Washington (CNN) Domestic terror groups pose a greater
threat to America than ISIS or al Qaeda, a Justice Department official said Wednesday.
To help combat them, the department has
created a new counsel that will coordinate the investigation and prosecution of
anti-government and hate groups.
Assistant Attorney General John Carlin,
who oversees national security at the Justice Department, announced the new
position -- the Domestic Terrorism Counsel -- following a number of violent
attacks or plots against the U.S. that he said were motivated by
"anti-government views, racism, bigotry and anarchy, and other despicable
beliefs."
More Americans have died at the hands of
domestic terror than the international terror groups that federal law
enforcement focuses so much attention on, Carlin said, pointing to such
high-profile attacks as the racially motivated Charleston church shooting in June or the murder of two Las Vegas
police officers by anti-government extremists last year.
"Looking back over the past few
years, it is clear that domestic terrorists and homegrown violent extremists
remain a real and present danger to the United States," he said. "We
recognize that, over the past few years, more people have died in this country
in attacks by domestic extremists than in attacks associated with international
terrorist groups."
While many similarities exist between
domestic and international terror groups, such as recruitment and reach on social media, one difference lies in the way the
Justice Department is able to prosecute them.
Groups such as ISIS and al Qaeda, who
are inspired by religious extremism, are designated by our federal government
as terror organizations, which makes it illegal to support or assist them. But
no such statute exist to prosecute white supremacists, the Ku Klux Klan or
anti-government extremists, forcing federal law enforcement to find more concrete
charges to lock them up.
"What causes some confusion is that
'domestic terrorism' is not an offense or a charge," Carlin said.
Therefore, domestic terror groups or actors must be prosecuted with firearms or
explosives offenses, hate crimes or murder.
It is the hope of the Justice Department
that the counsel will not only help to coordinate the prosecution of domestic
terrorists, but also "to identify trends to help shape our strategy, and
to analyze legal gaps or enhancements required to ensure we can combat these
threats," Carlin said.
The Justice Department identified white
supremacists as the most violent of the domestic terror groups and Carlin
raised concerns that the narrow focus the U.S. has on Islamic extremist
terrorism can take the attention away from threats which warrant more
resources.
"I do worry sometimes that the
coverage hypes the threat in such a way that it induces the fear that the
terrorist is attempting to accomplish," Carlin said. "Yet, while we
continue to address this evolving international threat of violent extremists,
we have not lost sight of the domestic terrorism threat posed by other violent
extremists."
http://www.cnn.com/2015/10/14/politics/justice-department-domestic-terror-council/index.html?AID=7236
Comments
Here comes another nudge. Attaching “anti-government” to the list of
suspects casts too wide a net to catch the crazies who shoot up schools and
other public places. Adding
anti-government includes 66% of all US voters.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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