Congressional Democrats seek more action
on U.S. domestic extremists
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[October 30, 2018]
By Mark Hosenball and Julia Harte
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Congressional
Democrats on Monday called on U.S. law enforcement authorities to do
more to track and prosecute far-right extremists after a mass shooting
at a Pittsburgh synagogue and the mailing of bombs to critics of
President Donald Trump.
The government must do more to police "hate crimes and domestic
terrorism" and prevent gun violence and the spread of white supremacist
ideology, said New York Representative Jerrold Nadler and other House of
Representatives Democrats in a letter to House Judiciary Committee
Chairman Bob Goodlatte.
Calling for an emergency hearing before the committee, Nadler and the
other lawmakers wrote that the panel "is charged with confronting the
causes of racial and religious violence, assessing the adequacy of
federal hate crimes statutes, and protecting the civil liberties of all
Americans." But they did not propose specific new legislation.
"It also falls to our committee to address gun violence in all its forms
... It is our responsibility to respond to this madness, and to do so
without delay."
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The FBI said as recently as May that it was pursuing 1,000
investigations into "domestic terrorists." But some critics have said
that federal law enforcement agencies have not done enough.
In the letter, the House Democrats praised the police responses to the
incidents, but added that congress should take action to make law
enforcement's work easier.
The absence of a U.S. law specifically outlawing domestic terrorism has
made it harder for investigators to track and analyze such crimes, said
Josh Zive, outside counsel for the FBI Agents Association. The group,
comprised of current and former agents, has been lobbying Congress for
two years for such a law.
Current and former government officials said federal agents focus far
more on Islamic militants than on right-wing domestic extremists. They
said that area is off-limits to the National Counterterrorism Center (NCTC)
and the CIA, unless a link to international terrorist groups can be
demonstrated.
In June 2017, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) cut funding for
combating U.S.-based extremism and redirected more resources in a $10
million government grant program toward law enforcement efforts focused
on fighting Islamic extremism.
A DHS official said its authority to monitor political activities is
limited.
Former FBI agent Michael German said federal law authorizes aggressive
action against right-wing extremists. "The Justice Department has plenty
of authority to treat these crimes as acts of terrorism. It simply
chooses not to," said German, now with the Brennan Center for Justice at
New York University Law School.
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U.S. House Democrat Jerrold Nadler (D-NY) and Judy Chu (D-CA) hold a
news conference to ask the Justice Department to investigate the
Trump Foundation's donations to Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi
in Washington, U.S., September 14, 2016. REUTERS/Gary Cameron/File
Photo
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In Britain by contrast, an authoritative source said the internal
security agency MI5 spent the overwhelming proportion of its
resources chasing Islamic militants, but now has begun expanding
efforts to monitor right-wing extremists.
The U.S. DHS official said the agency collects and reports on
domestic extremist movements, but is "prohibited from engaging in
intelligence activities for the sole purpose of monitoring
activities protected by the First Amendment or the lawful exercise
of other rights secured by the Constitution or the laws of the
United States."
In 2009, a report by a team of DHS officials warned of a "resurgence
in radicalization and recruitment" on the far right. It said
extremist groups were recruiting members using economic hardship,
the election of Barack Obama, the first U.S. African-American
president, gun control efforts and illegal immigration.
The report was leaked to the media and quickly condemned by
conservative activists and politicians. The DHS unit that produced
the report later was disbanded, a former senior unit member said,
and attempts to re-start some of its activities have gotten little
traction.
Mary McCord, who led the Justice Department’s national security
division from 2016 until May 2017, said there was a greater need for
condemnation of domestic extremism by the “highest levels of
government."
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She said federal agents can investigate domestic extremists who
threaten violence. But without those threats, domestic groups are
seldom investigated as aggressively as foreign groups.
“It’s not a legal question so much as a policy question. There’s no
law or constitutional provision that prohibits a lot of the
investigative work that could take place,” McCord said.
(Reporting by Mark Hosenball and Julia Harte; Editing by Kevin
Drawbaugh and David Gregorio)
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