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Feds on a Terror Tear
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As an al Qaeda suspect is charged, The Daily Beast crunches the feds’ track record: Hype is down, and convictions are way up.
Immediately following the September 11, 2001, attacks, officials and citizens alike worried that another attack was imminent. The police and the FBI made sweeping arrests, resulting in thousands of unsubstantiated accusations, detentions, prosecutions, and deportations. Yet, time and again, allegations about dangerous terrorists among us fell short of initial accusations.The Department of Justice repeatedly publicized arrests it considered to be related to terrorism, only to have to change charges later and/or acknowledge publicly that the case had no terrorism connection. Disappointingly, in the first two years of indictments after the 9/11 attacks, only 8 percent of those initially alleged to be associated with terrorism were eventually charged as such, and only 38 percent were convicted under terrorism statutes.
The 38 percent conviction rate in the first two years after 9/11 has risen to 88 percent as of 2008, and the label of terrorism has been more accurately and carefully used.
Now, on the eighth anniversary of 9/11, comes Najibullah Zazi, the Afghan-born permanent U.S. resident who was formally charged in the Eastern District of New York Tuesday with conspiracy to use weapons of mass destruction (Zazi pleaded not guilty). Seemingly within minutes of his arrest, experts and commentators began proclaiming the seriousness of his plot, suggesting that this was the case we had been warned of all along. Given the poor track record on allegations of terrorism, the tendency to sigh with cynicism is all too tempting: “Not another Liberty City 7!” Yet, whatever happens going forward in the Zazi case, it will be hard to discredit the initial arrest and allegation.
Here’s why. Buried inside the 828 indictments levied in the name of counterterrorism since 9/11, there has been a consistent focus on three serious indicators of danger: training in a terrorist camp, association with al Qaeda, and intent and ability to use weapons of mass destruction. On each of these separate counts, the record of terrorism trials shows few actual indictments. While training in a terrorist camp was made a crime by legislative statute in 2004, that statute has been used in only two cases. And authorities have accused suspects of an affiliation with al Qaeda in only 10 percent of their cases. But by far the charge that is the most telling is that of conspiracy to use weapons of mass destruction. Less than 4 percent of terrorism cases in the past have involved the weapons of mass destruction statute. Moreover, in some cases—such as Fort Dix—allegations of conspiracy to use WMDs have been plagued with assertions that the defendants had neither the know-how nor the sophistication to actually carry out their intentions. They were, rather, deemed bumblers and wannabes. Not so for Zazi, we are told. He is accused of actually having the training and the knowledge to build and use these devices.
It is worth noting that the Justice Department has seldom brought formal charges on these grounds; they’ve been leveled in the aggregate in only four cases that have been tried in the United States. Those four involve names that are well-known—among them Zacarias Moussaoui, the so-called 20th hijacker on 9/11, and Mohammed Mansour Jabarah, convicted of participation in a 2001 bombing plot aimed at the U.S. Embassy in Singapore.
Although he received his training elsewhere, Zazi falls into the category of home-grown terrorist. His father, initially accused as well (but later ordered released by a federal magistrate), is a naturalized American citizen. Zazi himself is a permanent resident. Thus, he resembles the characterization of those in the London bombings—homegrown terrorists who learned their trade via training camps in Pakistan. Secondly, and contrary to the record of terrorists in the United States so far, his targets were reportedly American.











"Disappointingly [sic], in the first two years of indictments after 9/11 only 8% of those initially alleged to be associated with terrorism were eventually charged as such, and only 38% were convicted under terrorism statutes.
Without dwelling on the incorrect "disappointingly" when they meant to write "disappointing," why were the statistics on charging and conviction rates "disappointing" for this category of criminal defendants?
"Disappointing" to whom and why?
Is it not possible that those defendants, whose charging and convicted rates "disappointed" the authoresses, were innocent of the crimes of which they were accussed?
In this sentence, the authors reveal their hopheaded, authoritarian, "end justifies the means" political ideology.
Seems to me that the disappointment comes from the sloppy investigations that led to the 38% conviction rate. Fewer indictments and higher conviction rates would be a good sign of an effective investigative branch.
that's one way to read it, another is that this article is a castigation of the attitudes and behaviour adopted by law enforcement in the wake of a media and politically driven frenzy to do something. Instead of doing the rational and correct thing of improving the law enforcement fundamentals we celebrate in this country they adopted a terrorist tactic of mass arrest (vs mass destruction) using poorly thought out executed methods.
I expect my law enforcement organizations to react professionally to crimes and potential crimes not like scared fascists. I think this article points out 4 things that are wrong (were wrong in one case). 1) Politicians should not be allowed to drive the execution of law enforcement - nowhere, notime. This is tatamount to creating a dictatorship and is to easily subverted. 2) The media has to return to reporting the news, not creating hysteria to sell papers. 3) We should support our law enforcement in becoming an enlightened law enforcement institution - that means money and guidance from the top down. and 4) I expect our law enforcement to act professional - always, even under pressure from Politicians and the media. I think this last one has been corrected because it works a lot better and the embarrassment of an 8% conviction rate of hundreds of arrested and charged citizens and aliens.
And that is why an 8% conviction rate is appalling - not because I expect the other 92 % to be convicted, but because they most likely shouldn't have been arrested and charged or at least the evidence gathering and case against them should have been more professionally thought out and executed. It's apalling that our law enforcement found it so easy to abandon decades of experience in effective law enforcement to terrorist tactics that reflected very badly on those in charge of the FBI.
This comment has been removed by The Daily Beast's editors.
Here's the part of the article that shows this author's agenda:
"monitoring the Internet and long-term surveillance proved successful."
Does she just mean that they got a warrant, followed the guy and tapped into his email? If so, well done.
Or, does she mean warrantless wiretapping and datamining?
Warrantless wiretapping and datamining are blatantly repugnant to the constitution:
"The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized."
I think that the author should be clearer about which kind of "monitoring" and "surveillance" this was.
Thank you.
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