Yes, Calling Only Muslims Terrorists Does Result
in Disparate Treatment of MuslimsBy
emptywheel
December 07, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "Emptywheel"
- Over at Salon, I’ve got a
piece addressing the things we call terror in this country that
mostly argues, “In the wake of the Planned Parenthood attack, both
the right and the left should redouble our commitment to
distinguishing speech from murder.” But I also start by laying out
how various mass killings get labeled as terrorism.
Commentary on the deadly mass shootings over
the past week — last Friday’s at a Planned Parenthood in
Colorado, and yesterday’s in San Bernardino, Calif. — has thus
far has focused on whether the attacks were terroristic in
nature.
Such a designation would suggest violence in
support of political ends but also to a set of potential
criminal charges. In both cases, there were at least initial
reports the perpetrators tried to set off an explosive device,
in Planned Parenthood shooter’s case a propane tank (though
since initial reports, police have said nothing about whether
this was his intent), in the alleged San Bernardino attackers’
case, several pipe bombs. If authorities do confirm these were
bombs, both cases might be treated legally as domestic
terrorism. Because of an asymmetry in our laws on terrorism and
our collection of online communications, if the San Bernardino
shooters can be shown to have been inspired by a foreign
terrorist organization, like ISIS —
as now appears to be the case — their attack would be
treated as terrorism even without a bomb.
At Lawfare, former NSA attorney Susan Hennessey
has a piece outlining at length much the same thing. If you want
a detailed legal treatment of what I summarized in that Salon
paragraph, written by an actual lawyer, hers is a decent piece to
read.
But her piece is far more interesting as an
artifact of a certain type of thinking, complete with some really
important blind spots about how the law actually gets implemented.
Those blind spots let Hennessey claim, falsely, that the different
treatment of international and domestic terrorism does not result in
disparate treatment for Muslims.
Hennessey lays out the law behind terrorism
charges and argues (and I agree) that the distinction is mostly
investigative.
The most consequential citation to the §
2331(5) domestic terrorism definition is in the
Attorney General Guidelines for Domestic FBI Operations
which authorizes the FBI to conduct “enterprise investigations”
for the purpose of establishing the factual basis that
reasonably indicates a group has or intends to commit an act of
“domestic terrorism as defined in 18 U.S.C. § 2331(5) involving
a violation of federal criminal law”:
[snip]
As a consequence, labeling an act one of
“domestic terrorism” is most important in the context of
investigations, and not ultimately indictments.
She claims it’s okay to treat domestic
“ideologically-motivated mass shootings” (which is a great term) as
murder because states have the capacity to investigate them.
We don’t want to have a general federal murder
statute, and the states are perfectly capable of prosecuting
murders of American citizens within their borders, even those
that are motivated by politics.
[snip]
States have no lack of capacity to investigate
shootings, no lack of authorities to prosecute them, and mass
shooters have tended to be very local in the past.
Of course, interest in investigating is
very different from capacity to. And for many forms of right wing
terrorism — the targeting of minorities and health clinics — there
has been local disinterest in investigating the networks behind
them. That problem has been addressed in both cases, though not
by making these crimes terrorism, but rather by creating “hate
crime” and Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances laws that can give
the Feds jurisdiction. But that jurisdiction does not, then, get
those crimes that require Federal investigation or prosecution
because localities are disinterested treated as terrorism crimes,
especially not prospectively. That means the FBI will be
bureaucratically less focused on and less rewarded for the
investigation of them, and they’ll more often intervene after an
attack than before, to prevent it. That bureaucratic focus shows up
in Congressional
tracking of terrorism cases and
White House focus on them, which is another way of saying FBI’s
bosses and purse-strings pay closer attention to the stuff that gets
charged as terrorism.
Hennessey claims this doesn’t result in any
disparate treatment of Muslims. To prove that there is no disparity
arising out of the limitation of domestic terrorism mostly to crimes
involving bombs, she lays out a list of Muslims who killed using
guns that didn’t get charged with terrorism. Here’s just part of her
discussion (in the later part, she presumes attackers who died would
not have been charged as terrorists).
By and large, violent extremists of all
stripes who use bombs are prosecuted as terrorists, while
violent extremists of all stripes who use guns get prosecuted as
simple murderers. Consider Nidal Hassan, the Fort Hood shooter
who professed an agenda of radical Islam, yet was prosecuted by
the military for simple murder. Despite overwhelming calls to
categorize the act as terrorism, the Pentagon treated it as an
act of workplace violence. Shortly before the Fort Hood shooting
in 2009, Abdulhakim Mujahid Muhammad killed two soldiers in
front of a Little Rock, Arkansas recruiting station. Following
the shooting, Muhammad expressed to investigators allegiance to
al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula. Yet he was prosecuted by the
state of Arkansas and ultimately pled guilty to capital murder
charges, not terrorism. The most dramatic example may be that of
Mir Aimal Kasi who, in 1993, shot two CIA employees dead outside
the agency’s entrance in Langley, Virginia. Kasi’s stated motive
was anger over the US treatment of people in the Middle East,
particularly Palestinians. He fled to Pakistan, and following a
four-year international manhunt and joint CIA-FBI capture
operation in Pakistan, he was rendered back to the United
States. How was he charged? Not with terrorism. Kasi was
convicted by the state of Virginia on capital murder charges and
executed in 2002.
But, even ignoring how she presumes certain
charging decisions had some attackers not died, this is not enough
to prove her claim. To prove it, she’d also have to
prove that non-Muslims who use bombs in “ideologically-motivated”
killings do get charged as terrorists, and that the ability to
charge domestic crimes using bombs is not used by FBI to create
terrorism prosecutions. With a few notable exceptions, those things
aren’t true.
There are a number of cases of right wingers who
could have gotten charged with a terrorist WMD charge but didn’t.
Most notably, there’s Eric Rudolph — who not only serially bombed
abortion clinics but bombed the Atlanta Olympics, then escaped
across state lines. He was charged with explosives charges but not
given a terrorism enhancement (he is serving multiple life
sentences in any case). Indeed, his
indictment — signed by current Deputy Attorney General Sally
Quillian Yates when she was an AUSA — did not once call the series
of bombings and threats Rudolph carried out terrorism, even though
bombing the Olympics is a quintessential example of terrorism.
Then there’s another Sally Yates case (this time
as US Attorney), the Waffle House plot, in
which four geriatric right wingers plotted to use weapons and
ricin dropped from a plane to overthrow the federal government. They
actually bought what they thought was explosives from the FBI, but
did not get charged with terrorism for either the ricin or the
presumed explosives.
There’s Schaffer Cox, who
got busted for conspiring to kill federal authorities; he talked
about using grenades but did not get charged with a WMD count.
There’s Benjamin Kuzelka,
the guy with Nazi propaganda trying to make TATP. There’s
William Krar, the white supremacist
caught with massive explosives who eventually
pled to one chemical weapons charge, but
without exposing what was presumed to be a broader network.
Meanwhile, there are just three cases I know of
where non-Muslims did get charged with bomb-related
terrorism charges — and to some degree, these exceptions prove the
rule (I’m not treating ACTA “animal terrorism” cases, which
introduce another order of magnitude of absurdity into the issue).
There is the Spokane MLK bomber Kevin Harpham,
whose sophisticated bomb got found before it went off. Harpham’s
plea deal retained a terrorism WMD charge, but his
sentence was lighter than similarly situated Muslim terrorists.
There is the Hutaree group
charged on multiple counts of trying to overthrow the
government, including with bombs. The terrorism
related charges against the Hutaree were
thrown out entirely (in part because they were charged badly),
and most of the 9 of them went free.
The only case I know of that is parallel to the
way many Muslims get treated is that of the
Occupy Cleveland participants whose discussion of vandalism got
inflamed — and
focused on a target that might merit federal charges — by an
informant who also plied them with jobs and other enticements. After
pressing buttons they thought would detonate a bomb, they got
charged as terrorists. The judge
thought the punishments requested by the government “grotesque”
and sentenced them much more lightly (though still to upwards from 6
years).
I say the Occupy Cleveland case is parallel
because for the overwhelming number of cases charged as Islamic
terrorism, the FBI supplies the bomb and often picks the target
for a “wayward
knucklehead” who then gets charged with terrorism (though judges
almost never consider those charges “grotesque”). There were
hundreds of them already by 2011. Often, the target would have
not had the ability — in terms of money, experience, and other
resources — to conduct the “bomb” plot by himself. So when Hennessey
justifies charging bomb but not gun crimes as terrorism because
“bombers tend to be more organized in interstate groups,” what she
really means is that the FBI is an organized interstate group,
because that’s the organizing force that provides the expertise in
the overwhelming majority of terrorism cases.
Which brings me to the most alarming claim that
Hennessey makes, in the midst of an argument that the civil
liberties cost of treating domestic terrorism like international
terrorism is too high: that what she calls “complex legal
obligations” on using “incidental” collection reflects heightened
privacy concerns.
The complex legal obligations generated by
incidental or intentional focus on US persons reflects the
heightened privacy and civil liberties concerns at stake when we
use foreign intelligence tools domestically. And rightly so, as
the process of investigating and prosecuting domestic terrorists
and homegrown violent extremists risks infringing into areas of
constitutionally protected speech, religion, and association.
To be fair, she was an NSA lawyer, not an FBI
lawyer, which is why I consider this surprising claim a “blind
spot.” The NSA does have to treat incidentally US person
data carefully; they actually do very few back door searches of
incidentally collected data.
But many (if not most) counterterrorism targets
collected under Section 702 and all traditional FISA ones get shared
directly with the FBI. And the FBI can access and use the
incidentally collected data not only for formal investigations, but
also for assessments, such as called in tips or even just to find
stuff to use to coerce people to turn informant. For incidentally
collected US person data that resides in FBI’s databases, in other
words, there are no complex legal obligations on incidental
collection. None. It just sits there for 30 years at potential risk
of contributing to a prosecution. And that’s a big source of the
stings the FBI starts, when it throws an informant at some kid
downloading Inspire or talking in a chat room to try to take them
off the street by inventing a bomb plot.
So if conducting network investigations of
“domestic terrorists and homegrown violent extremists risks
infringing into areas of constitutionally protected speech,
religion, and association,” — and I absolutely agree it does — then
it does for Muslims as well, except that because we’ve made the
terrorism Muslims might engage in a different category of collection
and thrown billions of dollars at it, they’re not accorded
that protection.
Finally, there’s one other problem with the
assumption that international terrorism requires enterprise
investigations but domestic terrorism doesn’t (that’s not actually
what happens; FBI does do enterprise investigations of
domestic terrorism, just with a different focus and different SIGINT
tools). People get killed as a result.
Consider Kevin Harpham’s case, the MLK bomber. The
government
used the correspondence Harpham had while in jail with known
white supremacist Frazier Glenn Miller (who was, I believe, then in
North Carolina but would move to Kansas) to call for an enhanced
sentence. Miller’s offer to raise money for Harpham might have been
evidence of an interstate network worth tracking. But the
FBI appears not to have done so, though, given that Miller went on
to murder three people he believed (wrongly) to be Jewish two years
later. Miller
got charged at the state level and will be executed.
Similarly, supporters of the militant anti-choice
group Army of God have
corresponded with people who had been previously convicted for
attacks before attacking others (in addition
to publishing Rudolph’s memoir), and George Tiller’s murderer,
Scott Roeder, has
issued threats while talking with Army of God supporters from
prison as recently as two years ago. These things have happened
across state boundaries, so would be tougher to investigate at the
local level. Like ISIS or AQAP, Army of God makes how-to materials
available to its supporters.
Indeed, the way in which Army of God fans have
networked is particularly important given this claim from Hennessey:
[With the Planned Parenthood attack], there is
no apparent evidence that the perpetrator was acting as part of
a larger group, and thus no need for the federal government to
pursue an enterprise investigation.
I presume she isn’t privy to the evidence
discovered so far, so in fact has no basis to say this. But even the
public reporting poses good reason to look for such connections. Six
years ago, Dear
considered the Army of God to be heroes for their actions.
In 2009, said the person, who spoke on the
condition of anonymity out of concerns for the privacy of the
family, Mr. Dear described as “heroes” members of the Army of
God, a loosely organized group of anti-abortion extremists that
has claimed responsibility for a number of killings and
bombings.
As ISIS did with the San Bernardino attack, the
Army of God
hailed the Planned Parenthood attack.
Robert Lewis Dear aside, Planned Parenthood
murders helpless preborn children. These murderous pigs at
Planned Parenthood are babykillers and they reap what they sow.
In this case, Planned Parenthood selling of aborted baby parts
came back to bite them.
Dear was very active online, so it is not
unreasonable to wonder whether he had reached out in the interim
period to the group or consulted their how-to resources. But you’re
not going to find those ties unless you look for them, and series of
localized murder trials are far less likely to do that than an FBI
enterprise investigation.
The FBI doesn’t entirely ignore attacks on
reproductive health clinics. Indeed, it
issued a threat assessment predicting increased targeting of
clinics in September. Would a more focused enterprise investigation
into Army of God before the Planned Parenthood attack have prevented
it?
Frankly, as Hennessey says, there’s a balancing of
civil liberties that goes on. And it may be that the number of
deaths we suffer from non-Islamic “ideologically-motivated mass
shootings” hits that sweet spot of the number of deaths we’ll
tolerate given the risks to civil liberties (or — as I argued at
Salon — it may be that because we suffer so
many non-Islamic “ideologically-motivated mass shootings” and
non-Ideological mass shootings, we need to develop another approach
to combat them).
But under the current system, the victims of
Islamic “ideologically-motivated mass shootings” are treated as more
important deaths than all the others (which almost certainly
inflates the import of them and thereby feeds more terror). All
American mass deaths, ideologically-motivated, Islamic or not,
deserve the same access to justice (or chance of prevention). And
all Americans, whether they worship in a church or a mosque or a
library, deserve the same protection for their First Amendment
rights.
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