Showing posts with label entrapment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label entrapment. Show all posts

Saturday, September 27, 2008

Derrick Shareef, Garbage Can Grenadist, To Be Sentenced Tuesday

Derrick Shareef [sketch] is scheduled to be sentenced on Tuesday. He faces life in prison.

Shareef was arrested in December of 2006, after trading a pair of car stereo speakers for a package he thought contained four grenades, a handgun and some ammunition.

According to documents released by the FBI at the time, Shareef was planning to attack holiday shoppers at CherryVale Mall in Rockford, Illinois, by detonating grenades in garbage cans there on the Friday before Christmas.

Unfortunately for Shareef, the "arms dealer" in this bogus transaction was working for the FBI, and so was the "friend" who set up the meeting between them.

The "friend", an FBI asset named William "Jameel" Chrisman [photo], had been sent to Rockford by the FBI with the task of meeting and "befriending" (and entrapping) Shareef.

Fortunately for Chrisman, Shareef was homeless and preparing to move in with the manager of the video store in which he worked, when Chrisman arrived, introduced himself as a fellow Muslim and offered Shareef a place to live.

Shareef started moving in with Chrisman -- and his three wives and nine children -- that same day. And the rest, for an experienced operator like Chrisman, was easy.

Chrisman, a convicted felon who converted to Islam in prison before going to work for the FBI, had Shareef under his roof for more than two months, during which he recorded every conversation they had. The FBI pulled the most incriminating segments together for its "evidence" against Shareef, and yet even in this non-representative sample, Chrisman can clearly be seen as the ringleader.

Close examination of the FBI-supplied affidavit reveals only one detail of the attack plan coming from Shareef -- the lunatic notion of detonating the grenades in garbage cans!

It was Chrisman who suggested attacking CherryVale Mall; it was Chrisman who suggested using grenades; it was Chrisman who suggested attacking on the Friday before Christmas; it was Chrisman who drove Shareef to CherryVale on two occasions, to "plan" the "attack". Both times they walked around the mall together under heavy FBI surveillance.

It was slick as could be: attacking the mall, where interstate commerce is carried out, makes it a federal offense; and using (or planning to use) grenades puts it into the category of "weapons of mass destruction" and makes possible a life sentence, according to the applicable federal law (no, I am not kidding). Chrisman couldn't possibly have done a "better" job.

But when the mainstream media report on Shareef's case, they always forget to mention Chrisman. And by the time the "terrorism experts" get to the story, Derrick Shareef has morphed into a "lone wolf".

Shareef pled guilty in November of 2007, then withdrew the guilty plea before he "withdrew the withdrawal", as a local TV report phrased it at the time. So the guilty plea still stands, and sentencing is next week.

Interestingly, Chrisman testified in court in New Haven, Connecticut, in the trial of Hassan Abujihaad [photo], on the same day that Shareef pled guilty in a federal court in Illinios. Shareef's guilty plea was entered in the morning; Chrisman took the stand in the afternoon.

It was almost as if Shareef had to plead guilty before Chrisman could reveal -- in another court -- the details of how Shareef had been entrapped.

But so what? Derrick Shareef, in many ways, is collateral damage. The FBI sent Chrisman after Shareef in the hope that Shareef and Chrisman working together could lead Abujihaad to incriminate himself. And it all kind of worked out, for the FBI, ha ha ha, didn't you know it would?

For more details, please see any (and perhaps even all) of the following:

Convicted Without Evidence: 'Father Of The Holy War' Found Guilty

Burned! Meet William Chrisman, FBI Entrapment Specialist

Rolling Stone: The Fear Factory

My series on Hassan Abujihaad: Father Of The Holy War

My series on Derrick Shareef: Derrick And The Detonators

Winter Parking: collected news articles about Derrick Shareef | Hassan Abujihaad | William "Jameel" Chrisman

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Saturday, August 16, 2008

Local And State Police To Be Granted New Spy Powers

According to Spencer Hsu and Carrie Johnson in the Washington Post,
The Justice Department has proposed a new domestic spying measure that would make it easier for state and local police to collect intelligence about Americans, share the sensitive data with federal agencies and retain it for at least 10 years.

The proposed changes would revise the federal government's rules for police intelligence-gathering for the first time since 1993 and would apply to any of the nation's 18,000 state and local police agencies that receive roughly $1.6 billion each year in federal grants.

Quietly unveiled late last month, the proposal is part of a flurry of domestic intelligence changes issued and planned by the Bush administration in its waning months. They include a recent executive order that guides the reorganization of federal spy agencies and a pending Justice Department overhaul of FBI procedures for gathering intelligence and investigating terrorism cases within U.S. borders.

Taken together, critics in Congress and elsewhere say, the moves are intended to lock in policies for Bush's successor and to enshrine controversial post-Sept. 11 approaches that some say have fed the greatest expansion of executive authority since the Watergate era.
They're kidding, right? "Some say"? "Since the Watergate era"?

No, they're not kidding. This is post-democratic American simulated journalism at its finest -- which is to say, get used to it!

They can't (or won't) say it, but I can:

These moves are intended to lock in policies for Bush's successor and to enshrine the greatest expansion of executive authority ever!


This is much, much worse than Watergate -- which was considered a national disgrace, remember? ... which was resisted by the Democrats and by the press, remember? ... including a couple of young "reporters", one of whom was actually an intelligence officer, and as we found out years later, the whole thing was a great big charade, designed to oust the by-then completely crazy Richard Nixon and leave the reins of power in the hands of the much more pliable long-time FBI asset, Gerald Ford ... Do you remember that?

And much of this simulated national drama was played out in the editorial offices of ... [drum roll] ... the Washington Post! Do you remember that, too?

We're not supposed to remember anything anymore, apparently. Or not much, anyway. So for the the next several paragraphs, our esteemed authors give us the point of view of government supporters, and they say things like this:
Supporters say the measures simply codify existing counterterrorism practices and policies that are endorsed by lawmakers and independent experts such as the 9/11 Commission. They say the measures preserve civil liberties and are subject to internal oversight.
WOW! Really?? Did somebody actually type the phrase "independent experts such as the 9/11 Commission"? Or did the editors simply copy and paste it in, like I did?

How could you type such a thing? How could such a thought even enter your head?

Actually, it makes as much sense as "internal oversight", doesn't it?

Here's the rub:
Under the Justice Department proposal for state and local police, published for public comment July 31, law enforcement agencies would be allowed to target groups as well as individuals, and to launch a criminal intelligence investigation based on the suspicion that a target is engaged in terrorism or providing material support to terrorists. They also could share results with a constellation of federal law enforcement and intelligence agencies, and others in many cases.
And that's not all.
On the day the police proposal was put forward, the White House announced it had updated Reagan-era operating guidelines for the U.S. intelligence community. The revised Executive Order 12333 established guidelines for overseas spying and called for better sharing of information with local law enforcement. It directed the CIA and other spy agencies to "provide specialized equipment, technical knowledge or assistance of expert personnel" to support state and local authorities.

And last week, Attorney General Michael B. Mukasey said that the Justice Department will release new guidelines within weeks to streamline and unify FBI investigations of criminal law enforcement matters and national security threats. The changes will clarify what tools agents can employ and whose approval they must obtain.
With the FBI having recently refused to assure Congress it wasn't protecting violent criminal informants, and in the wake of one transparent "terrorist" entrapment fiction after another, it's tough to imagine that "streamlining" the FBI's investigations could possibly be a good thing for anybody -- except the FBI.

And it's not even possible to imagine Michael Mukasey -- who wouldn't even admit that waterboarding is torture -- doing anything to protect your Constitutional rights, especially at the expense of the radical "unitary executive".

As even the Washington Post notes:
The recent moves continue a steady expansion of the intelligence role of U.S. law enforcement, breaking down a wall erected after congressional hearings in 1976 to rein in such activity.
Some other interesting points from the same article:
The push to transform FBI and local police intelligence operations has triggered wider debate over who will be targeted, what will be done with the information collected and who will oversee such activities.
To these three easy questions, the answers are: [1] Everybody, especially YOU. [2] Anything they want to do, and [3] Nobody whose interests correspond with yours.

The Post notes that
Many security analysts faulted U.S. authorities after the 2001 terrorist attacks, saying the FBI was not combating terrorist plots before they were carried out and needed to proactively use intelligence.
But rather than following up on the next logical question, namely: "Why didn't they use the intelligence they were gathering?", Spencer Hsu and Carrie Johnson protect their paychecks (certain lines must not be crossed, wink wink!, nudge nudge!), although they do admit that
civil liberties groups and some members of Congress have criticized the administration for unilaterally expanding surveillance and moving too fast to share sensitive information without safeguards.
But as always in post-democratic American simulated-journalism, nobody's allowed (or sufficiently courageous -- what's the difference?) to state a clear fact without putting it in the mouth of a speaker who is easily dismissed as "political". Thus
Critics say preemptive law enforcement in the absence of a crime can violate the Constitution and due process. They cite the administration's long-running warrantless-surveillance program, which was set up outside the courts, and the FBI's acknowledgment that it abused its intelligence-gathering privileges in hundreds of cases by using inadequately documented administrative orders to obtain telephone, e-mail, financial and other personal records of U.S. citizens without warrants.
This technique hides the obvious fact that "preemptive law enforcement in the absence of a crime" is not law enforcement at all.

It does violate the Constitution and it obliterates due process.

But the authors can't (or won't) say that; instead they attribute a watered-down version of the obvious truth in the words of anonymous "critics" and move on to quote a 9/11 cover-up insider -- sorry: independent expert -- Jamie Gorelick:
Former Justice Department official Jamie S. Gorelick said the new FBI guidelines on their own do not raise alarms. But she cited the recent disclosure that undercover Maryland State Police agents spied on death penalty opponents and antiwar groups in 2005 and 2006 to emphasize that the policies would require close oversight.

"If properly implemented, this should assure the public that people are not being investigated by agencies who are not trained in how to protect constitutional rights," said the former deputy attorney general. "The FBI will need to be vigilant -- both in its policies and its practices -- to live up to that promise."
It's beyond laughable, really. Gorelick blames the state police, emphasizes the need for oversight, and winds up with a conditional recommendation: "If properly implemented".

That's a good one. If my aunt had balls she'd be my uncle. But the Washington Post can't say that either.

To its credit, the Post article does include some critical quotes attributed to a named individual, who hits at least one nail on the head:
[Michael] German, an FBI agent for 16 years [and policy counsel for the American Civil Liberties Union], said easing established limits on intelligence-gathering would lead to abuses against peaceful political dissenters. In addition to the Maryland case, he pointed to reports in the past six years that undercover New York police officers infiltrated protest groups before the 2004 Republican National Convention; that California state agents eavesdropped on peace, animal rights and labor activists; and that Denver police spied on Amnesty International and others before being discovered.

"If police officers no longer see themselves as engaged in protecting their communities from criminals and instead as domestic intelligence agents working on behalf of the CIA, they will be encouraged to collect more information," German said. "It turns police officers into spies on behalf of the federal government."
But one former FBI officer's opinion doesn't carry much weight against the advancing twin waves of horse manure and tyranny:
Mukasey said the changes will give the next president "some of the tools necessary to keep us safe" ... [and that] the new guidelines will make it easier for the FBI to use informants, conduct physical and photographic surveillance, and share data in intelligence cases, on the grounds that doing so should be no harder than in investigations of ordinary crimes.
If there's one thing we don't need, it's new rules to "make it easier for the FBI to use informants".

And if there's one thing we do need, it's a complete understanding of what it means when "law enforcement" officials claim that collection of intelligence in the absence of a crime should be "no harder" than a criminal investigation.

But the Washington Post can't tell you that, either.

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Wednesday, August 13, 2008

The Entrapment Dividend: Setting A Few Knuckleheads Up, And Knocking The Rest Of Us Down

U.S. Lawmakers Take Aim

According to Catherine Herridge of FOX News:

U.S. Lawmakers Take Aim at Homegrown Terrorist Threat
Many Americans believe that the threat of homegrown terrorism is gravest in Europe, but according to the U.S. government, in the last 18 months more than a half-dozen plots were thwarted right here at home.
Indeed.

That's what they say. But what really happened? How much do we know about the homegrown terrorist threat in America?

Catherine Herridge chooses a couple of the FBI's most visible recent successes to illustrate her point.
Three young Ohioans were convicted in June on terrorism charges after officials gathered evidence against them that included suicide bomb belts filled with ball bearings.

Mohammed Amawi, Marwan el-Hindi and Wassim Mazloum were part of a terror cell in Toledo that wanted to launch attacks against U.S. troops overseas — made all the easier by their status as Americans.
Several questions arise here, among them: How did these three men get radicalized?

We might also ask how dangerous a belt full of ball-bearings would have been in the absence of any explosives. And we might follow up that question by asking why anyone with no bombs would ever make such a belt.

We might also ask why a group of men in Ohio found it necessary to contemplate attacking American troops overseas. If they were really driven by anti-American sentiment, surely they could have found suitable targets at home. No?

And what exactly is the status of American troops overseas? Are they legitimately considered as targets of terrorism? Isn't terrorism a strategy which attacks innocent people in order to induce fear in the general population?

Attacking American troops overseas is a matter of national self-defense, or at least that's how it seems to the citizens of occupied countries. And what are American troops doing overseas in the first place, if not occupying foreign countries?

If foreign troops were occupying America, would attacks against them be rightfully considered terrorism?

FOX News wants no part of any of these questions. Instead Catherine Herridge turns to Andrew Cochran of the Counterterrorism blog, which describes itself as
a unique, multi-expert blog dedicated to providing a one-stop gateway to the counterterrorism community
and which takes itself seriously, to say the least:
We envision the blog’s audience to be the policymakers in Congress and the Executive Branch, as well as serious students elsewhere...
No kidding. This blog is so serious that it's currently in the middle of a series about how al Qaeda has taken root in Gaza. But I digress.

Here's Catherine Herridge again:
"Being an American gives you a passport around the world," said Andrew Cochran, chairman of the Counterterrorism Foundation and editor of the Counterterrorism blog. "These again are instances of homegrowns who take it to the limit. ... These people wanted to go all the way to Iraq."
This case shows one of the distinguishing features of homegrown terrorism in the United States: a total mismatch between aspirations and capabilities. Three guys who couldn't manage daily life in Toledo were going to travel to Iraq -- to attack American troops! Sure, they were!!

Fortunately for our story, which would be far too ludicrous otherwise, not all homegrown terrorists want to "take it to the limit" -- and "go all the way to Iraq". As Catherine Herridge points out,
Other homegrown terrorists have planned attacks on the homefront. Derrick Shareef, then just 22, was inspired by a violent Islamist ideology to plan a grenade attack against a shopping mall in Rockford, Ill. He eventually pleaded guilty to terror charges.
This is quite true, and I have covered Derrick Shareef's story extensively on these pages -- in a somewhat less strident, but nonetheless extremely serious way. I also note without pleasure that -- with one notable exception -- Derrick Shareef's story has received no critical attention from so-called "professional" journalists.

But ... We Know!

Because the Toledo terror cell was tried in open court, and because a key figure in Derrick Shareef's case also testified in open court (in connection with another case), we know quite a lot about the two homegrown terror cases which illustrate the point of this FOX News article.

In both cases the major radicalizing force has been identified, though never officially acknowledged. This institutional sleight-of-hand has led to an astounding opportunity for those within the federal government who are working hard to curtail your freedom.

On their behalf, Catherine Herridge alleges without any hint of evidence:
The Internet is fast becoming the dominant tool for the training and recruitment of terrorists.
She then continues as if she had identified websites that enable the violent radicalization of homegrown terrorists:
Some lawmakers are attempting to shut down such sites and those with the most extreme propaganda tapes, often made by Al Qaeda's media arm, As-Sahab.
What does she mean by "such sites"? There's no indication in the article. Could she be referring to unnamed websites that promote Islamic extremism? And if so, what does that mean? There are those who believe the government may be interested in shutting down any website that doesn't present a Pentagon-approved view of the news of the day. Since the Pentagon lies about everything all the time, and the mainstream media go along with it almost every time, the internet -- for all its warts and sinkholes -- is the last bastion of truth, and they would love to see it shrivel away and die.

The bipartisan American foreign-and-domestic policy establishment is running an agenda so thoroughly evil that it cannot be spoken of openly and truthfully, and that's why the internet -- with its amateur truth-seekers and dedicated debunkers of official nonsense -- is portrayed as "very dangerous" to the "cream" that rises to the "top" of the military-industrial-media complex.

The "Danger" Inherent In The Internet

I don't view the internet as "dangerous" to the military-industrial-media complex, let alone "very dangerous". I see it primarily as a black hole into which much useful energy disappears every day. But on the other hand, it is the world's largest "free speech zone", and that's why any professional military organization -- perfectly aligned against the truth, trained to seek out every potential enemy and destroy it -- would tend to see it as more dangerous than it really is. In any case, dangerous or not, the Internet is now a target.
"I am continuing to work to try to bring down the terrorist Web sites on the Internet," [disgraced former Democratic Senator Joe] Lieberman said. "I think the critical role… [is] reaching out to try to stop the problem in local areas before it starts."
This preemptive approach -- "stopping" the "problem" before it "starts" -- is a foolproof recipe to "justify" meddling in anything at all, doing whatever is "necessary" to solve "problems" which don't even exist!

Yet this is exactly what federal authorities are doing.

And it's only costing us billions of dollars and our most treasured civil rights.

Catherine Herridge notes:
The shutting down of certain Web sites is a prospect some critics are dreading.
And -- great big surprise! -- she finds an Arabic defender of the Constitution to give voice to that dread:
"We have a First Amendment and we champion the Constitution, and so in no way, shape or form should we engage in censorship of the internet," said Kareem Shora, national executive director for the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee.
The "journalistic" device we see here is quite despicable (though fully predictable) in that it gives anti-American wingnuts the opportunity to pretend that only Arabs and Muslims support the First Amendment. From there, it's an easy step to pretend that only terrorist sympathizers support the Rule of Law.

In reality -- but not on FOX -- patriots of all ethnic and religious backgrounds support the Constitution and all its amendments, particularly the Bill of Rights. But many others -- including the current administration and nearly everyone in the national media, especially FOX "News" -- take a different view: that the truth is dangerous, that the people are dangerous, and that sooner or later all of them -- the truth and the people -- will have to be destroyed.

Catherine Herridge goes on to portray an open internet as a very dangerous place indeed:
Ultimately, experts say, the Web will replace traditional terrorist training with cyber training, making it easier to recruit homegrown terrorists.

"It's not a substitute for physical field training, but it can come close to creating situations on how to train for an urban attack, a mall attack," Cochran said. "It's somewhat like what some of the 9/11 hijackers used in flight simulation software."

Beyond Ridiculous

This claim is beyond ridiculous, of course, in many ways. Terrorists training online for a mall attack? Sure! Why not terrorists going online to train for swimming to Iraq and killing American troops there?

And meanwhile: How many terrorists per year does the American government train? Count all the terrorist groups our government openly supports, such as the Special Forces. Count all terrorist groups doing clandestine operations on behalf of our government as well. But don't forget the "students" we train at schools for torture, like the infamous School of the Americas. And don't forget terrorist training at the most basic level: boot camp.

Quite apart from the numbers, American-trained terrorists are far more capable than anyone trained on a website.

And "our" terrorists are never short of resources: they are armed and equipped, fed and sheltered, moved around the world like "dumb, stupid animals" (in Henry Kissinger's notorious phrase) by the psychopathic elite they worship (and which includes Kissinger himself).

Talk about radical extremists! But I digress. Catherine Herridge continues:
According to experts, young, middle-class American Muslims are most at risk — men who don't know a lot about their religion and in an effort to educate themselves fall victim to an extreme ideology.
Herridge doesn't identify her experts, but this part of her claim is partially kind of almost true, at least somewhat.

Young, middle-class American Muslims are most at risk because they are the group being most aggressively infiltrated by violent radicals; and those who don't know much about their religion are especially vulnerable, because they're not secure enough in their beliefs to tell the violent radicals to get lost!

And, as Catherine Herridge notes,
American Muslim groups say that formula amounts to racial profiling.
Unfortunately, it does. And there's a reason for that: because it is. Furthermore, racial profiling is not only offensive to many innocent people; it's also very inefficient at detecting the dangerous elements among us.
"Giving parameters as far as race, religious views or age groups really misses the point. We should be much more sophisticated in the way we approach threats against our country," Shora said.
And that's quite true, or at least it would be, if our government were really interested in shutting down terrorism. But it isn't -- not much. It's quite a bit more interested in fomenting terrorism and using it as a political weapon. And that's why it's utterly misleading to say, as Catherine Herridge does, that
U.S. lawmakers also are looking at ways of addressing the root causes of homegrown terrorism.
Among the many problems with this claim, perhaps the most important is that it describes a question posed in a vacuum.

A Nation Of Vicious Idiots In Denial

The people who have the most trouble understanding the root causes of terrorism -- homegrown or otherwise -- deny in absolute terms that it has anything at all to do with America's foreign policy. To hear them tell the tale, it's all about "ideology".

So they write and talk and rant and rave about the "primitive" and "perverse" "radical" "violent" "hateful" "ideology" of Islam, because of which -- according to them -- people are taught to regard human life as having no value, and so on. But at the same time they deny the obvious and horrible fact that their country has deliberately killed millions and millions of innocent people, in Muslim countries and elsewhere around the world, in overt wars and convert invasions that were demonstrably carried out under false pretexts -- and continued at huge human expense long after the falsehoods were exposed to the world.

In addition to the millions of innocent people killed for lies, American troops and undercover operatives (and non-Americans hired, trained, fed and clothed, motivated and transported by American government officials) have maimed millions more, captured and tortured hundreds of thousands, and turned many millions of other innocent people into homeless refugees.

What Do We Think?

In the wake of these state-sponsored atrocities, what do we think goes on in the minds of the survivors? Do we imagine that none of them are consumed with rage over what we have done to them? Do we imagine that none of them are smart enough to figure out who did it?

YES! That's what we think. Some of us think so. Maybe most of us think so.

Barack Obama thinks so -- or at least he says so! In his supposedly brilliant speech about race in America and how it's not really an issue anymore (for light brown rich guys who have white relatives and attended elite law schools), Obama declared that "the conflicts in the Middle East" are "rooted primarily" -- not in any nation's actions or policies -- especially those of Israel -- but in "the perverse and hateful ideologies of radical Islam."

It's a simple solution to a complicated problem, but it's utterly useless, because it achieves its simplicity by ignoring an ocean of historical fact.

In the cesspool that's sometimes referred to as the "right" side of the blogosphere, Obama's analysis was echoed at the Doctor Bulldog and Ronin blog by Ronin, who wrote:
Hundreds of millions of muslims have conducted jihad for centuries not a single one of them ever logged online. They came from all types of races, cultures, sects of islam and they had only a single common denominator-the koran.
Ronin's solution to the terror problem is equally straight-forward:
Read the koran, understand it, outlaw it, seize them and destroy them. Problem solved.
One might wonder about the "hundreds of millions of Muslims" who have been waging their jihad for all these centuries and why so few of them have found their way into reputable history books. Invisible Muslims? Invisible jihad? Errr...

One might also wonder how anyone could possibly think that these "perverse and hateful" people would all stop attacking us if we would only seize and destroy the one book they consider Holy.

But please let's not get hung up on such irrelevant questions.

Many more penetrating questions remain to be asked, such as: What do we know about the three-man Terror Cell from Toledo? And what do we know about the lone-wolf Mall Bomber from Rockford?

The Toledo Terror Cell

The terror cell from Toledo, the group that included Mohammed Amawi, Marwan el-Hindi and Wassim Mazloum [L-R in photo], had another member whose name doesn't appear in the FOX News report quoted above, probably because he wasn't convicted along with the others.

But he was the ringleader. His name was Darren Griffin and he was the one who brought the others together.

Why wasn't he convicted? Why wasn't he even charged? Because he was working for the FBI. That's why.

According to an AP report published in the International Herald Tribune,
Griffin testified that he won the trust of the men by posing as a disgruntled soldier who converted to Islam. He secretly recorded his conversations with them for about two years until they were arrested in 2006.

At one point, Griffin told an FBI agent that he would meet with the men and "get them together to train," according to a transcript of the conversation.
Apparently, the jury didn't care how or why the "terror cell" had been brought together, or whose idea it was. Obviously, the jury didn't care whether the "terrorists" were actually planning to commit an act of terrorism or whether they were merely humoring a bizarre "friend" about his a crazy plan to attack an impossible target.

The jury also didn't care, apparently, that "investigators arrested them even though they found no guns, explosives or targets."

Instead, they paid attention to the recordings. FBI investigators, sifting through two years of recordings secretly made by Darren Griffin, pieced together a narrative that made it seem as if the three convicted "terrorists" were actually guilty of making this "terror cell" happen, and that the fourth one -- the ringleader, the planner, the FBI asset -- was entirely innocent.

It's not the first or only time something like this has happened.

The Rockford Mall Bomber

Derrick Shareef [left], the so-called "CherryVale Mall Bomber" form Rockford, Illinois, is sometimes referred to as a "lone wolf", but he wasn't plotting alone -- not by any means. Shareef was "helped along" by Jameel Chrisman [below, right], if you don't care what you say; you'd say "pushed along" if you wanted to be more accurate.

It was Chrisman who suggested attacking the CherryVale Mall; he also suggested the date of the attack (the last Friday before Christmas, 2006); and he suggested the weapons to be used (hand grenades). Shareef and Chrisman cased the mall twice, having driven there in Chrisman's car, and it was Chrisman who set up a bogus "arms deal" in which Derrick Shareef thought he was going to obtain grenades.

The "arms deal" was suspicious enough to alarm anyone not suffering from terminal stupidity: Shareef was to receive four hand grenades, a handgun and some ammunition, in exchange for a pair of stereo speakers.

But Shareef didn't suspect a thing, and the grenades were nonfunctional, and the ammo was blanks, and as soon as Shareef took possession of the "weapons" and placed them in the trunk of Chrisman's car, he was arrested by FBI agents, who had been watching the entire bogus transaction.

What happened? Derrick Shareef had been deceived. Jameel Chrisman, like Darren Griffin, had been working for the FBI. Chrisman had been sent to Rockford to meet Shareef, to "befriend" him, and to lead him across an invisible line. And Chrisman, who had performed similar services for the FBI in the past, was wonderfully effective.

When Chrisman arrived in Rockford, Shareef was working in a video store. Chrisman went there to meet him, introduced himself as a fellow Muslim, and found out it was his lucky day: Shareef was homeless and preparing to move in with the store manager. So Chrisman offered Shareef a place to live -- with his three wives and nine children.

Within hours Shareef was moving into the home the FBI had bought for Chrisman. The two "new friends" lived together for several months before Chrisman arranged the bogus arms deal that led to Shareef's arrest; in that time Chrisman recorded every conversation he and Shareef had. The FBI produced a selection of snippets edited from these hundreds of hours of recordings, a selection chosen to show Shareef in the worst possible light, while hiding as much as possible Chrisman's role as a provocateur.

But it was a dismal failure. The affidavit filed by the FBI in this case clearly shows Chrisman leading -- every step of the way.

Rolling Stone and "The Fear Factory"

Rolling Stone featured the Shareef / Chrisman story in an article by Guy Lawson called "The Fear Factory", which pulled too many punches for my liking, but also broke some new ground.

Guy Lawson spoke with agents of the FBI's Joint Terrorism Task Force (JTTF) who explained how the feds were working hard to market their "counter-terrorism" program in the face of opposition from local police chiefs who see people getting killed all the time due to gang warfare and other gun-related violence (to name just a few problems) and who see "terrorism" more as a threat to their already limited budgets than to their continued existence.

As Lawson wrote:
There is considerable skepticism in local police departments in northern Illinois about the nature and extent of the threat posed by terrorism. There are 415 local law-enforcement agencies in the district, many of which remain unconvinced that the threat is as dire as the JTTF maintains. Many departments refuse to allocate even one or two officers to spend four hours on basic terror training. Rather than consider the idea that the cops closest to the ground might have a better perspective on their communities, the JTTF addressed the problem by forming a TLOC —Terrorism Liaison Officer's Committee. The point is to merchandise the menace of terrorism to the police.

"It's a matter of marketing strategy," says Mark Lundgren, a special agent who oversees the TLOC. "These terrorism acts are trending toward the homegrown, self-activated, self-radicalized — the sort of thing that could literally pop up in your back yard. The typical things we would use to detect terrorism don't work, because these people are off the charts, so to speak. Nine times out of ten, for the next decade, it's going to be the local cop who stops the terror attacks."

Lundgren, who resembles a young Gary Busey, fairly glistens with certainty about the value of his work. "What are you trying to sell to the local police departments?" I ask.

"Awareness. Motivation," he says. "It's a very hard sell. You walk into a chief of police in a crime-ridden district. The first thing he's going to tell you is, 'The guys in this area are killing people. The guys you're telling me about —it's not make-believe, I understand that — but they haven't killed anyone lately in my district.' "

"Or ever," I say.

"Exactly."
Lawson's article drew a fiery response from the FBI. The FBI's piece, written by Assistant Director John Miller, claimed that Lawson had ignored facts that didn't support his pre-ordained conclusion. Unfortunately for John Miller, this is an unsupportable claim. Guy Lawson's conclusion springs naturally from the information readily available in the public record; his own research clearly confirms what astute observers had already deduced.

But John Miller clearly doesn't care about any of that; he's telling the story the way he wants it told. He shows his disdain for the truth in many places, but never more brazenly than in the following passage:
At any point during his planning process, Mr. Shareef could have stopped his actions, but he chose not to. There is no evidence that he ever wavered in his desire to murder holiday shoppers in the CherryVale Mall that day. Would he have succeeded had it not been for the diligence of the JTTF?
In point of fact, it was Chrisman who was unwavering, while Shareef hesitated. It was Chrisman who wanted to murder holiday shoppers; Shareef himself didn't want to murder anyone. Shareef was talking about vandalizing a courthouse in the middle of the night when nobody was around. He certainly didn't see himself as a killer -- let alone a suicide bomber! The idea of attacking shoppers, the idea of attacking just before the holiday, the idea of using hand grenades, the idea of murdering innocent people -- these ideas all sprang from the fertile imagination of William "Jameel" Chrisman, an FBI asset, an entrapment specialist, and a good one.

Shareef was being manipulated by a professional; and if he had balked, he might have found himself homeless; at the very least he would have been endlessly humiliated with respect to the "fellow Muslim" who had offered him a home.

And John Miller has the shameless gall to ask, "Would he have succeeded had it not been for the diligence of the JTTF?"

Clearly the question is meant as rhetorical, and the expected answer is "Maybe". But in reality the question is answerable, and the answer is an unqualified "NO."

Derrick Shareef wouldn't have been trying to get grenades; he wouldn't have been trying to attack CherryVale Mall; he wouldn't have been trying to kill anyone at all, had it not been for the "diligence" of the JTTF!

If it shocks or even surprises you to see an Assistant Director of a national security agency lying in such a despicable fashion, you haven't been paying attention. That's how they do it nowadays. It would be shocking if he stood up and told the truth.

And in any case, John Miller's obfuscation is the least of our problems. But it does fit in with some other basic truths about which the FBI feels distinctly uncomfortable. As the Texan blog Grits For Breakfast reported, the FBI won't assure Congress it doesn't tolerate 'serious violent felonies' by informants. Makes you feel a bit safer, doesn't it?

Federal Legislation To Enable The Study [sic] Of Violent Radicalization And Homegrown Terrorism

In "response" to the "threat" posed by "homegrown terrorists" such as "The Toledo Terror Cell" and "The Rockford Mall Bomber", Congress has been working on an act which will grant enormous funding and vast police powers to a government which is already overloaded with both; in addition it will create an "academic center" for the "study" of "violent radicalization".

In truth, this "research center" will be a vast data repository, where the feds will store every available tidbit about every available warm body, then use still-to-be-discovered data mining techniques to wring every possible political advantage from the terabytes of personal data the center is designed to house.

It won't be a proper study of violent radicalization, nor will it provide anything resembling an accurate view of homegrown terrorism, for two main reasons. First, as mentioned above, America's military role in destroying much of the rest of the world is off-limits for such a study; in the official US government narrative, from which none may depart, Muslims are radicalized by violent and perverse ideologies alone.

Furthermore, the role of the government-funded agents provocateur is always scrubbed from the official tales of these homegrown terrorists, forcing professional liars like John Miller and bottom-feeding pseudo-journalists like Catherine Herridge to resort to sheer pretense. Thus they pretend that these "violent radicals" -- the "mall bombers" and "terror cells" of modern America -- are "radicalized" by the internet. What else can they do? They can't admit that the government itself has "radicalized" a handful of gullible chumps through a series of face-to-face confrontations with deliberate lying instigators. Nor can they admit that these instigators are working hand-in-glove with the FBI, in an effort to draw unsuspecting chumps into legal nightmares. So instead they pretend they've busted real terrorists. They pretend the agents provocateur didn't exist. They pretend that we're utterly, helplessly, hopelessly, stupid. And in many cases we are. But not always.

Earlier this year, Mother Jones published a piece called "Don't Even Think About It", which was aptly subtitled: The war against "homegrown terrorism" is on. Enter the thought police.

In that article, James Ridgeway and Jean Casella wrote:
Largely ignored by the mainstream candidates—as well as the mainstream media—are the latest efforts to bring the fear home by targeting "homegrown terrorism"—another new catchphrase. Only liberal Democrat Dennis Kucinich and libertarian Republican Ron Paul have warned that in the name of stopping domestic terrorist plots before they happen, Congress is in the midst of passing legislation aimed not at actual hate crimes or even terrorist conspiracies, but at talking, Web surfing, or even thinking about jihadism or other "extremist belief systems." Last October, a piece of legislation called the Violent Radicalization and Homegrown Terrorism Prevention Act of 2007 sailed through the House with near-universal bipartisan support; it is likely to reach the floor of the Senate early this year and appears certain to be signed into law.
...

The legislation would create a National Commission on the Prevention of Violent Radicalization and Homegrown Terrorism composed of 10 members whose vaguely defined job would be to "examine and report upon the facts and causes of violent radicalization, homegrown terrorism, and ideologically based violence," and to "build upon and bring together the work of other entities" including various federal, state, and local agencies, academics, and foreign governments. The commission is charged with issuing a report after 18 months. It also directs the Secretary of Homeland Security to set up a center to study "violent radicalization and homegrown terrorism" at a U.S. university, and to "conduct a survey" of what other countries are doing to prevent homegrown terrorism.
...

The bill raises the potential for government encroachments on civil rights in part through the way it defines some basic terms. The text of the bill says that "the term 'violent radicalization' means the process of adopting or promoting an extremist belief system for the purpose of facilitating ideologically based violence to advance political, religious, or social change." It gives no clue as to what would qualify, under this law, as an "extremist belief system," leaving this open to broad interpretation according to the prevailing political winds.

In addition, simply by designating the "process of adopting or promoting" belief systems as a target for government concern or control, the bill moves into dangerous territory. The director of the ACLU's Washington legislative office, Caroline Fredrickson, said in a statement on the bill, "Law enforcement should focus on action, not thought. We need to worry about the people who are committing crimes rather than those who harbor beliefs that the government may consider to be extreme."
...

What the Homegrown Terrorism bill does is bring back into the equation not just violent actions, and not just violent plots, but the words and ideas that may (or may not) inspire or encourage them somewhere down the road. It moves toward designating people as terrorists based not on what they do, but on what they say and what they think.
And all of this is allegedly necessary to study what causes violent radicalization. Hah!

We could do better with a complete study of violent radicalization through entrapment; from the limited amount of reliable published material, we know a fair bit about how and when it works, and how and when it doesn't.

When Entrapment Works, It's Ugly ...

From the available evidence we can conclude that Chrisman's entrapment of Shareef was guaranteed when Shareef agreed to move in with Chrisman and his very unconventional family. Shareef's dependence on Chrisman -- for something as essential as shelter -- was a very powerful weapon working constantly in Chrisman's favor.

Not all entrapment is done in-house, of course, and not all of it is done by the FBI, either. In New York City, Shahawar Matin Siraj [left] was entrapped by a specialist named Osama Eldawoody [below, right], who was working for the NYPD.

Eldawoody ingratiated himself to his intended target by offering him rides across the city. The FBI asset would often drive Siraj home from work, and along the way he would "teach" him about radical Islam.

Siraj and his family had come to America from Pakistan, where they were persecuted for being "too secular" -- i.e. not sufficiently radical. Siraj was working in his father's bookstore when Eldawoody walked in; according to his family, Siraj had never had a violent thought in his head until Osama Eldawoody started planting "perverse and hateful ideologies" there. Eventually Siraj came to see Eldawoody as a mentor, a father-figure. And Eldawoody took full advantage, playing the gullible Siraj like a toy fiddle.

The NYPD arrested Siraj in August of 2004, just before the Republican National Convention opened there, and accused him of plotting to bomb a subway station. Ever since, he's been known as "The Subway Bomber", even though he didn't have a bomb, didn't have access to one, didn't know how to make one, and had no interest in bombing anybody.

In recordings played during Siraj's trial, Eldawoody prompts Siraj (and co-conspirator, and mental patient, James Elshafay) to talk about bombing a subway station. Siraj doesn't like the idea much; he says he'll have to ask his mother! Does this sound like a committed suicide bomber to you? Nevertheless, the jury convicted Siraj, and the NYPD put Eldawoody on the payroll: he now receives $3200 per month for "services rendered" in an arrangement likely to be "permanent".

In a bizarre coda, after Siraj was sentenced to 30 years in prison for his role in the "conspiracy", his parents cried "entrapment" and the whole family was promptly arrested. A little truth goes a long way, and the NYPD were not having any of it. Siraj's mother and sister have been released on bail; to the best of my knowledge his father is still incarcerated.

... And When It Doesn't Work, It's Still Ugly

The question of dependency is crucial, and it was grievously overlooked in the southern California case of Craig Monteilh.
On the first Friday of each month, Mohammed Elsisy, an Egyptian-born software engineer, usually drives from his home in Irvine, Calif., to the King Fahad mosque in Culver City, Calif., to deliver the khutba, or sermon.

Elsisy thought the first Friday of this past June would be no different.

But little did he know something totally unexpected was about to happen that would make this particular Friday the most memorable for years to come.

Elsisy had two passengers in his car at the time.

In the back seat sat Ahmed Niazi, 33, a language teacher and a friend, while in the passenger seat sat a man who converted to Islam almost a year ago.

The man was 44-year-old Craig Monteilh, but he went by the name "Farouk Aziz."

"Monteilh started talking about the Iraq war," Niazi said. "He went off on a rant against U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East."

But then, out of the blue, Monteilh said something that sent chills down the spines of his companions.

He asked Elsisy and Niazi if they knew of an "operation" he could be part of.

Pin-drop silence followed. Elsisy’s eyes bounced over to the rearview mirror and traded a horrified glance with Niazi.

"Blood froze up in our veins," Elsisy recalls.
Monteilh had violated one of the essential rules of successful entrapment stingers: he hadn't created any dependencies. He wasn't even driving the car.

In one of the most laughable details of this particular sad story, Monteilh had apparently followed his handler's instructions to the letter, and the instruction manual had obviosly told the stinger to spend a year getting to know the target.
Exactly a year earlier, Monteilh had walked into the Islamic Center of Irvine and declared his intention to embrace Islam.

Issa Edah-Tally, president of the center, said Monteilh, known only as Farouk then, was just another convert among many who took Shahada, or declaration of faith, at the center and became regulars at the mosque.

"We don’t ask people for their real names and don’t keep track of who attends prayer service," Edah-Tally said.

Monteilh started attending regularly and enrolled in the weekly adult Arabic class taught by Niazi.

"Farouk told me his real name was Frederick Jordon," Niazi recalled. Monteilh also told Niazi that he was of French and Moroccan descent.

However, when Monteilh joined the Berlitz Language Institute’s Costa Mesa branch – where Niazi works – to learn Arabic, he filled out a form and wrote his name as Craig Monteilh.

"I don’t know why he lied about his real name," Niazi said. "And I don’t know why he chose to write down his real name knowing I worked at the Berlitz."
Monteilh wasn't the slickest entrapment artist ever, was he? But still ...
A few months after his conversion, Monteilh was able to make several friends at the mosque. Some recalled how he often went on anti-American tirades, blasting U.S. foreign policy and decrying the suffering of Muslims throughout the world.

But then he started talking about something else.

Ashruf Zied, a software engineer from Irvine, Calif., said Monteilh approached him one day claiming to have access to weapons and asking if he wanted to join him in "waging jihad."

Zied was floored. "I was completely taken aback by what he said," Zied said. "I said, hold it there. What are you talking about?"

Zied said he tried to give Monteilh advice, but found him argumentative and set in his ways.

As his call for armed war became more aggressive, some frightened worshippers stopped attending the prayers altogether.
...

Elsisy, Niazi and Zied were shocked to find out [...] that Monteilh had a criminal record.

Monteilh had told the three he worked as a fitness trainer and was a former pastor.

However, a routine search on the Internet revealed that Monteilh had an extensive criminal record dating as far back as 1987.

The charges included the following: separate charges of grand theft in 1987, 2002 and 2003; burglary in 2002 and forgery in 2003.
That's not the way it's supposed to work, of course. The supposedly freshly converted Muslim is supposed to hide his criminal record (like Chrisman, a convicted felon, hid his history from Derrick Shareef). And he's supposed to find dim-witted Muslims who will depend on him and ride around in his car (like Chrisman and Eldawoody did), not software engineers who drive their own cars.

Why is is all this entrapment going on? In the absence of unvarnished truth from our national media or from the Assistant Director of the FBI, we may never know for sure, but we can certainly make reasonable deductions from the available facts.

The immediate objective of all this entrapment is clearly to find gullible Muslim knuckleheads and draw them into making rash statements, posing for martyrdom videos, and doing other stupid things to incriminate themselves: thus we have one chump trading speakers for nonfunctional weapons in Rockford, and three others stuffing ball bearings into inert "suicide belts" in Toledo.

This would be almost funny, except ...

Important Aspects Overlooked

Some of the most important aspects of this story are the most overlooked.

It's bad enough that a law "enforcement" service should use criminal informants whose illegal conduct is then protected, as if these lying rats were somehow above the law.

It's bad enough that the gullible young fools who are entrapped by these informants are doomed to spend the rest of their lives in prison.

But the larger ramifications of this multi-layered farce are much more disturbing.

The barrage of news stories about how we are constantly under threat from the "violent radical Muslims" who walk among us is not only palpably false but also feeds directly into the false "justification" for our wars of aggression in Iraq and Afghanistan -- and perhaps in Iran next -- in which we have already killed more than a million completely innocent people.

Furthermore, the fear generated by these not-quite-legitimate terrorists has almost led us to the point of voluntarily accepting a police state. But not quite.

Implementing Legislation That Hasn't Even Been Passed

The "Violent Radicalization and Homegrown Terrorism Prevention Act" has not yet been passed. It's been approved by the House but it's still in committee in the Senate. However, despite this seemingly vital impediment, some portions of the bill are already being implemented -- just as if it had been passed and signed into law!



[Thanks to Laurie Dobson for this video. If you live in Maine, you ought to vote for an independent Senate candidate who stands for Peace and Sanity (and you only have one to choose from). And if you don't live there, you should still support her, in my cold and humble opinion. This has been a public service announcement.]

In Short

The threat of homegrown terrorism is now so grave that we must take extraordinary action to protect ourselves.

This grave threat is personified by the Toledo Terror Cell and the Rockford Mall Bomber, who are presented to the nation by the likes of FOX News and the Counterterrorism blog as the face of the homegrown terror threat. They are portrayed as such for a reason: they are the most visible "successes" of the FBI and its JTTFs. However:

Both of these cases were the work of admitted agents provocateur. In both cases the agents provocateur were entrapment specialists working for the FBI. In neither case -- according to the government -- was the public in any danger.

But the threat posed by these terrorists and others of their ilk is so serious that we must shred some of our remaining civil liberties in order to protect ourselves, even though they are now in prison for having taken part in the plotting of crimes they never could have accomplished, and never would have thought of on their own.

The shredding of our civil liberties to protect ourselves against this threat is so righteous and so vital to our continued existence that it has been started even before the legislation enabling it has been passed.

Does that make sense to you? It makes perfect sense to me!

We are now so far through the looking glass, most of us can't even remember when we fell in.

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Saturday, February 2, 2008

Bogus Terror: Feds Wage War Against The Rule Of Law

The Other Osama

Shahawar Matin Siraj [photo] was a young man when his family moved from Pakistan to the United States. The family had been persecuted in Pakistan because they were "too secular", and they came to the US looking for religious freedom. But they found something else again.

Matin Siraj was working in his father's store when Osama Eldawoody walked in. Eldawoody talked up Siraj, a doe-eyed dolt who was barely competent to sell Islamic books. Eldawoody found out that Siraj lived across the city, and that he rode the subway a lot. Eldawoody started offering Siraj rides home from work. The two would talk in the car.

The much older Eldawoody established a surrogate-father relationship with the innocent and gullible youngster, taught him about violent jihad, told him that to be "true" to Allah he had to attack the Americans, and got him to draw a map of the Herald Square subway station. This crude drawing would be used against Siraj at trial, after Eldawoody "blew the whistle" on Siraj and his plans.

Unknown to Siraj -- or to an alleged accomplice, James Elshafay -- Eldawoody was working for the NYPD counter-terrorism unit.

He had been assigned to visit mosques and write down the plate numbers of the cars in the parking lots, to visit the Islamic bookstores looking for a likely mark. He couldn't have found a better one than Siraj, who had never had a violent thought in his life -- until Eldawoody took the young man "under his wing", so to speak.

Eldawoody [photo] led Siraj along by the nose, or at least he tried to. At one point Eldawoody asked Siraj if he was ready to attack and Siraj replied that he had to ask his mother.

Hi Mom, it's me. I was wondering, well, actually one of my friends was wondering, would it be OK if me and some friends blew up the subway station? Puh-leeze!

Siraj was arrested in August of 2004 and charged with plotting to bomb the Herald Square station. He was convicted in 2005, even though he had no bombs, no bomb-making materials, no knowledge of bomb-making, and even more importantly, no desire to hurt anyone. In January of 2006 he was sentenced to 30 years in prison, and at that point his family, who had been quiet thus far, started talking about entrapment.

The next day -- early the very next morning -- his entire family was arrested and taken into custody, charged with immigration violations. After a lengthy publicity battle, the government allowed Matin's mother and sister out on bond, and now they work in the store, while Matin serves his time ... and the father is still in prison, more than a year later.

It's not about immigration. It's about entrapment. The word must not be uttered.

Heavy Pieces

In the Terror War against the Rule of Law, the heavy pieces are beginning to move into place, and quite visibly, too: even the so-called alternative media are starting to get a vague idea about some of it. Their coverage comes way too late, and it's too fragmented to do any of us much good, in my opinion. But then again, I've been wrong before. I would love to be wrong about this.

As I was saying: a couple of long and relevant pieces have appeared recently in the quasi-dissident media, both with good points, both with gaping holes. At least they complement each other.

Mother Jones has a heavily annotated piece by James Ridgeway and Jean Casella called "Don't Even Think About It" which describes the crackdown on your civil rights that's sure to come as more and more resources are devoted to striking at "the roots of terrorism". Unfortunately for you, the striking is being done by people who have no idea where the roots of terrorism lie, and/or no intention of finding out, and they certainly wouldn't share that information with you even if they did have it. Oh well.

At Rolling Stone, Guy Lawson's "The Fear Factory" delves into the world of fabricated terror, shining a spotlight on William "Jameel" Chrisman [photo right], the former FBI asset who entrapped Derrick Shareef [sketch below].

Lawson also points out that the FBI counter-terrorists have no intention of sharing any information with you, either.

Neither piece does a very good job at showing the "big picture", but they both show parts of that picture fairly well.

The FBI's Joint Terrorism Task Forces

Lawson's piece focuses on the FBI's Joint Terrorism Task Forces, about which he observes:
Since 9/11, the number of such outfits across the country has tripled. With more than 2,000 FBI agents now assigned to 102 task forces, the JTTFs have effectively become a vast, quasi-secret arm of the federal government, granted sweeping new powers that outstrip those of any other law-enforcement agency. The JTTFs consist not only of local police, FBI special agents and federal investigators from Immigration and the IRS, but covert operatives from the CIA. The task forces have thus effectively destroyed the "wall" that historically existed between law enforcement and intelligence-gathering. Under the Bush administration, the JTTFs have been turned into a domestic spy agency, like Britain's MI5 -- one with the powers of arrest.
Lawson questions the practice of instigating terror plots, and points out it tends to produce the "victories" in the war on terror that are so essential to the continuation of the war.

He mentions a series of famously "foiled" "terror plots", all of which were set up by law-enforcement agents who had "infiltrated" groups of wannabe terrorists, or recruited such groups themselves, after which they served as agents-provocateur, organizing the alleged wannabes to work on an impossible plot for which they could then be busted.

Lawson provides a host of frightening insights into the mentality of the people who are supposed to be protecting us. One of my favorites: a telling exchange with Sgt. Paul DeRosa of the Chicago Police Department:
Chicago has one of the largest Muslim populations in the country -- some 400,000, DeRosa estimates. "Experts say that between five and ten percent of Muslims are extremists. So you take it down to one percent. What's one percent of 400,000? Forty thousand? Technically there could be 40,000 —"

"You mean 4,000," I say.

DeRosa pauses. "Right," he says. "Four thousand." He forges on. "Most people who come to America who are Middle Eastern come for a good reason. But there's still a percentage that may be here that don't like us. They are with the extremists."
Aside from the obvious difficulty with easy math -- if that's what it was -- the question begs to be raised: If there are 4,000 extremists in Chicago alone, why aren't any of them attacking?

The Circular Dance

Ask a question such as this in a JTTF context, and you can go around in circles forever, as illustrated by the following conversation between Lawton and Special Agent Robert Holley, a JTTF Counterterrorism Squad supervisor
When I ask what kinds of cases his CT squad has made, Holley cites the example of a local cab driver who came up on the JTTF's radar some time back —he won't say how or why. The man was East African, Holley says, a suspected Islamic extremist "connected to known bad guys overseas." After being interviewed by the JTTF, the cabbie decided to leave the country. Nothing criminal had occurred, and no charges were laid. The cab driver had simply come to the attention of the JTTF, and that in itself was enough to dispose of the matter.

"Can we consider that a success because we didn't put him in jail?" Holley asks. "Absolutely. This guy is no longer here. He is not a threat to one person in the United States."

"Was he ever a threat?" I ask.

"We opened up an investigation."

"But isn't that a circular argument?"

"Was he a bomb-thrower?" Holley concedes. "Probably not. Did he want to go into a mall and attack? No."
And that's just the beginning of the circular dance.
The next morning, I meet with three members of the Field Intelligence Group. [...] None of the three analysts in the FIG have Arabic-language skills or extensive experience in the countries they are supposed to monitor. To keep informed, they read newspapers and intelligence reports. They then issue bulletins to police departments about perceived threats.

"What is the biggest threat?" I ask.

There is a long pause.

"I think it's very dangerous if we start to identify that," an analyst named Julie Irvine says.

"The enemy is listening," Assistant Special Agent in Charge Gregory Fowler adds later. "I drill that into my people's heads every day. Foreign-intelligence agencies and terrorists are listening. The FBI is on a war footing."

When I express skepticism at the nature of the cases being brought by the JTTF, and the wild-goose chases that seem to occupy its time, Fowler says people don't understand the "threat stream" facing the nation. [...]

"The public is never going to see the evidence we have," Fowler says. "We don't want to reveal our hand or tip our sources. You cannot judge the nature of the terrorist threat to the United States based on the public record."

"But with such strictures," I ask, "how does a citizen become informed about the threat?"

"I have access to the information," Fowler says. "I have a lot of faith in the judgment of the common citizen. A lot of people understand the nature of the threat."
Are you dizzy yet? People don't understand the "threat stream" facing the nation but they do understand the nature of the threat. Yeah, right!

And that's good enough for you because DON'T ASK QUESTIONS!

In one of the more chilling passages, Lawton portrays the coming crackdown as a planned reaction to the next terrorist attack:
Despite the rapid and widespread proliferation of JTTFs, very little has been reported about what goes on inside the War on Terror's domestic front. The FBI building that houses the JTTF for the Northern District of Illinois has been moved from the middle of the city to a more spacious, fortresslike building on the industrial west side of Chicago, a place out of the city's Loop, literally and figuratively. The glass tower is surrounded by a tall metal fence, and layers upon layers of security inside and out add to the sense of siege. When Special Agent Robert Holley, who supervises the JTTF's Squad Counterterrorism 1, offers to escort me to his office on the eighth floor, we are stopped by his superior before we even reach the hallway. The entire floor, the supervisor declares, is considered secure -- there are classified documents on desks -- and therefore off-limits to outsiders.

Holley, an ex-military type who is built like a bullet, rolls his eyes but complies. There is no problem finding another room for a meeting. There are acres of empty offices and cubicles in the eerily futuristic building, the premises far larger than current requirements dictate but ready for expansion should the need arise with another terrorist attack.
And so on. It's fairly good work given the circumstances, and well worth checking out, despite its many deficiencies.

Deficiencies? For starters, it provides no annotations, it neglects some easily available relevant material, and it gives no sense of the shoe that's about to drop on us next.

Lawson even manages a somewhat hopeful -- and, to my mind, thoroughly pointless -- conclusion:
There are signs, however, that judges and jurors are getting fed up with such concocted "threats." In December, the prosecution of the "Liberty City Seven" ended in one acquittal and a hung jury for the rest of the accused. The supposed cell was accused of preparing a "full ground war" against America by bringing down the Sears Tower and other buildings. At trial, however, it emerged that the men had no operational abilities, that the plots were dreamed up at the exhortation of two paid FBI informants while smoking dope and that the group had been provided its camera, military boots and warehouse by the JTTF.

Despite 15,000 surveillance recordings of the men, including one in which they swore allegiance to Osama bin Laden, the jury refused to convict. "This was all written, produced, directed, choreographed and stage-designed by the United States government," Albert Levin, an attorney for one of the accused, said in his closing argument.

Undeterred, the government is taking six of the men back to court. The retrial was scheduled to begin on January 22nd.
This is my main criticism of Lawson's piece: The conviction or otherwise of the knuckleheads recruited by the counter-terrorists in this particular bogus foiled "terror plot" is not the point! The point is that the publicity generated by the arrest (forget the hearings if any, the trial if any, and the sentencing if any) is enough to "justify" the crackdown on radicalization.

The Crackdown Is Coming

For more on the coming crackdown, Mother Jones provides a resource although its piece also has serious limitations.

To wit: even though it gives a good picture of how The Violent Radicalization and Homegrown Terrorism Prevention Act is going to take away a lot of your freedom (and that of your children, and theirs...), and even though it provides many important links, it gives no hint that the bulk of the "terror" being invoked to "justify" the new legislation was bogus.

Nonetheless, it does report:
After a couple of hearings—described by OMB Watch as "primarily one-sided, with the bulk of the witnesses representing law enforcement or federal agencies"—the bill went to the House floor, where it was it passed with only six members voting against it—three Democrats and three Republicans. (Twenty-two others were absent.) Currently, a nearly identical version of the bill awaits a vote in the Senate's Committee on Homeland Security, where it has a supporter in chair Joseph Lieberman. Committee member Barack Obama has gone on record as being undecided on the bill (after an earlier email to constituents that seemed to indicate support)—but no presidential candidate is likely to cast a vote that could be seen as soft on terrorism.

The legislation would create a National Commission on the Prevention of Violent Radicalization and Homegrown Terrorism composed of 10 members whose vaguely defined job would be to "examine and report upon the facts and causes of violent radicalization, homegrown terrorism, and ideologically based violence," and to "build upon and bring together the work of other entities" including various federal, state, and local agencies, academics, and foreign governments. The commission is charged with issuing a report after 18 months. It also directs the Secretary of Homeland Security to set up a center to study "violent radicalization and homegrown terrorism" at a U.S. university, and to "conduct a survey" of what other countries are doing to prevent homegrown terrorism.
...

The bill raises the potential for government encroachments on civil rights in part through the way it defines some basic terms. The text of the bill says that "the term 'violent radicalization' means the process of adopting or promoting an extremist belief system for the purpose of facilitating ideologically based violence to advance political, religious, or social change." It gives no clue as to what would qualify, under this law, as an "extremist belief system," leaving this open to broad interpretation according to the prevailing political winds.

In addition, simply by designating the "process of adopting or promoting" belief systems as a target for government concern or control, the bill moves into dangerous territory. The director of the ACLU's Washington legislative office, Caroline Fredrickson, said in a statement on the bill, "Law enforcement should focus on action, not thought. We need to worry about the people who are committing crimes rather than those who harbor beliefs that the government may consider to be extreme."
We also need to worry about any bill that raises the potential for government encroachments on civil rights.

Worrying About The Wrong Stuff, On Purpose

And there's the rub. We've got bogus terror on one hand, instigated by agents of the rapidly coalescing law-enforcement military complex ("lawfare", as Lawson points out). On the other we have a drastic new law that will enable all sorts of unwarranted surveillance, not to stop terrorism per se, but to "study" the process of "radicalization".

But this study will never work, can never work -- not for the purpose for which it was ostensibly designed -- because it's based on bogus analyses of bogus terror plots, by which I mean the analyses are stripped of any indication that the plots were bogus. As a rookie computer programmer I was taught the inviolable GIGO rule (Garbage In, Garbage Out). It applies to more than computers, of course. But clearly the designers of this process don't care whether garbage comes out. All they want is output!

Mother Jones again:
In his book on terrorism, Unconquerable Nation: Knowing Our Enemy, Strengthening Ourselves, [Brian Michael Jenkins, of the Rand Corporation] wrote, "In their international campaign, the jihadists will seek common grounds with leftist, anti-American, and anti-globalization forces, who will in turn see, in radical Islam, comrades against a mutual foe." Once a terrorist is defined by thought and word rather than deed, there will be room for all of us in the big tent.
In other words, we're all losing our rights -- rights to privacy and security, among others; rights that our ancestors fought and died for -- as a pre-planned "reaction" to the arrests of bogus "terrorist cells" which were actually recruited, inspired, funded and supported in numerous other ways by agents of the lawfare state. How quaint!.

All this power-grabbing is clearly based on false pretexts, and that's becoming increasingly obvious, which is another problem (for another day, perhaps).

Much of the so-called "justification" for the Violent Radicalization and Homegrown Terrorism Prevention Act comes from a report compiled by the New York Police Department. One of the "featured terrorists" in this report is Shahawar Matin Siraj, the so-called Subway Bomber.

The NYPD entrapped him, the feds jailed his family, and a bogus tale regarding his "violent radicalization" is being used to drive acceptance of a draconian new law.

Even the world's best marketers couldn't sell this "lawfare" nonsense unless they had a pile of stories to hang it on -- so who cares whether the stories are true or false as long as they sell?

Rolling Stone again:
There is considerable skepticism in local police departments in northern Illinois about the nature and extent of the threat posed by terrorism. There are 415 local law-enforcement agencies in the district, many of which remain unconvinced that the threat is as dire as the JTTF maintains. Many departments refuse to allocate even one or two officers to spend four hours on basic terror training. Rather than consider the idea that the cops closest to the ground might have a better perspective on their communities, the JTTF addressed the problem by forming a TLOC —Terrorism Liaison Officer's Committee. The point is to merchandise the menace of terrorism to the police.

"It's a matter of marketing strategy," says Mark Lundgren, a special agent who oversees the TLOC. "These terrorism acts are trending toward the homegrown, self-activated, self-radicalized — the sort of thing that could literally pop up in your back yard. The typical things we would use to detect terrorism don't work, because these people are off the charts, so to speak. Nine times out of ten, for the next decade, it's going to be the local cop who stops the terror attacks."

Lundgren, who resembles a young Gary Busey, fairly glistens with certainty about the value of his work. "What are you trying to sell to the local police departments?" I ask.

"Awareness. Motivation," he says. "It's a very hard sell. You walk into a chief of police in a crime-ridden district. The first thing he's going to tell you is, 'The guys in this area are killing people. The guys you're telling me about —it's not make-believe, I understand that — but they haven't killed anyone lately in my district.' "

"Or ever," I say.

"Exactly."
They do an aggressive sales job. It's a tough sell. But it's necessary if we're going to be safe!

Except it's all hogwash!

Well, there you go. That's my story, at least for the moment.

Sadly, no major American media type is interested in putting the pieces together. The best they can do is throw out a few pieces at a time. Oh well. Thanks for the pieces. But that's not the most amazing thing.

The most amazing thing to me is that the American public doesn't seem to care very much. And that's a shame, because in the long run, the destruction of the Rule of Law is going to hurt us and our descendants much more than the destruction of our national "honor", not to mention our military, in Iraq.

~~~

The problem of fabricated bogus terror is not restricted to the United States.

See also: Inadequate Deception: The Impossible Plots Of The Terror War.

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Wanna Get This Picture On The Cover! The Photo Rolling Stone Should Have Published With "The Fear Factory"

(UPDATED twice, below and belower)

Rolling Stone has just published a long and fairly good article called "The Fear Factory", which focuses on the FBI's so-called Joint Terrorism Task Forces and their apparent history of fomenting bogus terror -- creating false "terror cells" which they can then bust.

The author, Guy Lawson, shines a spotlight on the shady dealings of FBI entrapment specialist William "Jameel" Chrisman, whose story graced these pages some time ago.

Unfortunately, Rolling Stone didn't publish Chrisman's photo, even though it is readily available. Nor did Lawson link to any corroborating evidence, even though plenty of that is available, too.

I have been working on a review of Lawson's piece and I hope to have it ready shortly. But in the meantime, since Lawson has sparked some interest in the case, it makes sense to post a photo of the rat and links to more information.

For a closer (and annotated) look at William "Jameel" Chrisman, how he entrapped Derrick Shareef, and how he tried to entrap Hassan Abujihaad:

Burned! Meet William Chrisman, FBI Entrapment Specialist

And for another glimpse behind the scenes of bogus terror:

Inadequate Deception: The Impossible Plots Of The Terror War

I'll be back with more on Lawson's piece and some related matters as soon as possible. In the meantime, and especially if you're new to all this, please click some links and learn about the terrorist threat we face, where it comes from, and how serious it really is!

UPDATE 1:

The Register-Star, hometown paper of Rockford, Illinois, was none too thrilled with the coverage Rolling Stone provided their fair city, and had this to say about it:
Rolling Stone takes aim at Rockford: Says city not worthy of terrorist attack

Jan 30, 2008 @ 07:22 PM | RRSTAR.COM

ROCKFORD - Rolling Stone, the venerable anti-establishment pop-culture magazine, took notice of Rockford in its latest issue.

In "The Fear Factory," a piece that suggests the federal government is "manufacturing" terror threats, author Guy Lawson examines the strange case of would-be mall bomber Derrick Shareef.

In the process, he takes a few swipes at Rockford, "a Midwestern city of 150,000, with a minuscule Muslim population and the lone claim to fame of being the hometown of Cheap Trick."

Later, Lawson opines, "Finding a meaningful target to blow up in Rockford isn't easy. A hardscrabble town in the middle of America, the place is not much more than an intersection of interstates and railway lines, with little of note that might attract the attention of terrorists."

What are your thoughts on this? Send us an e-mail at [email protected].
So I sent them my thoughts:
In "Rolling Stone takes aim at Rockford", I see the following:
"The Fear Factory," ... suggests the federal government is "manufacturing" terror threats
I hate to break it to you, but you can go without the quotes.

The article describes some of the bogus terror threats that the federal government has been manufacturing! Period.

It is very clear and all the author's assertions are very well-documented elsewhere. But you won't report on that, will you?

Why not? Doesn't the truth matter to the newspapers anymore?

I think you're not only upset that Rolling Stone took a swipe at your thriving metropolis.

I think you're also ticked because they showed up your shitty little paper.

You should have been reporting on this more than a year ago.

I wrote to Mike Wiser -- the "Star" reporter who covered this story extensively at the time -- and pointed out that the evidence of entrapment was enormous.

Indeed, the scent of entrapment was all over this case from the beginning.

But apparently he wasn't interested. And apparently you still aren't.

Are your revenues declining, just like all the other shitty newspapers in this country?

Maybe you should start printing the truth for a change and see whether that makes a difference in your sales.

Because right now the bloggers have your ass beat from here to hell and back, chump.
UPDATE 2:

I've been looking and looking for a good piece on this story and I've finally found one.

William N. Grigg: Federal Provocateurs: The "One Percent Solution"
Draped across the throat of our nation like a lank noose about to be pulled taut is a system of 102 Joint Terrorism Task Forces (JTTFs). These entities, which could properly be called homeland security soviets, combine state and local police with FBI Special Agents, covert operatives from the CIA, personnel from various directorates of the Department of Homeland Security, and investigators from the IRS.
...

FBI Special Agent Lundgren told Rolling Stone that the JTTFs are governed by “the Dick Cheney one percent solution”: If there is just a one percent chance that a terrorist incident can occur, “then we have to treat our response as if there were a 100 percent chance.”


Of course, where no evidence of a plot exists, the Feds stack the odds by employing provocateurs who supply the missing “one percent chance.”
Right on, William!