencing” that triples or quadruples jail time in cases linked to terrorist acts; disallow secret court proceedings, and immediately notifying defendants if any evidence in their case is derived from secret surveillance.


http://rt.com/usa/166060-usa-fbi-terror ... secutions/
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Re: Homegrown Terror Threat “Manufactured”: NYU Study

Postby elfismiles » Thu Nov 06, 2014 11:09 am

Thanks Scott Ogle for alerting me to this Austin, Texas incident that somehow I'd not heard about the past few months...

scottogle » 06 Nov 2014 14:25 wrote:That ain't right.... .

"A recent Human Rights Watch report co-written by Shah concluded that federal operatives had guided nearly 50 U.S. suspects in developing domestic and overseas attack plans from Sept. 11, 2001, through 2011."

Law Enforcement will solict people with offers of criminal acts that set them up to be arrested. That, in itself, should be a crime. That is official state-sponsored "gaslighting" gone too far.

I was solicited for illegal activity by phone yesterday at my law office. .. . out of the blue by a former client who is currently in trouble with the law. Law enforcement give arrested individuals incentives to become involved in undercover operations involving people they know. When law enforcement goes to the extent of involving those "willing to make a deal" to entrap "targets", law enforcement has stepped over the line of over five Constitutional protections.

Law enforcement should behave more legally, or else everyone of us risk the wrath of a law enforcement whim.

http://readingeagle.com/ap/article/wife ... -join-isis


Wife: Undercover ‘friends’ pressured Austin man to join ISIS


Wednesday October 22, 2014 07:27 PM

By Dylan Baddour, Austin American-Statesman (MCT)


AUSTIN, Texas — The wife of an Austin man who awaits sentencing on terrorism-related charges says he was pressured by federal informants into committing to travel to Turkey as a step toward joining a militia in Syria.

Asked if her husband, Michael Todd Wolfe, was a member of the so-called Islamic State group, Jordan Furr, his wife of more than two years, told the Austin American-Statesman in her first interview: “No, no, laughingly no. He doesn’t know anybody over there.”

Nevertheless, the 23-year-old Wolfe accepted a plea agreement and now faces up to 15 years in prison — part of a growing number of Americans arrested on terrorism-related charges as federal authorities try to stem a flow of disaffected young people looking to travel overseas to join the Islamic State.

According to a June federal complaint, Furr and Wolfe were stopped that month at Houston’s George Bush Intercontinental Airport, and Wolfe was held based on evidence that he had agreed to — and concealed a plan to — travel to Turkey where he would follow an FBI informant to help terrorists.

Furr countered that the informant who spent months visiting the couple “put all that out there. My husband never came to him with any idea on how to do anything. It was like this guy, you know, everything was his plan, everything was his idea, everything was his … master plan. And my husband was just a pawn.”

Furr, 22, said Wolfe admitted to wanting to join the Islamic State, which has wreaked havoc in Syria and Iraq, because the FBI insinuated the government could otherwise take their two children and prosecute his family.

Daryl Fields, spokesman for the U.S. attorney’s office, said that, because Wolfe hasn’t been sentenced, officials must limit comments to information in the public record. Still, he said, “the wife’s assertions are not accurate.”

Wolfe pleaded guilty to conspiracy to provide material support to terrorists, a violation of the Patriot Act of 2001.

Naureen Shah, a Washington, D.C.-based American Civil Liberties Union attorney, described the law as “the most common statute under which people are prosecuted for terrorism” in the U.S.

Generally, Shah said, Wolfe’s case is part of a trend in arrests of individuals allegedly planning to join Islamic militias overseas. A recent Human Rights Watch report co-written by Shah concluded that federal operatives had guided nearly 50 U.S. suspects in developing domestic and overseas attack plans from Sept. 11, 2001, through 2011.

Critics contend the FBI has targeted suspects who wouldn’t have plotted terrorism without help from undercover informants. But there is a rationale for this investigatory strategy, said Scott Stewart, vice president of tactical analysis at Stratfor, the Austin-based global intelligence firm.

Stewart, formerly an Army intelligence officer, said the government believes that when suspects agree to an informant’s terror plot, they demonstrate that “if they had run into a real operative, they would have pulled off a real attack.”

There have been cases of “overzealous law enforcement actions,” Stewart said, but the FBI has “been very reluctant to ease up on people who they consider goofballs, because they could get connected with professional terrorists and be used to do real damage.”

Last month, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder announced an initiative to stop Americans from joining foreign militias.

A State Department spokesman said he didn’t know how many Americans have left the U.S. to fight with foreign militias. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel told CNN last month that more than 100 Americans were fighting with the Islamic State group. The Star Tribune in Minneapolis reported this month that since 2007, at least 22 men have left Minnesota to fight with Somalia’s al-Shabab militia.

Last week, three teenage girls from Colorado were stopped at an airport in Frankfurt, Germany, reportedly en route to Turkey and Syria. They are being investigated for possibly trying to join Islamic State militants.

Furr and a couple who say they were close friends of Furr and Wolfe said they were part of a circle of friends, mostly recent converts to Islam, who embraced two seemingly like-minded strangers only to later realize the pals were federal provocateurs.

Luke Cavalier, 26, and Amanda Fennick, 22 — the couple who said they also socialized with the informants — said the man and woman surfaced at a dinner party Aug. 8, 2013, the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Fitr.

Furr said the informants, purporting to be a married Muslim couple in their early 30s named Rasheed and Melissa, were invited to the gathering of about 15 Austin-area believers, most in their early 20s, after meeting the party’s host on a domestic flight.

Fennick and Cavalier said the newcomers set their sights on Furr and Wolfe. Fennick said, “The amount of pressure these people put on our friends is outrageous. If this agent never came around, they never would have made plans to leave.”

According to Furr, Fennick and Cavalier, a friend in the circle privately raised suspicions in October 2013 that the two were federal informants. Most friends broke with the newcomers, but Furr and Wolfe refused. Furr said she and her husband, who told the male informant of the suspicions, didn’t want to betray the couple.

The informants then spent more time with Furr and Wolfe.

(EDITORS: BEGIN OPTIONAL TRIM)

Cavalier said Wolfe looked up to the male informant, about 10 years older than Wolfe. Cavalier said: “After Wolfe stood up for him, the two were inseparable. He took Michael under his wing.”

And, Furr said, that’s when the man began talking about travel to the Middle East and approaching local militias, a scheme that intrigued her husband at first.

According to the federal complaint, which describes 10 months of interactions between two unidentified FBI workers and Furr and Wolfe, an undercover informant told Wolfe on Nov. 1 that he “occasionally helped individuals who wanted to travel for jihad in Somalia and Syria.”

After that, Furr said, the informants contacted her or Wolfe at least 50 times, counting emails, text messages, phone calls and in-person meetings.

(END OPTIONAL TRIM)

“He would put so much fire under my husband, like, ‘We need to do this now,’” Furr said. “Every time we talked, he would just basically say, ‘Hey, I got the plan. I got the plan. I got the resources.’”

But, Furr said, as news reports broke in early June about Islamic State atrocities, her husband told the male informant he didn’t like the group’s actions and couldn’t join it. Furr said her husband said: “If there’s another group that’s doing things the right way” in opposing the Syrian government, “then sure.” She said he also told the informant: “I really need to research and understand it more before I go.”

Cavalier said that Wolfe didn’t plan to fight but was excited at the chance to leave the U.S. because two theft convictions made it hard for Wolfe to get a job here.

On June 17, Furr and Wolfe left Austin to fly from Houston through Canada to Denmark, where, Furr said, they planned to meet the encouraging couple and travel with them to Turkey. Furr said she’d “researched cool things to do in Europe” and was excited to leave the U.S. and see a Muslim country.

Arrests resulted instead.

The FBI, Stewart said, commonly waits to arrest monitored suspects until they attempt to commit the illegal act because investigators work with the U.S. attorney “to ensure they have all the elements needed for a successful prosecution” when the investigation is done.

———

©2014 Austin American-Statesman, Texas

Visit Austin American-Statesman, Texas at http://www.statesman.com

Distributed by MCT Information Services
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