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N.Y. Using Terrorism Law To Prosecute Street Gang
Critics Say Post-9/11 Legislation Is Being Applied Too Broadly
By Michelle Garcia

Special to The Washington Post
Tuesday, February 1, 2005; Page A03

NEW YORK - The newest face of an alleged terrorist wears a goatee, stands
about five feet tall, dresses in baggy clothes and resides in the Bronx.
Gang member Edgar Morales, aka "Puebla," has the distinction of becoming
one of the first people ever charged under New York's state terrorism
laws.

The Bronx district attorney has accused members of the St. James Boys
street gang of shootings "committed with the intent to intimidate or
coerce a civilian population." The other charges include murder, attempted
murder, various weapons charges and assault. But prosecutors have not
alleged that the gang is connected to any terrorist network.

"The terror perpetrated by gangs, which all too often occurs on the
streets of New York, also fits squarely within the scope of this statute,"
said District Attorney Robert T. Johnson.

When members were arrested, Police Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly said the
gang "terrorized" the community surrounding St. James Park, the
neighborhood park from which the gang takes its name.

But civil libertarians and some terrorism experts say the case -- now
underway in New York State Supreme Court -- is a misuse of state laws and
should raise concern about what they consider is an ever-expanding
definition of the term "terrorism."

Jameel Jaffer, a staff attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union,
said that prosecuting the St. James Boys was not what most Americans
envisioned when state legislators passed anti-terrorism bills.

"They didn't think of gang members in inner cities, drug crimes,
non-security" crimes, Jaffer said. "It's not what people had in mind."

After the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, 36 states added
terrorism-related laws to their criminal codes, using them to enhance
sentences that, in some cases, will now include the death penalty,
according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

Most of the new laws focus on heinous crimes such as murder and kidnapping.

"Probably most of the crimes could have been prosecuted before," said
Blake Harrison, a lawyer with the legislatures group. "Enacting these laws
makes it a little easier to effect the same goal."

But the new laws also provide prosecutors with new opportunities. Once on
the books, the laws can be applied to various crimes if prosecutors
believe they can make them stick. It has happened before.

Anti-racketeering laws, for example, were created to combat mobsters but
are now frequently used in drug and corporate-corruption cases.

"Language is plastic," said Gregory Mark, a former prosecutor who is now a
legal historian at Rutgers University. "As new situations arise and the
imagination of prosecutors is stimulated, the statutes which were clearly
intended for one purpose are expanded."

In Virginia, state prosecutors brought terrorism charges against the
now-convicted Washington area snipers Lee Boyd Malvo and John Allen
Muhammad, in part because investigators could not pinpoint which man
pulled the trigger. Virginia's Supreme Court is expected to rule soon on
the constitutionality of the state's terrorism laws.

The case against the St. James Boys began in 2002 with the shooting of
10-year-old Malenny Mendez. Shortly after midnight, Malenny and family
friends left a christening party. A street fight broke out between the St.
James Boys and another group of men. Shots rang out; the men ran. Malenny
fell to the ground, a bullet lodged in her brain. She died several hours
later.

At the time, police said the alleged shooter had fled to Mexico.
Prosecutors accused Morales of hiding the gun. But he was convicted only
of criminal trespass and was sentenced to time served and probation.

Bronx prosecutors have relaunched the murder case as part of a broader
70-count indictment against the gang that was unsealed last May. It named
19 defendants, charging all of them with terrorism for gang-related
activity.

Earlier this month, Morales's attorney, Lewis Alperin, argued in a Bronx
courtroom that the definition of terrorism was too expansive. "You put the
key in the door and you know what happens: Any protester who takes a
position [against the government] will be prosecuted under the terrorism
law."

The judge is scheduled to listen to further arguments March 9 before
deciding whether to permit the terrorism charges in the case.

New York's anti-terrorism law was born as a response to the 2001 attacks
and a public clamor for action. Within a week of the attacks, the state
legislature and Gov. George E. Pataki (R) approved terrorism legislation
that they hailed as the toughest in the country. Assembly Speaker Sheldon
Silver (D-Manhattan) characterized the bill as "overkill," even as he
voted for it.

Silver predicted at the time that the law would be a purely symbolic
gesture. "Will there be a prosecution under the state terrorist act?" he
asked. "I don't think so."

But terrorism expert Jessica Stern said New York and other states adopted
terrorism laws that contained vague and open-ended language that allows
the term to easily slip from its original meaning.

"Now we are seeing the possibility that it can be used by the government
to go after people we wouldn't think of as terrorists," said Stern, a
lecturer at Harvard University. "It's so often an epithet for the person
we want to incarcerate [or] extradite."

Outside the Bronx courtroom, Morales's parents said prosecutors
overreached with the terrorism charges in a desperate attempt to win a
conviction in the little girl's shooting.

The couple says that if prosecutors simply brought criminal charges
against Edgar they would accept the fate, but the terrorism label
horrifies them. They worry about the stigma the family might suffer if
Edgar is convicted for terrorism, and the effect on their jobs and future.

"Sometimes I wonder when people see us walking down the street," said
Morales's stepfather, Inocencio Hernandez. "Do they say, ' There goes the
parents of Edgar' or 'the parents of a terrorist' ?"

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