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After all, Mohamud also made it clear he wanted to carry out an attack and rejected every opportunity to change his mind, officials said. "He was told that children -- children -- were potentially going to be harmed," Attorney General Eric Holder said Monday, rejecting the notion that FBI agents entrapped Mohamud. In Oregon, the FBI went so far as to load a van full of phony explosives and let Mohamud try to activate them during the Christmas tree lighting celebration, according to court documents. That tactic, along with the repeated offers to let Mohamud walk away, reflect how far the FBI's role-playing has come since an early, high-profile sting operation in Miami nearly fell apart. When federal authorities unveiled that case in 2006, they said seven men from Miami's impoverished Liberty City neighborhood had planned to destroy the Sears Tower in Chicago. But the plot never got past the discussion stage and the group never had the means to carry out the attack. The case suffered two mistrials and two men were acquitted before prosecutors finally won the case and five men were sent to prison last year. Today, authorities are more likely to carry their ruses further, give suspects more opportunities to clearly state their intentions for FBI microphones and even let them light a fuse to a fake bomb. "Particularly in light of cases like Liberty City, everybody at Justice and the FBI is predisposed to taking it as far as they can," said Patrick Rowan, the Justice Department's former top counterterrorism official. Jeffrey H. Sloman, a former federal prosecutor in Miami who supervised the Liberty City case, said people caught up in sting cases tend to be people who have the desire to kill but are still looking for ways to pull it off. He acknowledged that leaves prosecutors open to claims that such cases are just boasts and bluster. "It's ripe for criticism, second-guessing and Monday-morning quarterbacking, but when you're talking about people who express a desire to murder and maim large numbers of people," he said, "you have to explore that."
[Associated
Press;
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