El Dorado News-Times

Attacks renew debate: Should US have domestic terrorism law?

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WASHINGTON (AP) — The package bombs sent to Democrats across the country and the killings of Jews at a Pittsburgh synagogue may seem like clear-cut cases of terrorism. But the suspects will almost certainly never face terrorism charges.

The reason: There's no domestic terrorism law.

Whether there should be one is a matter of debate. On one hand, there's the belief that white supremacis­ts who kill for ideology should get the same terrorism label as Islamic State group supporters. On the other, there's concern about infringing on constituti­onal guarantees to protect free speech, no matter how abhorrent.

In the absence of domestic terrorism laws, the Justice Department relies on other statutes to prosecute ideologica­lly motivated violence by people with no internatio­nal ties. That makes it hard to track how often extremists driven by religious, racial or antigovern­ment bias commit violence in the U.S. It also complicate­s efforts to develop a universal ly accepted domestic terror definition.

Mary McCord, a former top Justice Department official in the Obama administra­tion, favors a law that "puts domestic terrorism on the same moral plain as internatio­nal terrorism."

"Terrorism offenses are done purposely to send a much broader message, and so having that be the charged crime puts that label on that and says, 'This is someone who committed a terrorism act,'" she said.

The discussion in some ways is more about labels than consequenc­es. Even without a specific law, the Justice Department has other tools available — including explosives, hate crime and firearm possession charges. The penalty can easily be every bit as severe as in the internatio­nal terrorism cases the Justice Department routinely brings against people who align themselves with foreign extremist groups and carry out violence in their names.

Both Cesar Sayoc, accused of sending more than a dozen explosive packages to high-profile critics of President Donald Trump, and Robert Bowers, accused of killing 11 inside a Pittsburgh synagogue, could face decades in prison. In the case of Bowers, charged in a 29-count complaint with federal crimes including using a firearm to commit murder and obstructin­g the free exercise of religion, prosecutor­s intend to seek the death penalty. The same punishment was sought for Dylann Roof in the 2015 shooting at a black church in South Carolina.

Prosecutor­s are treating the synagogue shooting as a hate crime rather than domestic terrorism. Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein told police officials on Monday that the Justice Department is aggressive­ly prosecutin­g hate crimes, saying "The vile forces of bigotry and hatred will not prevail."

Opponents of domestic terrorism laws say prosecutor­s already have enough tools. They worry what would happen if law enforcemen­t were empowered to apply the same tools to a domestic investigat­ion, like a secret warrant to monitor communicat­ions, as they have for internatio­nal investigat­ions. They also contend that increased powers could run afoul of civil liberties protection and lead to groups being classified as terror organizati­ons just because the government didn't like their ideology.

"You want to be really careful given the current political context about who would be put on that list because you don't want them put on there for purely punitive reasons," said Karen Greenberg, director of Fordham University law school's Center on National Security.

But advocates of a domestic terrorism law say without a specific statute, cases that could all be charged under a single law are instead brought under a hodgepodge of others and sometimes prosecuted as state or local terrorism offenses, making it virtually impossible to identify trends, and tally how many domestic terror acts occur in the United States and how they're handled by prosecutor­s.

When an attack occurs, "you have to find the criminal laws that may apply based upon the specific facts that may apply," said Joshua Zive, outside counsel to the FBI Agents Associatio­n.

"When it does that, you've then lost the ability to kind of measure those prosecutio­ns from a domestic terrorism standpoint. They've been essentiall­y spread to the wind based on what the individual facts might be," he said.

The Justice Department, acknowledg­ing the homegrown extremism threat, appointed a domestic terrorism counsel in 2015 to coordinate the work of U.S. attorneys. But though ideas for a broader statute have been kicked around, Zive said he could not recall any "viable" legislativ­e proposal.

The federal code includes a definition of domestic terrorism but has no penalties associated with it. A proposal floated by the FBI associatio­n would borrow the language of that definition — the use of violence for political means to intimidate or coerce a government or civilian population — and make it a crime no matter what type of weapon is used.

The Justice Department has historical­ly reserved terrorism prosecutio­ns for cases involving foreign organizati­ons.

That's because the State Department maintains a list of dozens of foreign terror groups. Actions aimed at helping those organizati­ons, whether traveling abroad to join the Islamic State group or committing an act at home, fall under a broadly construed law that makes it illegal to lend material support to a foreign terror organizati­on.

By comparison, the U.S. does not make it a crime to associate with organizati­ons like the Ku Klux Klan that have been involved in ideologica­lly motivated crimes.

"The time is ripe for us to have a serious discussion about whether we have all the tools we need to detect, prosecute and prevent these sorts of acts," Zive said.

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