New York Police Commissioner Ray Kelly
holds pieces of a pipe bomb confiscated from alleged 'lone wolf'
terrorist Jose Pimentel. Photograph: Mario Tama/Getty Images
The news stories, which quickly surface, long enough to cause
scary headlines, then vanish before people can learn how often the cases
are thrown out. These are stories about "bumbling fantasists," hapless
druggies, the aimless, even the virtually homeless and mentally ill, and
other marginal characters with not the strongest grip on reality, who
have been lured into discourses about violence against America only
after assiduous courting, and in some cases outright payment, by
undercover FBI or police informants.
They have become a litany in recent years. The terrifying 2003-2004 national news stories that a Detroit "sleeper cell" had sent Muslim terrorists to blow up Disneyland and other landmarks, including in Las Vegas, was later thrown out of court, with accusations of prosecutorial misconduct, to almost no press attention -- the same cycle of hype and failed convictions that have characterized many such stories. The evidence had included a home video taken in Disneyland,
"doodles," and a guy with a credit card fraud problem, who had been
pressured to diminish his own sentence by accusing his buddies.
But the tales of entrapment and terror hype continue apace -- 10 years after 9/11. Judith Miller, in Newsmax, writes that one recent case was so lame that even the FBI distanced itself from NYPD:
"Despite FBI Doubts, NYPD Convinced Pipe Bomb Case Posed Real Danger",
noted the headline on her 28 November 2011 article. A 27-year-old
Dominican immigrant, Jose Pimentel, aka Muhamad Yusuf, had been
monitored by NYPD for two years. Last fall, Manhattan District Attorney
Cyrus Vance Jr charged Pimentel with constructing pipe bombs to attack
"police cars, post offices, veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan, and other
targets."
An email in the case, which purports to show that
Pimentel was writing about violent jihad to the al-Qaida-supporting
"glossy magazine" Inspire, was described to Judith Miller by anonymous
"law enforcement officials." Given Miller's journalistic history,
this sentence alone should raise eyebrows. But the alleged email is,
she writes, "part of a vast investigative file containing over 400 hours
of surveillance
audio and video tapes, interviews, and other material amassed by the
NYPD." New York Police Commissioner Ray Kelly, in a flashy press
conference, called the young man a "lone wolf" terrorist -- a recent DHS
soundbite. But the case was so shaky that the Federal Bureau of
Investigation, as well as federal prosecutors, did not want to join the
case: "Too many holes in the case," other anonymous officials told
Miller.
Pimentel was one of what has become an army of FBI- or
NYPD-entrapped losers. He had no money, no job, and at key points lived
with his mom. The New York Times noted that he may have been
psychologically "unstable," and that he had made threats after smoking
pot. Officials say that in May 2010, he repeated loudly in Arabic that
"America is my enemy." This scary guy was a circuit city clerk in
Schenectady, New York.
Additional evidence that Miller's anonymous
sources give for his being a terrorist? In 2010, he had $100. One
witness told police "that he had flashed a $100 bill when he made some
purchases." Another? "Pimentel scraped the heads of some 750 matches,
officials say." The scenario that entrapped Pimentel involved a
surround-sound of informants trying to entrap him in cyberspace and to
lure him to incriminate himself in taped phone conversations. But the
FBI dropped its involvement after they judged that the informant had
been too active in helping: urging or arranging for Pimentel to start
drilling into pipe pieces -- the evidence that he intended to set off a
bomb.
Many other, much-ballyhooed cases of "homegrown terrorism"
show this creaky, effortful, farcical quality of people who, left to
their own devices by the FBI or NYPD, would have remained harmlessly
playing video games in their childhood bedrooms, smoking their doobies,
or babbling gently to themselves, on their anti-psychotic meds, about
geopolitical forces.
The "Newburgh Four" is another such case,
as Russia Today reported: four African-American Muslims were found
guilty recently of a plot to place bombs in two Bronx synagogues and to
shoot down military aircraft in Newburgh. Another flashy press
conference in May 2009 showcased these four men as "the faces of
homegrown terrorism." The FBI had claimed that the men had planned to
commit their acts of terrorism on the day that they were arrested.
Joseph Demarest from the FBI called it "a terrifying plot."
The
men were low-income former convicts who could not read or write with
literacy. They could not drive and had no passports. Shahid Hussain, a
Pakistani immigrant who was an FBI employee, got them to say they were
going to commit these crimes -- paying them $100,000. Hussain presented
the men with a fake stinger missile, and Hussain offered these
poverty-stricken men cars and money in exchange for their promise to
carry out the manufactured plot.
The men's relatives accused the
FBI of entrapment. "I do not think this is entrapment. I know it is.
This is entrapment," said Alicia McWilliams-McCollum, aunt of
29-year-old David Williams. As with many of these scenarios, one can
easily imagine poor people with criminal records, offered large sums of
money by a fake jihadist, trying to get the money and then trick the
instigator. Also, as any AA or Al-Anon counsellor can tell you, if drugs
or alcohol are in the mix, entrapment is a ridiculous premise, too: an
addict will say anything, and make any ludicrous promise, to get a giant
check. It doesn't mean the addict has any intention of delivering on
the supposed contract. David Williams' aunt says that her nephew is in
prison because of a pretend terror attack created by the FBI:
"They
are creating scenarios; they are manufacturing crimes. That would not
have occurred if you had not planted an unconstructive seed into a
community."
Attorney Steve Dowds, who tracks cases
like the Newburgh Four, argues the US government is systematically
employing preemptive prosecution:
"They are taking
some down and out vulnerable individuals and not only planting the
ideology of jihad on them, giving them all the things they need, all of
the material. They are setting up the plan, giving them all the research
and then grabbing them and claiming these were homegrown terrorists. It
is just a fiction."
Now we have another "underwear bomber"
-- declared by the Pentagon to have been about to launch a major attack
via a US-bound plane, but who appears, reportedly, to have been a CIA-run
double agent. What is the evidence that the "device," which is
supposedly so sophisticated that there is doubt as to whether existing
surveillance technologies in US airports would have caught it, actually
exists? As with so many of these stories, we have no independent
verification -- because reporters from the British Daily Telegraph, to
Reuters, to the Huffington Post
are simply taking dictation from New York Representative Peter King and
from the Pentagon, and scarcely asking for backup evidence of their
elaborate assertions.