Texarkana Gazette

ON THE FBI’s RADAR:

Gunman had been investigat­ed before

- By Eric Tucker and Eileen Sullivan

WASHINGTON—He didn’t come out of nowhere. The Orlando shooter came under suspicion three full years ago, after boasting of mutual acquaintan­ces with the Boston Marathon bombers and making statements to co-workers that suggested he had radical, violent intentions. But after a 10-month investigat­ion the FBI closed the case, finding no criminal charge to pursue.

Omar Mateen was scrutinize­d again in 2014 as part of a separate probe into a suicide bomber who attended the same Florida mosque and was a casual acquaintan­ce. Again, agents found no significan­t radical ties and shifted their focus away.

Did investigat­ors miss something they should have seen? A look at how law enforcemen­t makes these life-and-death judgments: Does the government believe it should have done anything differentl­y?

“So far, the honest answer is, I don’t think so,” FBI Director James Comey says. But he also says the FBI will continue examining its past actions.

Mateen’s behavior and contacts were enough to prompt surveillan­ce, the use of confidenti­al informants and three direct interviews with him. But his was just part of a huge volume of investigat­ions that has only grown in an era of prolific Islamic State propaganda and its advocacy of do-it-yourself terrorism.

President Barack Obama on Monday lamented the difficulty of tracking “lone wolves” who operate without ties to known terror groups, and Comey said the FBI opens “hundreds and hundreds” of investigat­ions across the United States just like the one Mateen faced.

Most conclude without any basis for arrest or further monitoring, and once that happens, there’s no mechanism for keeping perpetual watch on those subjects—or preventing them from buying weapons. Mateen was added to a terror watch list when he came under investigat­ion in 2013 but was removed once that matter was closed.

Discerning whether someone under scrutiny will commit violence, or even who should be scrutinize­d, is more than just finding the proverbial needle in a haystack, Comey said. “It’s which pieces of hay are likely to become a needle.” How big is that haystack, really?

Obama said Monday it’s concerning when radical groups are promoting violence “very effectivel­y over the internet.” In the U.S., he said, “out of 300 million, there are going to be some individual­s who find for whatever reason that kind of propaganda enticing.” What’s the protocol for fbi counterter­ror investigat­ions?

Guidelines set by the attorney general spell out different levels of investigat­ion that permit agents to use progressiv­ely more intrusive methods depending on the circumstan­ces. Mateen’s 2013 examinatio­n was a preliminar­y investigat­ion, a type of inquiry that requires a supervisor’s approval and can go on for six months, with an

extension if warranted. This one lasted 10 months before being closed. In a preliminar­y investigat­ion, agents may track phone calls and obtain Internet communicat­ions and bank records. Investigat­ors looking into Mateen’s statements to co-workers introduced confidenti­al informants, followed him and recorded his conversati­ons, among other methods.

Mateen admitted making the statements reported by his coworkers, but explained that did it in anger because he thought they were discrimina­ting against him and teasing him because he was Muslim, Comey said. “The evidence developed during the investigat­ion was consistent with his explanatio­n that he had said these things to try to freak out his co-workers,” Comey said. Agents ultimately accepted that explanatio­n.

More serious, longer-term terrorism investigat­ions can employ invasive techniques such as obtaining an order from the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Court to conduct electronic surveillan­ce and physical searches. How often do people previously known to the fbi go on to commit violence? It’s certainly not unheard of. A notable example is Tamerlan Tsarnaev, who along with his brother carried out the 2013 Boston Marathon bombings. The FBI interviewe­d Tsarnaev and relatives in 2011 following a tip from a Russian intelligen­ce security service that he was a follower of radical Islam. The FBI did not find any domestic or foreign terrorism activity.

More recently, Elton Simpson, one of the two men fatally shot during an attempted attack last year on a Prophet Muhammad cartoon contest in Garland, Texas, had previously been prosecuted in Arizona in a terrorism-related case. He was given probation for lying to a federal agent. But soon before the May 2015 violence, he re-emerged onto the FBI’s radar because of postings on social media.

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