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March 23, 2016
"Why Dylann Roof is a Terrorist Under Federal Law, and Why it Matters"
The title of this post is the title of this notable new article authored by Jesse Norris now available via SSRN. Here is the abstract:
After white supremacist Dylann Roof killed nine African-Americans at a Charleston, South Carolina church, authorities declined to refer to the attack as terrorism. Many objected to the government’s apparent double standards in its treatment of Muslim versus non-Muslim extremists and called on the government to treat the massacre as terrorism. Yet the government has neither charged him with a terrorist offense nor labelled the attack as terrorism.
This Article argues that although the government was unable to charge him with terrorist crimes because of the lack of applicable statutes, the Charleston Massacre still qualifies as terrorism under federal law. Roof’s attack clearly falls under the government’s prevailing definition of domestic terrorism. It also qualifies for a terrorism sentencing enhancement, or at least an upward departure from the sentencing guidelines, as well as for the terrorism aggravating factor considered by juries in deciding whether to impose the death penalty.
Labelling Roof’s attack as terrorism could have several important implications, not only in terms of sentencing, but also in terms of government accountability, the prudent allocation of counterterrorism resources, balanced media coverage, and public cooperation in preventing terrorism. For these reasons, the Article contends that the government should treat the Charleston Massacre, and similar ideologically-motivated killings, as terrorism.
The Article also makes two policy suggestions meant to facilitate a more consistent use of the term terrorism. First, the Article proposes a new federal terrorism statute mirroring hate crime statutes, which would enable every terrorist to be charged with a terrorist offense. Second, simplifying the definition of terrorism to encompass any murder or attempted murder meant to advance an ideology would avoid the obfuscation invited by current definitions. However, even without such changes, the government still has the authority and responsibility to treat attacks such as Roof’s as terrorism for nearly all purposes.
A few prior related posts:
- Should it be the state or feds (or both!?!) that capitally prosecute racist mass murderer Dylann Storm Roof?
- Thanks to death penalty, one of worst racist mass murderers gets one of best defense lawyers
- South Carolina prosecutors begin pursuit of death penalty again Charleston church mass murderer
- Attorney for Dylann Roof, Charleston church mass murderer, suggests plea to avoid death sentence
- Just why is DOJ still uncertain about seeking death penalty against Charleston mass murderer Dylann Roof?
March 23, 2016 at 09:22 AM | Permalink
Comments
It begs the question that we need federal statutes for "terrorism" in the first place. There is a straight forward murder case to be prosecuted against Dylann Roof. South Carolina, law, judges and juries can handle it very well. No additional federal statutes are needed in this case or any other act of "terrorism" that has occurred on American soil. All fifty states have criminal statutes dealing with homicide in all its various forms.
Posted by: Jardinero1 | Mar 23, 2016 12:52:51 PM
"Labelling Roof’s attack as terrorism could have several important implications, not only in terms of sentencing, but also in terms of government accountability, the prudent allocation of counterterrorism resources, balanced media coverage, and public cooperation in preventing terrorism."
Wow, If the author utilized facts and reason, he would conclude that "terrorism" is so extremely rare, so extremely insignificant as a threat to life and limb, that no resources, media, or public cooperation is required, at all.
Posted by: Jardinero1 | Mar 23, 2016 12:57:40 PM
We do not need any more federal terrorism or hate crime laws. This is a murder case - period. This is where "Big Government" comes from - more prosecutorial discretions for new potential make believe crimes, whether it is a terrorist murder or selling jihadi cookies.
The author appears to be another wet-behind-the-ears feelz person that this world needs less of. I am trying to guess their age, upbringing and education.
Posted by: albeed | Mar 23, 2016 5:05:37 PM
Terrorism that involves some national matter such as interstate conduct of some significant degree logically could be a federal concern. The article cites some laws in place basically to deal with racist behavior the states did not adequately handle. Not applicable here given the state is seriously prosecuting the matter.
I don't see this being a good case for a federal prosecution but wouldn't be surprised the open-ended language of the statutes in place arguably could be applied somehow. Know justices repeatedly have opposed relying on prosecutorial discretion, but at some point that is what we have to rely upon.
Posted by: Joe | Mar 23, 2016 10:13:14 PM
The defendant is perhaps a wacko. Is he a member of a terrorist group? No? It is similar to conspiracy. You can be a single person who kills others in order to terrify. But if you are not part of ISIS or some group then the "group on" method of prosecution is not needed. He killed. Penalty should be death. What more can you do? Punish his mom and dad? Second Grade teacher? Whose fault is it?
Posted by: Liberty1st | Mar 24, 2016 12:23:13 AM