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A terrorist targets liberals

Sunday, April 25, 2004  
Regular readers know I've already discussed ad nauseam the Bush
administration's failure to take domestic terrorism seriously (and will
have more tomorrow, I hope, on my current series discussing the broader
ramifications and consequences of that). Some of you may recall that I've
also repeatedly voiced concern that right-wing extremists may be planning
violence against liberals this summer and fall and how it might affect
the coming election.

Both of those concerns, it seems, have coalesced in the arrest last week
of an Illinois man named Michael J. Breit for plotting the deaths of
government officials:

Police came upon Breit after an anonymous caller reported a gunshot going
off in his apartment Sunday night.

When officers arrived, Breit told them, "I screwed up."

He explained he accidentally shot off his AK-47 semi-automatic assault
rifle in his home, blowing a hole through his door frame. 

Breit agreed to a search of his house and car, according to the
complaint. 

The search turned up several hundred rounds of ammunition, components for
pipe bombs, shotguns, more than 700 rounds of AK-47 ammunition, a cannon
fuse and a recipe for dynamite.

The search also turned up a list of federal officials, political and
public figures with the word "marked," next to the names. Breit told
agents it meant "marked to die," because the people were liberal, opposed
to gun rights or opposed to the current government. 

Police also found a note that reads: "I will die for my cause, for it is
just. I won't put my hands up and surrender -- I will not rest till I
purge these United States from the treasonist (sic) parasites."

What the Sun-Times story neglects to tell readers is that it appears that
nearly the entirety of his targets were Democrats and liberals. That
information comes from a news release from the Brady Campaign:

Federal agents say they recovered seven guns, more than 1,300 rounds of
ammunition, pipe bomb making components and other explosives, a list of
government officials and political and public figures with the word
"marked" written next to them, and a written plan for 15 heavily armed
men to kill 1,500 people at a Democratic presidential meeting. 

Breit's library included The Turner Diaries, the anti-government cult
novel that inspired Timothy McVeigh, and Guns, Freedom and Terrorism, the
book authored by National Rifle Association CEO Wayne LaPierre,
investigators said.

The latter text may not necessarily be relevant, though the title,
obviously, points up the extreme irony of the situation.

But what remains especially disturbing about this case is that, once
again, an obvious case of domestic terrorism has received so little
attention. 

Information about this case is nowhere to be found at the Web sites of
either the FBI or the Justice Department -- though of course, both carry
voluminous reports discussing threats from international terrorists. And
of course, the FBI has a full phalanx of reportage on various aspects of
"eco-terrorism," which is currently the agency's prime domestic-terrorism
focus.

Even the Chicago Tribune carried only a brief version of the story --
even though last week, the same paper carried an in-depth report on
domestic terrorism and the fact that these threats are ignored by media
and played down by federal law enforcement:

With the nation focused on terrorist threats from abroad in the wake of
the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, experts wonder if the Krar case, which FBI
agents discovered only by accident, could be a harbinger of homegrown
attacks to come.

"All of this homeland security, all of the orientation of the
government's war on terror is about protecting our borders," said Ken
Toole, director of the Montana Human Rights Network, which monitors
right-wing groups. "We're moving back into this period where radical
right-wing activism is being dismissed as goofy and loopy, whereas the Al
Qaeda threat is around every corner. But the right-wingers are much
closer to home. And they are still there."

Mark Pitcavage, director of fact-finding for the Anti-Defamation League,
noted that criminal acts by right-wing extremists "remain at a very high
level," including the slayings of three law enforcement officers last
year.

Also unanswered in the Breit case is the lingering question that almost
certainly would be raised were we talking about the arrest of a Muslim
man: Is there any evidence that his plans to employ 15 other conspirators
to gun down Democrats proceeded beyond the mere fantasy stage? As with
the Texas cyanide bomb case, there seems to be relatively little concern
about the possibility of active and uncaught co-conspirators.

As I say, I'll have more on all this soon.

[Thanks to reader Ann Salisbury for the heads-up, and to Jonas M. Luster
for the first post I've seen on this case.] 

-----
I Pledge Impertinence to the Flag-Waving of the Unindicted
Co-Conspirators of America
and to the Republicans for which I can't stand
one Abomination, Underhanded Fraud
Indefensible
with Liberty and Justice Forget it.

 -Life in Hell (Matt Groening)

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