Islamic State-linked cases in U.S. number
110 since 2013: Justice Department
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[September 13, 2016]
By Julia Edwards
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Assistant
Attorney General John Carlin said on Monday that more than 110 people
have been publicly charged in federal court since late 2013 on counts
related to the Islamic State militant group that has overrun much of
Syria and Iraq.
Carlin said the U.S. Justice Department needs the American public to be
more proactive about alerting federal authorities when they witness
someone showing support for foreign terrorist organizations, such as
Islamic State, in remarks to reporters at the U.S. Justice Department.
In more than 80 percent of the Islamic State cases that have been
prosecuted since 2013, someone in the community of the accused person
believed they had witnessed the activity for which the person was
ultimately charged, according to Carlin. In more than half of those
cases, the witnesses did not report anything to law enforcement
authorities until after the charges were made.
Many of the Islamic State supporters prosecuted since 2013 have been
charged under "material support" statutes that prohibit supporting
designated foreign terrorist organizations. No groups based on domestic
ideology, such as white supremacists have that designation.
Carlin said he is open to considering whether affiliation with a
domestic extremist group could "warrant a special penalty" for people
already charged with committing a violent crime.
Simply supporting a domestic group where some of the members have
committed crimes, should not be prosecuted, Carlin said, because it
"runs into our Constitution and our values."
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An Islamic State flag is seen in this picture illustration taken
February 18, 2016. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
"You're getting close to making illegal ideas," Carlin said.
The Department of Justice charged 60 people last year with
supporting or committing crimes because of their sympathies to
Islamic State, the largest annual figure on record. The number
arrested this year has been less than last year's figure.
(Reporting by Julia Edwards; Writing by David Alexander and Julia
Harte; Editing by Eric Walsh, Bernard Orr)
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