Latest FBI Claim of Disrupted Terror
Plot Deserves Much Scrutiny and
Skepticism
By Glenn Greenwald and Andrew Fishman
January 16, 2015 "ICH"
- "The
Intercept"
-
The
Justice Department on Wednesday issued
a press release trumpeting its
latest success in disrupting a domestic
terrorism plot, announcing that “the
Joint Terrorism Task Force has arrested
a Cincinnati-area man for a plot to
attack the U.S. Capitol and kill
government officials.” The alleged
would-be terrorist is 20-year-old
Christopher Cornell (above), who is
unemployed, lives at home, spends most
of his time playing video games in his
bedroom, still addresses his mother as
“Mommy” and regards his cat as his best
friend; he was
described as “a typical student” and
“quiet but not overly reserved” by the
principal of the local high school he
graduated in 2012.
The
affidavit filed by an FBI
investigative agent alleges Cornell
had “posted comments and information
supportive of [ISIS] through Twitter
accounts.” The FBI learned about Cornell
from an unnamed informant who, as the
FBI put it, “began cooperating witbarbh
the FBI in order to obtain favorable
treatment with respect to his criminal
exposure on an unrelated case.” Acting
under the FBI’s direction, the informant
arranged two in-person meetings with
Cornell where they allegedly discussed
an attack on the Capitol, and the FBI
says it arrested Cornell to prevent him
from carrying out the attack.
Family members say
Cornell converted to Islam just six
months ago and claimed he began
attending a small local mosque. Yet The
Cincinnati Enquirer could not find
a single person at that mosque who had
ever seen him before, and noted that a
young, white, recent convert would have
been quite conspicuous at a mosque
largely populated by “immigrants from
West Africa,” many of whom “speak little
or no English.”
The DOJ’s press
release predictably generated an
avalanche of scary media headlines
hailing the FBI.
CNN: “FBI says plot to attack U.S.
Capitol was ready to go.”
MSNBC: “US terror plot foiled by FBI
arrest of Ohio man.”
Wall St. Journal: “Ohio Man
Charged With Plotting ISIS-Inspired
Attack on U.S. Capitol.”
Just as predictably,
political officials instantly exploited
the news to justify their powers of
domestic surveillance. House Speaker
John Boehner
claimed yesterday that “the National
Security Agency’s snooping powers helped
stop a plot to attack the Capitol and
that his colleagues need to keep that in
mind as they debate whether to renew the
law that allows the government to
collect bulk information from its
citizens.” He
warned: “We
live in a dangerous country, and we get
reminded every week of the dangers that
are out there.”
The known
facts from this latest case seem to fit
well within
a now-familiar FBI pattern whereby
the agency does not disrupt planned
domestic terror attacks but rather
creates them, then publicly praises
itself for stopping its own plots.
First, they target a
Muslim: not due to any evidence
of intent or capability to engage in
terrorism, but rather for the “radical”
political views he expresses. In most
cases, the Muslim targeted by the FBI
is a very young (late teens, early 20s),
adrift, unemployed loner who has shown
no signs of mastering basic life
functions, let alone carrying out
a serious terror attack, and has no
known involvement with actual terrorist
groups.
They then find another
Muslim who is highly motivated to help
disrupt a “terror plot”: either because
they’re being paid substantial sums of
money by the FBI or because (as appears
to be the case here) they are charged
with some unrelated crime and are
desperate to please the FBI in exchange
for leniency (or both). The FBI then
gives the informant a detailed attack
plan, and sometimes even the money and
other instruments to carry it out, and
the informant then shares all of that
with the target. Typically, the
informant also induces, lures, cajoles,
and persuades the target to agree to
carry out the FBI-designed plot. In
some instances where the target refuses
to go along, they have their informant
offer huge cash inducements to the
impoverished target.
Once they finally get
the target to agree, the FBI swoops in
at the last minute, arrests the target,
issues a press release praising
themselves for disrupting a dangerous
attack (which it conceived of, funded,
and recruited the operatives for), and
the DOJ and federal judges send their
target to prison for years or even
decades (where they are kept in
special GITMO-like units).
Subservient U.S. courts uphold the
charges by applying such a
broad and permissive interpretation of
“entrapment” that it could almost never
be successfully invoked. As AP
noted last night, “defense
arguments have repeatedly failed with
judges, and the stings have led to many
convictions.”
Consider
the truly remarkable (yet not
aberrational) 2011 prosecution of James
Cromitie, an impoverished
African-American Muslim convert who had
expressed anti-Semitic views but, at the
age of 45, had never evinced any
inclination to participate in
a violent attack. For eight months,
the FBI used an informant – one who was
on the hook for another crime and whom
the FBI was paying - to try to persuade
Cromitie to agree to join a terror plot
which the FBI had concocted. And for
eight months, he adamantly refused.
Only when they dangled a payment of
$250,000 in front of him right as
he lost his job did he finally
assent, causing the FBI to arrest
him. The DOJ trumpeted the case as a
major terrorism arrest, obtained a
prosecution and sent him to prison for
25 years.
The federal judge
presiding over his case, Colleen
McMahon,
repeatedly lambasted the government
for wholly manufacturing the plot. When
sentencing him to decades in prison, she
said Cromitie “was incapable of
committing an act of terrorism on his
own,” and that it was the FBI which
“created acts of terrorism out of his
fantasies of bravado and bigotry, and
then made those fantasies come true.”
She added: “only the government could
have made a terrorist out of Mr.
Cromitie, whose buffoonery is positively
Shakespearean in scope.”
In
her written ruling upholding the
conviction, Judge McMahon noted that
Cromitie “had successfully resisted
going too far for eight months,” and
agreed only after “the Government
dangled what had to be almost
irresistible temptation in front of an
impoverished man from what I have come
(after literally dozens of cases) to
view as the saddest and most
dysfunctional community in the Southern
District of New York.” It was the FBI’s
own informant, she wrote, who “was the
prime mover and instigator of all the
criminal activity that occurred.” She
then wrote (emphasis added):
As it turns out,
the Government did absolutely
everything that the defense
predicted in its previous motion to
dismiss the indictment. The
Government indisputably
“manufactured” the crimes of which
defendants stand convicted. The
Government invented all of the
details of the scheme - many
of them, such as the trip to
Connecticut and the inclusion of
Stewart AFB as a target, for
specific legal purposes of which the
defendants could not possibly have
been aware (the former gave rise to
federal jurisdiction and the latter
mandated a twenty-five year minimum
sentence). The Government selected
the targets. The Government designed
and built the phony ordnance that
the defendants planted (or planned
to plant) at Government-selected
targets. The Government provided
every item used in the plot:
cameras, cell phones, cars, maps and
even a gun. The Government did all
the driving (as none of the
defendants had a car or a driver’s
license).
The Government funded
the entire project. And the
Government, through its agent,
offered the defendants large sums of
money, contingent on their
participation in the heinous scheme.
Additionally,
before deciding that the defendants
(particularly Cromitie, who was in
their sights for nine months)
presented any real danger, the
Government appears to have done
minimal due diligence, relying
instead on reports from its
Confidential Informant, who passed
on information about Cromitie
information that could easily have
been verified (or not verified,
since much of it was untrue), but
that no one thought it necessary to
check before
offering a jihadist
opportunity to a man who had no
contact with any extremist groups
and no history of anything other
than drug crimes.
On another occasion,
Judge McMahon wrote:
“There
is not the slightest doubt in my mind
that James Cromitie could never have
dreamed up the scenario in which he
actually became involved. And if by some
chance he had, he would not have had the
slightest idea how to make it happen.”
She added that while “Cromitie, who was
desperately poor, accepted meals and
rent money from [the informant], he
repeatedly backed away from his violent
statements when it came time to act on
them,” and that “only when the offers
became outrageously high–and when
Cromitie was particularly vulnerable to
them, because he had lost his job–did he
finally succumb.”
This is
pre-emptory prosecution: targeting
citizens not for their criminal behavior
but for their political views. It’s an
attempt by the U.S. Government to
anticipate who will become a
criminal at some point in the future
based on their expressed political
opinions – not unlike the dystopian
premise of Minority Report –
and then exploiting the FBI’s vast
financial, orgnaizational, and even
psychological resources, along with the
individuals’ vulnerabilities, to make it
happen.
In 2005, federal
appellate judge A. Wallace Tashima – the
first Japanese-American appointed to the
federal bench, who was imprisoned in an
U.S. internment camp - vehemently
dissented from one of the worst
such prosecutions and condemned these
FBI cases as “the unsettling and
untoward consequences of the
government’s use of anticipatory
prosecution as a weapon in the ‘war on
terrorism.’”
There are
countless similar cases where
the FBI triumphantly disrupts its
own plots, causing people to be
imprisoned as terrorists who would not
and could not have acted on their
own. Trevor Aaronson has
comprehensively covered what amounts
to the FBI’s own domestic terror
network, and has reported that “nearly
half [of all DOJ terrorism] prosecutions
involved the use of informants, many of
them incentivized by money (operatives
can be paid as much as $100,000 per
assignment) or the need to work off
criminal or immigration violation.” He
documents “49 [terrorism] defendants
[who] participated in plots led by an
agent provocateur—an FBI operative
instigating terrorist action.” In 2012,
Petra Bartosiewicz in The Nation reviewed
the post-9/11 body of terrorism cases
and concluded:
Nearly every major
post-9/11 terrorism-related
prosecution has involved a sting
operation, at the center of which is
a government informant. In these
cases, the informants — who work for
money or are seeking leniency on
criminal charges of their own — have
crossed the line from merely
observing potential criminal
behavior to encouraging and
assisting people to participate in
plots that are largely scripted by
the FBI itself. Under the FBI’s
guiding hand, the informants provide
the weapons, suggest the targets and
even initiate the inflammatory
political rhetoric that later
elevates the charges to the level of
terrorism.
The U.S. Government
has been
aggressively pressuring its allies
to adopt the same “sting” tactics
against their own Muslim citizens (and
like most War on Terror abuses, this
practice is now fully seeping into
non-terrorism domestic law: in a drug
smuggling prosecution last year, a
federal judge condemned the Drug
Enforcement Agency for luring someone
into smuggling cocaine,
saying that “the
government’s investigation deployed
techniques that generated a wholly new
crime for the sake of pressing criminal
charges against” the defendant).
Many of the
key facts in this latest case are still
unknown, but there are ample reasons to
treat this case with substantial
skepticism. Though he had
brushes with the law as a
minor arguably indicative of anger
issues, the 20-year-old Cornell had no
history of engaging in
politically-motivated violence (he
disrupted a local 9/11 memorial
ceremony last year by yelling a 9/11
Truth slogan, but was not arrested).
There is no evidence he had any contact
with any oversees or domestic terrorist
operatives (the informant vaguely claims
that Cornell claims he “had been in
contact with persons overseas” but
ultimately told the informant that “he
did not think he would receive specific
authorization to conduct a terrorist
attack in the United States”).
Cornell’s father
accused the FBI of responsibility
for the plot, saying of his son: “He’s a
mommy’s boy. His best friend is his cat
Mikey. He still calls his mother
‘Mommy.’” His father
said that “he
might be 20, but he was more like a
16-year-old kid who never left the
house.” He added that his son had
only $1,200 in his bank account, and
that the money to purchase guns could
only have come from the FBI. It was the
FBI, he said, who were “taking him
somewhere, and they were filling his
head with a lot of this garbage.”
The mosque with which
Cornell was supposedly associated is
itself tiny, a non-profit that
reported a meager $115,000 in
revenue last year. It has no history of
producing terrorism suspects or violent
radicals.
Whatever else is true, a
huge dose of scrutiny and skepticism
should be applied to the FBI’s claims.
Media organizations certainly should not
be trumpeting this as some dangerous
terror plot from which the FBI
heroically saved us all, nor telling
their viewers that the FBI “uncovered” a
plot that it actually created, nor
trying to depict it (as MSNBC’s Steve
Kornacki did in
the pictured segment) as part of
some larger plot of international terror
groups, at least not without further
evidence (and, just by the way, Mr.
Kornacki: Anwar Awlaki
was not “the leader of Al Qaeda
in Yemen,” no matter how much
repeating
that false claim might
help President Obama, who ordered that
U.S. citizen killed with no due
process). Nor should politicians like
John Boehner be permitted without
challenge to claim that this scary plot
shows how crucial is the Patriot Act and
the NSA domestic spying program in
keeping us safe.
Having crazed loners get
guns and seek to shoot people is, of
course, a threat. But so is allowing the
FBI to manufacture terror plots: in the
process keeping fear levels about
terrorism completely inflated, along
with its own surveillance powers and
budget. Ohio
is a
major recipient of homeland security
spending: it “has four fusion centers,
more than any other state except
California, New York and Texas. Ohio
also ranks fourth in the nation (tying
New York) with four FBI Joint Terrorism
Task Forces (JTTFs).”
Something has to be
done to justify all that terrorism
spending. For all those law enforcement
agents with little to do, why not sit
around and manufacture plots to justify
those expenditures, giving a boost to
their pro-surveillance ideology to
boot? Media outlets have a
responsibility to investigate the FBI’s
claims, not mindlessly repeat them while
parading their alarmed faces and scary
graphics.
Photo: Associated
Press