BLM: William Barr tells prosecutors to consider charging violent protesters with sedition
To bring a sedition case, prosecutors would have to prove a conspiracy to attack government officials that posed imminent danger
Attorney General William Barr told the nation’s federal prosecutors to be aggressive when charging violent demonstrators with crimes, including potentially prosecuting them for plotting to overthrow the US government, people familiar with the conversation said.
In a conference call with US attorneys across the country last week, MrBarr warned that sometimes violent demonstrations across the US could worsen as the November presidential election approaches. He encouraged the prosecutors to seek a number federal charges, including under a rarely used sedition law, even when state charges could apply, the people said.
The call underscores the priority MrBarr has given to prosecuting crimes connected to violence during months of protests against racial injustice, leading to major property damage, as President Trump has made a broader crackdown on the violence and property destruction a key campaign issue. US attorneys have broad discretion in what charges they bring.
Federal prosecutors have charged more than 200 people with violent crimes related to the protests, most of whom face counts of arson, assaulting federal officers, or gun crimes. FBI officials earlier this year described the perpetrators as largely opportunistic individuals taking advantage of the protests.
In more recent months, police officials say they are alarmed by the presence of armed fringe groups from both sides of the political spectrum. MrBarr has blamed much of the violence of leftist extremists including antifa, a loose network of groups and people that describe themselves as opposing fascism and which MrBarr has described as a movement advocating revolution.
In the call last week, MrBarr urged prosecutors to seek federal charges whenever possible, two of the people said. He listed a number of additional statutes they could potentially use, including one addressing conspiracies or plots to overthrow the government. Legal experts say the rarely used statute could be difficult to prove in court.
To bring a sedition case, prosecutors would have to prove there was a conspiracy to attack government agents or officials that posed an imminent danger, legal experts said. They added that there is a fine line between the expression of anti-government sentiment, which could be protected speech under the First Amendment even if it included discussions of violence, and a plot that presented an imminent danger and could justify a charge of sedition.
Officials have also discussed using a statute that allows prosecutors to bring a federal case against someone who impedes or obstructs a law-enforcement officer responding to unrest, which experts said is also infrequently applied. That could potentially allow them to bring charges before an act of violence occurs, but hasn’t been tested much in the courts, leaving grey areas as to what behaviour could be characterised as obstruction.
Federal prosecutors in June brought that charge against three people accused of throwing Molotov cocktails at New York City police vehicles during protests. They have pleaded not guilty.
A Justice Department spokeswoman declined to comment.
“There’s all these different statutes the government can use if they are worried about things like property damage,” said Jenny Carroll, a University of Alabama law professor. She said that turning to statutes like sedition would mark an escalation in the government’s effort to quell the violence. “If you start charging those people, even if you don’t get a conviction, it may make people think twice before going out to exercise their right to free speech.” One of the few cases in recent years to involve allegations of a sedition conspiracy ended in acquittal. Several members of a Michigan-based militia group were accused in 2010 of plotting to kill a local police officer as part of a plan to start an armed clash with state and federal authorities. They were found not guilty in 2012 by a federal judge who said the government’s case was built on “circumstantial evidence” and didn’t prove beyond a reasonable doubt the defendants had entered a “concrete agreement to forcibly oppose the United States Government.”
The US Attorney in Detroit at the time of that prosecution, Barbara McQuade, said prosecutors have long-grappled with how to approach ideologically-motivated violent plots. “You can’t penalise people for First Amendment activity, but it leaves fewer tools when you have a group plotting an attack of some sort,” Ms. McQuade, who now teaches at the University of Michigan, said.
In places such as Portland, Oregon, Kenosha, Wisconsin and elsewhere, violent demonstrators have hijacked peaceful protests by starting fires, vandalising buildings, attempting to pull down statues and monuments and attacking law enforcement.
On the campaign trail, MrTrump has touted his administration’s efforts to quash the unrest and has publicly called for the Justicgon Department to bring more cases against violent demonstrators and ask for long prison sentences. He has similarly promoted an unrelated Justice Department crime-fighting effort that aims to drive down gun violence in certain cities that have seen spikes.
MrTrump has described the violence as a harbinger of what is to come if Democrats are elected. His Democratic presidential challenger Joe Biden has also denounced the destruction and called for violent demonstrators to be prosecuted.
MrBarr in June formed a task force to counter what he described as anti-government extremists who had “engaged in indefensible acts of violence designed to undermine public order.” In one high-profile instance, local law enforcement on a federal task force earlier this month killed self-described antifa supporter Michael Reinoehl as they attempted to arrest him in connection with the fatal shooting in Portland, Ore., of a member of right-wing group Patriot Prayer.
In charging documents in multiple other cases, federal prosecutors have identified members of the “boogaloo” movement, whose adherents predict civil war and are affiliated with multiple, mainly far-right ideologies, as instigators of violence at protests this summer. The Justice Department has said its information on left-wing groups’ involvement in demonstrations comes from state and local law enforcement. Police officials say armed fringe groups from both sides of the political spectrum have been involved in the demonstrations.
Experts have said antifa has no central leadership structure or formal membership and is instead a dispersed network that coordinates antiracist activism on an ad hoc basis. But MrBarr has said he views it as more organised.
“No question, antifa is a movement,” MrBarr said in an NBC News interview this month. “They have websites. They are organised … Anyone who has spent a moment at these things and heard their chants and what they’re calling for can see right away that they are, they say they are, revolutionaries, that this is a revolution.”
The Wall St Journal
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