http://www.danielpipes.org/pf.php?id=2579
 
  

Convicting [Ali al-Timimi,] the "Paintball Sheikh"


by Daniel Pipes
FrontPageMagazine.com
May 2, 2005

Which is "the federal government's greatest court victory against
terrorism"? According to an
<http://pittsburghlive.com/x/tribune-review/trib/newssummary/s_329818.html>
article by Debra Erdley in yesterday's Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, that would
be the conviction on April
<http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,154635,00.html> 26, 2005, of Ali
al-Timimi.

Ali who? Well yes, with the exception of the Tribune-Review, which followed
the Timimi case because
<http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/tribune-review/news/s_84612.html> of a
Pittsburgh angle, the mainstream media stayed resolutely away from the case,
with nearly everyone simply reprinting the identical Associated
<http://washingtontimes.com/metro/20050426-100615-8452r.htm> Press dispatch
deep inside the newspaper. Television was apparently oblivious to the trial.

What is so momentous about the Timimi conviction, Erdley notes, is its being
the first time since 9/11 that the U.S. government has put away a terrorist
not for his deeds, such as raising money or blowing something up, but for
his words.

The previous time this occurred was in 1995, when the feds convicted Omar
Abdel Rahman, the blind sheikh, for having incited the (aborted) "day of
terror" planned in New York City for June 1993. As the lead prosecutor in
the case, Andrew C. McCarthy,  <http://www.meforum.org/article/336>
explained, what made the prosecution in this case unique, was the
government's

stratagem to focus on the jihad organization behind the individuals carrying
out this program: all the defendants were charged under the seditious
conspiracy statute, which criminalizes agreements to wage war against the
United States and to oppose government authority by force.

Included among the defendants was the blind and diabetic sheikh, someone who
himself obviously could not take part in operations, but he is spending the
rest of his life in a U.S. prison for his seditious words.

And now, Ali al-Timimi, also a sheikh, follows in Abdel Rahman's footsteps
to jail because he tried to get a group of young Americans Muslims
associated with a paintball group in northern
<http://www.danielpipes.org/blog/32> Virginia, to go to Afghanistan and
fight for the Taliban regime there. Erdley explains:

Al-Timimi trial witnesses, including several members of the Paintball Jihad,
said that at a secret meeting on Sept. 16, 2001, he advised the men to leave
the country and take up arms for the Taliban in its coming war with the U.S.
"There is definitely a line crossed where someone is not just expressing
views about our country, but encouraging, directing and enabling individuals
to act on those words," [Eastern District of Virginia U.S. Attorney Paul]
McNulty said.

"Some people still want to debate the issue of whether this constitutes
speech. The essence of the case was, did these words have an effect on these
individuals? Did they get solicited, induced, encouraged? Did they have an
influence over the conduct of other people? The jury came back guilty on all
counts," McNulty said.

This case, prosecuted by Gordon Kromberg and his team, is so important
because it dealt with words and placed them in context. For example, the
<http://www.usdoj.gov/usao/vae/ArchivePress/SeptemberPDFArchive/04/TimimiIND
C092304.pdf> indictment of Timimi quotes a message he sent out on February
1, 2003, the day when the Columbia space shuttle crashed to earth, in which
he - a born American citizen - stated that

There is no doubt that Muslims were overjoyed because of the adversity that
befell their greatest enemy.

The Columbia crash made me feel, and God is the only One to know, that this
is a strong signal that Western supremacy (especially that of America) that
began 500 years ago is coming to a quick end, God Willing, as occurred to
the shuttle.

God Willing, America will fall and disappear.

That the government is ready to take such sentiments into consideration when
prosecuting a terrorism case is one more sign of its growing recognition
<http://www.danielpipes.org/article/2546>  that the current war is not
against terrorism but against the ideas that lead to that terrorism, namely
arising out of radical Islam.

That said, it is troubling to see the mainstream media so consistently
seeming not to see the import of these developments. Rather, they tend to
ignore a case like that of Ali al-Timimi - or, if they do notice it, focus
on the wrong set of  <http://www.danielpipes.org/blog/409> issues.

My guess is that, once again, the Internet has to make up for this failing.

>From www.danielpipes.org | Original article available at:
www.danielpipes.org/article/2579



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