The New York Times - 06.08.2019

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A14 0 N THE NEW YORK TIMES NATIONALTUESDAY, AUGUST 6, 2019


El Paso and Dayton Shootings


pledged to give federal law en-
forcement authorities “whatever
they need” to combat domestic
terrorism. The motive for the sec-
ond attack of the weekend, in Day-
ton, Ohio, remains unknown. But
even before the shootings, which
left at least 31 people dead, offi-
cials said that preventing attacks
from white supremacists and na-
tionalists would require adopting
the same type of broad and ag-
gressive approach used to battle
international extremism.
“We need to catch them and in-
carcerate them before they act on
their plans,” Rod Rosenstein, the
former deputy attorney general,
said in an email interview. “We
need to be proactive by identifying
and disrupting potential terrorists
before they strike, and we can ac-
complish that by monitoring ter-
rorist propaganda and communi-
cations.”
Under current federal law, that
is difficult. Federal officials have
broad powers to disrupt foreign
terrorist plots, given to them as
part of the Patriot Act passed after
the 2001 attacks. They can take
preventive action, for example, by
wiretapping or using an under-
cover online persona to talk to peo-
ple anonymously in chat rooms to
search for jihadis.
But domestically, federal offi-
cials have far fewer options. A fed-
eral statute defines domestic ter-
rorism but carries no penalties.
The First Amendment, which pro-
tects freedom of speech, makes
stopping terrorist acts committed
by Americans before they happen
more challenging. No government
agency is responsible for desig-
nating domestic terrorism organi-
zations. And individuals who are
considered domestic terrorists are
charged under laws governing
hate crimes, guns and conspiracy,
not terrorism.
“It’s a big blank spot,” said Mary
McCord, a former top national se-
curity prosecutor who has drafted
a proposed statute to criminalize
domestic terrorism not covered by
existing laws. This would include
criminalizing the stockpiling of
weapons intended to be used in a
domestic terrorist attack.
The issue is urgent. Right-wing
extremists killed more people in
2018 than in any year since 1995,
the year of Timothy McVeigh’s
bomb attack on the Oklahoma City
federal building, according to the
Anti-Defamation League. And the
attack in El Paso and an April
shooting in a synagogue in Poway,
Calif., alone have claimed as many
lives as all extremist homicides “of
any stripe” in 2018, according to
the Center for the Study of Hate
and Extremism at California State
University, San Bernardino.
The F.B.I. field office in Phoenix
recently issued a report that said
conspiracy theories — often with
racial overtones and fueled by dis-

semination online — had become a
growing national security threat.
Mr. Rosenstein said that law en-
forcement needs to model its do-
mestic terrorism response after
the international counterterror-
ism efforts undertaken in the wake
of the 9/11 attacks.
“In the same way that hon-
orable members of mosques re-
port people who express violent
designs, so, too, should people re-
port violent white nationalists to
the police,” he said.
The First Amendment’s protec-
tion of citizens’ rights to engage in
hateful speech makes it difficult to
track down attacks before they
happen.
“From the perspective of the
courts, white supremacy is a hate-
ful but protected form of speech,”
said Jonathan Turley, a constitu-
tional law expert at George Wash-
ington University. “What courts
resist are efforts to classify whole
movements as violent as a result
of the actions of some of its mem-
bers.”
The problem touches every as-
pect of American life — politics,
civil liberties and business — and
involves complicated new ques-
tions around the issue of technol-
ogy. How much will technology
and communications companies,
including the big social media plat-
forms, be willing to share informa-
tion about domestic customers
with law enforcement agencies?
On the internet, white nationalists
can align with other radicals, be-
come inspired and find the re-
sources they need to act alone — a
process that has also helped for-
eign extremists become terrorists.
Perhaps most important, a new
focus on white-supremacist vio-
lence would test whether Ameri-
cans are as accepting of ag-
gressive law enforcement tactics
when the targets aren’t Muslims,
but white Americans.
“If they did the same thing that
they did with the Muslims, they’d
say every white guy is a potential
terrorist,” said Martin R. Stolar, a
New York civil rights lawyer. “You
can’t do that with white people.
The blowback would be out-
rageous.”
The rise in the white suprema-
cist threat has paralleled an in-
creasing racialization and divi-
siveness in the nation’s immigra-
tion debate. Mr. Trump has used
ethnonationalist language that his
opponents argue is arousing politi-
cal extremists. Even in past years,
some political leaders have been
slow to recognize the existence of
domestic terrorism: After the Ok-
lahoma City bombing, Newt Ging-
rich, at the time the speaker of the
House, refused to hold hearings on
white nationalist terrorism.
In the years since, the nature of
white supremacism has changed.
It used to be that white suprema-
cists, for the most part, operated in
groups, often living in the same
area, said Brian H. Levin, director
of the Center for the Study of Hate
and Extremism. The chapters had
some control over the timing and
choice of targets. He cited as ex-
amples Aryan Nations, the Ku
Klux Klan and local Nazi skinhead

groups.
“The top-down hierarchies of
the past have been increasingly
supplanted by a more democra-
tized and a geographically dis-
persed set of erratic do-it-yourself-
ers,” he said. “Now, so-called lone
wolves are turbocharged by a
fragmented and hate-filled dark
web which has become a modern-
day, virtual neo-Nazi bootcamp
available 24-7 anywhere in the
world with an internet connec-
tion.”
Examples of these kinds of ac-
tors are the attackers in the Poway
synagogue shooting, the mass
shooting at a synagogue in Pitts-
burgh last fall and now, according
to the authorities, El Paso.
While these men often act alone,
the F.B.I. says that technology has
allowed American terrorists to
plug into a global community of
terrorists who espouse similarly
hateful ideologies. Domestic ter-
rorists are increasingly citing ter-
rorists overseas in their killings.
In his manifesto, the suspected El
Paso gunman said that he agreed
with the terrorists who attacked
two mosques in Christchurch,
New Zealand. The suspect in New
Zealand said in the manifesto he is
believed to have written that he
had been inspired by Dylann Roof,
who murdered nine people at the
Emanuel African Methodist Epis-
copal Church in Charleston, S.C.
Ali Soufan, a former F.B.I. spe-
cial agent and the author of “Anat-
omy of Terror,” said he had been
struck by how much white su-
premacists resemble the jihadis
he spent so many years fighting.
“There is a striking resem-
blance between jihadists and
white supremacists, and it goes
way beyond just utilizing social
media in order to spread ideology,”
he said.
Both use violence to reshape so-

ciety in their own image. Both use
recruitment videos that empha-
size a lifestyle of “purity,” mili-
tancy and physical fitness. Jihadis
share beheading videos, while
right-wing extremists share the
live stream of the attack in New
Zealand. He said Ukraine was now
a global gathering place for white
supremacists, much as Afghani-
stan was for jihadis in the 1980s.
“This is becoming a global net-
work in so many different ways,
just like we’ve seen with the ji-
hadis before them,” he said.
Federal investigators have also
found white supremacist elements
flourishing in prisons. In March,

federal prosecutors in Alaska an-
nounced that an investigation had
resulted in charges against 18
members and associates of a white
supremacist gang known as the
1488s. In May, a federal grand jury
indicted members of an Aryan
Knights prison gang that had op-
erated in Idaho.
The indictment in the Alaska
case described the 1488s as a gang
with dozens of members operating
in Alaska and elsewhere.
David Neiwert, who has long re-
ported on extremism in the North-
west and has worked with the
Southern Poverty Law Center,
said he sees the threat of the
Northwest’s racist groups return-
ing to levels of the 1980s, when
neo-Nazi elements around the
country had moved into the North-
west in a bid to create a white eth-

nostate. In the 1990s and 2000s,
those groups lost much of their
power and subsided.
Mr. Neiwert said people with ex-
tremist sympathies were now or-
ganizing online and attaching
themselves to groups that aren’t
as explicit about white suprema-
cist notions.
“Local agencies in particular
should be better equipped,” Mr.
Neiwert said. “On the other hand,
the F.B.I. and the Justice Depart-
ment could probably do a better
job of equipping local law enforce-
ment.”
As the international terrorism
threat evolved to include more
lone actors, radicalized online
rather than in terrorist cells
abroad, the F.B.I. sought to enlist
technology companies in its ef-
forts to combat the threat. But
companies have been slow to re-
spond — and have been shielded,
in part, by the First Amendment.
“It’s been a very long few years
of getting platform companies to
understand the role that digital
media plays in spreading hate
speech, harassment and incite-
ment to violence,” said Joan Dono-
van, director of the Technology
and Social Change project at the
Harvard Kennedy School’s Shor-
enstein Center. “Generally, a piece
of content is only reviewed if
someone else has flagged it first.”
Under intense criticism for their
delayed reaction to disinformation
and hateful content after the 2016
presidential election, technology
companies have started to take a
more proactive approach to disin-
formation and hate speech. In
most cases, spokeswomen for
Google and Facebook said the
companies report white suprema-
cist content only when it poses an
imminent threat to life, or when
they are complying with valid le-
gal requests.

In May, Facebook evicted seven
of its most controversial users, in-
cluding Alex Jones, the conspiracy
theorist and founder of Infowars,
and Laura Loomer, a far-right ac-
tivist.
But critics say that is not
enough. “White supremacy, at
least at Facebook, was seen as a
political ideology that one could
hold,” said Jessie Daniels, a sociol-
ogy professor at the City Univer-
sity of New York and the author of
a forthcoming book on white su-
premacy. “It’s only recently that
they’ve said they recognize white
supremacy as an ideology of vio-
lence.”
Ms. Daniels said there was an
important lesson in what hap-
pened to Milo Yiannopoulos, the
right-wing provocateur, after he
was banned from using Twitter
and Facebook.
“Milo has ceded from view since
that happened. I really think that’s
an argument in favor of this strat-
egy,” she said. “He lost a book deal.
He’s bankrupt. It showed ‘deplat-
forming’ is a useful tool and we
need to find more ways to adopt it
in the U.S.”
Ms. Daniels and others say the
companies’ own algorithms for de-
ciding what constitutes far-right
extremist content are insufficient
in tackling the threat. Often they
rely on users, and in many cases
names and content that percolate
in the media, to decide what con-
tent and accounts should be taken
down.
“We’ve reached this position
where these companies have
scaled beyond their capacity for
safety. We don’t know what the
next steps should be,” Ms. Daniels
said. “We’re in a pretty significant
bind now that we have a very large
tech industry we all depend on,
and we don’t feel we can trust
them to keep us safe.”

Battling Domestic Terror


With No Clear Road Map


From Page A

F.B.I. agents at the El Paso shooting site. One expert said the bureau could do better at helping local police agencies identify threats.

IVAN PIERRE AGUIRRE FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

Reporting was contributed by
Serge F. Kovaleski, Audra Burch,
William K. Rashbaum and Mike
Baker.

Free-speech rules can


hamper efforts to act


on hate speech.


WASHINGTON — For two dec-
ades, through Columbine, Virginia
Tech, Newtown, Orlando, Las Ve-
gas and the rest, mass shootings
have provoked only scant action
in Congress. Now, after horrific
back-to-back massacres this
weekend, people in both parties
agree that one man could change
that: Senator Mitch McConnell.
As President Trump urged na-
tional unity in the face of “racist
hate” without endorsing broad
gun control measures, Democrats
and a handful of Republicans
called on Monday for Mr. McCon-
nell, the majority leader, to bring
up legislation to require gun buy-
ers — including those on the inter-
net and at gun shows — to go
through background checks.
Mr. McConnell, nursing a frac-
tured shoulder from a weekend
fall at home in Kentucky, made no
commitments. After consulting
with advisers and fellow Republi-
cans, he issued a statement Mon-
day saying that he had asked
three top committee chairmen “to
engage in bipartisan discussions”
about how to address gun violence
“without infringing on Americans’
constitutional rights.”
“Senate Republicans are pre-
pared to do our part,” he said.
But just what “our part” is, was
unclear. One of Mr. McConnell’s
longtime advisers, J. Scott Jen-
nings, said Monday that Mr. Mc-
Connell was positioned to lead a
process in Congress that could
“achieve a solution that, at a min-
imum, comforts the nation.”
“People want something to hap-
pen,” he said. “I don’t think people


want mass confiscation of guns,
but they do want something to
show responsiveness.”
With Congress in recess,
Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Sena-
tor Chuck Schumer, the Demo-
cratic leader, demanded that Mr.
McConnell bring back the Senate
— something he is highly unlikely
to do — to consider a House back-
ground checks bill, which passed
in February.
While some House Democrats
want Ms. Pelosi to call back the
House to consider additional leg-
islation, such as an assault weap-
ons ban, Democratic leaders want
to keep the pressure on Mr. Trump
and Mr. McConnell. After a confer-
ence call with House Democrats
on Monday, Ms. Pelosi sent them a
“Dear Colleague” letter saying
two committees would hold hear-
ings on domestic terrorism and
gun violence.
“The president and Mitch Mc-
Connell have to feel the public sen-

timent on this,” Ms. Pelosi told
Democrats during the call, ac-
cording to an aide. “We have a
golden opportunity to save lives.”
In the Senate, some of Mr. Mc-
Connell’s Republican colleagues
were speaking up.
Senator Susan Collins of Maine,
who faces a tough re-election race
next year if she runs again, said
she had “long supported closing
loopholes in background checks.”
Senator Mike Braun, a fresh-
man from Indiana, said any bipar-
tisan legislation to address gun vi-
olence must include stronger
background checks and “red flag”
laws, which were cited by Mr.
Trump and would allow the tem-
porary confiscation of firearms
from people deemed a danger to
themselves or others.
Senator Lamar Alexander of
Tennessee, one of the committee
chairmen called into action by the
majority leader, vowed, “I am
ready to do more, especially on

background checks, to identify
those who shouldn’t have guns.”
And Senator Patrick J. Toomey
of Pennsylvania convened a con-
ference call with reporters to an-
nounce that he was reviving his
background check measure,
which failed in the Senate in 2013.
He said he spoke Monday morn-
ing to Mr. Trump, who expressed
“a very constructive willingness
to engage on this issue,” and also
to Mr. McConnell, whose com-
ments he would not characterize.
“My view is, if we have enough
support in the Senate, then we
ought to have a vote, and I intend
to do everything I can to persuade
Senator McConnell if that’s neces-
sary,” he said.
At 77, Mr. McConnell, who is
running for re-election in 2020,
has cast himself as the “grim
reaper” for liberal legislation. Ms.
Pelosi and Mr. Schumer have re-
peatedly called the Senate a “leg-
islative graveyard,” and around
the country, Mr. McConnell has
become a target for liberals — as
reviled by the left as Ms. Pelosi is
on the right.
On Monday, he was being pillo-
ried on social media with the hash-
tag #MassacreMitch — a twist on
#MoscowMitch, the moniker that
critics used to assail him for block-
ing election security legislation.
His campaign came under at-
tack on two fronts. Representative
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Demo-
crat of New York, demanded an
explanation for a photograph that
appeared on Twitter of young men
wearing “Team Mitch” T-shirts
appearing to choke a life-size
cardboard cutout of her.
And Amy McGrath, Mr. McCon-
nell’s likely Democratic opponent,
complained that the campaign

had tweeted a photograph of a
mock graveyard depicting tomb-
stones with her name and the
name of Merrick B. Garland,
whose Supreme Court nomination
Mr. McConnell blocked.
The McConnell campaign said
it did not produce the grave-
stones, which were photographed
at Fancy Farm, a Kentucky politi-
cal picnic, as a spoof of a newspa-
per cartoon that Ms. McGrath her-
self had circulated. But Ms. Mc-
Grath upbraided the campaign for

“nasty and personal” attacks — a
message that was picked up by
Gabrielle Giffords, the former
congresswoman who was griev-
ously wounded in a mass shooting
in Tucson in 2011, and is now an ad-
vocate for gun safety laws.
“I am appalled that in this divi-
sive political climate — a climate
where gun violence fueled by hate
is on the rise — Mitch McConnell
is joking about the death of his
current and former opponents
and a federal judge,” Ms. Giffords
said in a statement. “The nation is
turning to Leader McConnell
right now for leadership, and this
is the furthest thing from it.”
Gun violence — and how to ad-
dress it — has been one of the
most intractable and divisive is-
sues in Washington; the last time
the lawmakers voted to restrict
gun ownership was 1994, when
Congress passed an assault weap-
ons ban.

Even gun control advocates ac-
knowledge that this weekend’s
mass shootings are unlikely to
produce quick congressional ac-
tion. Still, some Republican strat-
egists say they sense a shift in
sentiment in their party.
“There clearly seems to be a
consensus developing on both
sides of the aisle for universal
mandatory background checks,”
said Whit Ayres, a Republican
strategist. “And the door may be
opening a bit more for a ban on
military-style assault weapons
and magazines.”
With the National Rifle Associa-
tion, the nation’s most powerful
gun lobby, in disarray amid a
string of lawsuits and internal up-
heaval, some Republicans who fa-
vor tightening gun laws say now is
the time to act.
But Mr. McConnell, who wants
to maintain the Republican major-
ity in the Senate, is well aware that
voters in rural hunting states —
including his own — would not
look kindly on any restrictions on
gun rights. Al Cross, the director
of the Institute for Rural Journal-
ism and Community Issues at the
University of Kentucky, said Mr.
McConnell was unlikely to push
for them.
“Six words,” Mr. Cross declared.
“We love our guns in Kentucky.”
And Mr. McConnell is unlikely
to act without the approval of Mr.
Trump, whose own statements on
gun violence have been all over
the place. In an early morning
tweet on Monday, Mr. Trump
called for “strong background
checks,” but tied them to an immi-
gration law overhaul. In a speech
from the White House a few hours
later, he did not mention back-
ground checks, but instead called
for red flag laws.

Washington’s Eyes Turn to McConnell for Response to Gun Violence


By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG

“Senate Republicans are prepared to do our part,” Senator Mitch
McConnell said of plans to address the spate of mass shootings.

ERIN SCHAFF/THE NEW YORK TIMES

Bipartisan sentiment


grows for some form


of background checks.


Nicholas Fandos and Emily Coch-
rane contributed reporting.

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