Operation:
Entrapment - Cleveland bomb "plot" masterminded by FBI
agents
Federal
agents announced on Tuesday that they successfully thwarted plans to
blow up a bridge in Cleveland, Ohio. What was left out of most
reports, however, was that the FBI was instrumental in plotting the
potential attack.
RT,
2
May, 2012
As
is the case with most terrorist attacks revealed by the FBI, from the
very beginning of the alleged crime until this week’s arrests, the
charges introduced by federal agents were orchestrated by undercover
agent provocateurs.
Five
men were arrested in the Cleveland area on Monday for charges of
conspiracy and the use of explosive materials. According to the
criminal complaint released this week by the US District Court for
the Northern District of Ohio, prosecutors link Brandon Baxter, 20;
Anthony Hayne, 35; and Douglas Wright, 26, to an anti-government plot
that involved bringing a large bridge in the region crashing down
with the aid of at least two accomplices.
"The
individuals charged in this plot were intent on using violence to
express their ideological views,” explains Special Agent Stephen D.
Anthony of the Cleveland Division of the FBI this week.
Taking
a closer look at the federal complaint against the five men reveals
that although the suspects are believed to have expressed
anti-government sentiments and disdain for major financial
corporations, the impetus in the would-be bombing was the urging of
undercover agents that had infiltrated a group of friends and
encouraged them to consider acts of terrorism. Although the incident
is still developing, federal authorities have submitted statements
and recordings stemming from conversations their contacts had with
the alleged terrorists, and unsurprisingly the mainstream media is
largely ignoring one key problem with the federal probe: the FBI
provoked members of an Occupy Wall Street off-shoot to embrace
terrorist-like crimes despite voicing from the start that they were
opposed to such.
The
criminal complaint considers the entire operation to have started
from an Occupy Wall Street style protest in Cleveland on October 21,
2011. There the FBI dispatched an unnamed confidential human source —
referred to as CHS in the criminal complaint — who had been
recruited by the agency to work undercover earlier in the year. The
FBI describes the CHS as a felon that had been convicted of at least
six charges dating back to the 1990s, including cocaine possession
and robbery, yet entrusted the source to attend the OWS meeting in
order to investigate reports “of potential criminal activity and
threats involving anarchists who would be attending” the protest.
Once there, the CHS singled out participants who “acted differently
than the other people in attendance,” including the aforementioned
accused, Douglas Wright. The CHS then forged a relationship with
Wright that lasted until this week.
Although
it seems straight out of a spy novel, it is commonplace within
domestic intelligence agencies. An exposé put together last year by
Mother Jones and the Investigative Reporting Program at the
University of California-Berkley reveals that the FBI currently has
as many as 15,000 undercover agents working within their ranks, with
some making as much as $100,000 per assignment from Uncle Sam.
What’s
more is that the FBI regularly dabbles in entrapment in order to
encourage and create crime. The same study shows that of around 500
prosecutions in recent years relating to terrorism charges, the FBI
used informants for about half of them. Of 158 of prosecutions that
ended in convictions, around one-third acted on plots perpetrated by
federal agent provocateurs.
According
to the criminal complaint, Wright and fellow self-described
anarchists had been considering options “in order to send a message
to corporations and the United States government,” that had at that
point consisted of nothing more than knocking the signs off of banks
in downtown Cleveland while concurrently detonating smoke grenades to
distract law enforcement. Wright is also said to have suggested the
group use items such as stink bombs or paint guns, objects available
to children, in order to make a statement. When Wright told the CHS
that C4 explosives may be out of the question due to the cost, the
undercover agent asked how much money it would take.
“I’m
not sure, I haven’t really read too much into it,” said Wright in
reference to instructions he found in a digital copy of the
Anarchists Cookbook.
“Well,
you gotta get with me,” pleaded the CHS. “If we gonna be trying
to do something in a month you need to get with me as soon as
possible on how much money we gonna need.”
That
conversation is reported by the FBI to have occurred on March 22. In
another encounter on March 28, both Wright and his cohort Brandon
Baxter said that they did not want people to think that they are
terrorists. On that same day, along with the undercover informant,
the group drove over Valley View Bridge and the conversation turned
to bringing a similar structure to the ground.
“I
could show you,” said the informant, who then urged the group to
exit the highway and investigate the bridge.
The
CHS then asked if they would be interested in purchasing blocks of C4
explosives, suggested to them that they need two, and then offered to
put them in touch with another FBI agent, this time a 15-year veteran
with a decade off the radar.
On
a March 28 meeting, Wright refused an offer to purchase “heavy
stuff” from the agent. Later in the week, the officer asked them to
consider purchasing a larger quantity of C4 at a discounted rate.
Days later, the CHS insisted that Wright and Baxter act quick because
they were “on the hook” for the explosives.
In
the weeks leading up to the alleged attack, the FBI says that Baxter
at one point said that the group had never agreed to blow up a bridge
and that he personally feared that, if caught committing a
large-scale crime, the anarchists would be sent to the military
prison at Guantanamo Bay. The CHS attempted to ease those concerns by
offering the group decoy license plates and provided them with ways
to establish an alibi should they follow through.
On
Tuesday this week, law enforcement announced that five men had been
arrested in conjunction with the terrorist plot and now both Baxter
and Wright face hefty sentences if convicted. For engaging in a
conspiracy to commit offense they can each suffer up to five years in
prison and a fine of a quarter of a million dollars; for the use of
explosive materials, they could spend another decade behind bars.
And
for engaging in hostilities against the United States while working
for a terrorist organization? Well, it’s a long-shot, but if the
government really wants to invoke the National Defense Authorization
Act, or NDAA, then Wright and Baxter could end up at Gitmo until the
end of time.
"The
problem with the cases we're talking about is that defendants would
not have done anything if not kicked in the ass by government
agents," attorney Martin Stolar tells Mother Jones. Although
Stolar is not working with this case currently, the lawyer previously
represented the suspect the linked to a New York City bombing plot
that was set-up by FBI agents. "They're creating crimes to solve
crimes so they can claim a victory in the war on terror." For
their part, the FBI says this method is a plan for "preemption,"
"prevention" and "disruption."
There
is a happy ending for someone, at least: The convicted robber and
hard-drug user turned FBI informant will probably just be sent to
infiltrate more OWS protests, though.
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