The only terrorists discussed in this article are U.S. Muslims who join Islamic jihad groups. But the belief system that leads these men to join such groups is never mentioned — it can be surmised by the reader from the fact that they join groups like “the Islamic State” and take on names like “Abu Omar al Amreeki,” but it is never directly mentioned exactly what kind of terrorists these are. That peculiar omission would never have been made in a news story about “right wing extremists” who are members of “patriot groups,” but it is required here by the politically correct straitjacket that stifles all mainstream media discussion of Islamic jihad. And this omission also ensures that the feds’ attempts to prevent “homegrown terrorists” will always been hamstrung by their inability to speak honestly or investigate in detail what these terrorists believe, and what motivates them to become terrorists in the first place.
“Law enforcement increase effort to prevent threat of homegrown terrorists,” by Christopher Snyder, FoxNews.com, August 12, 2014 (thanks to Kenneth):
In the past few months, federal agents arrested and filed terrorism charges against several Americans, experts say in an effort to prevent homegrown terrorists.
According to the NYPD, more than 100 Americans are possibly training within Al Qaeda-inspired groups like the Islamic State (IS), the militant group formerly known as ISIS operating in Syria and Iraq.
Tom Ruskin, former NYPD detective and president of security consulate firm the CMP Group told Foxnews.com that law enforcement officials are trying to track potential threats overseas before suspected terrorists come stateside.“It’s a major concern in this country of people coming back or into our country or people who are already here,” Ruskin said.
The latest incident was the arrest of suspected terror supporter Donald Ray Morgan earlier this month in New York.
A spokesperson for prosecutors said the ex-convict was arrested in connection with a North Carolina indictment and charged with “being a felon in possession of firearms.” Authorities also found the suspect had tweeted his loyalty to the leader of the Islamic State using the alias “Abu Omar al Amreeki.”
“We know he has been in possession of illegal guns in the past, very high [levels of] ammunition and the fact that he is tweeting his allegiance to ISIS is of concern to the U.S. government,” Ruskin said.
It might prove to be a tough task for prosecutors to build terror-related charges against Morgan just based on tweets.
“Obviously when came back through [John F.] Kennedy airport, the eastern district U.S. attorney felt that they had enough to prosecute and hold him for the time being,” Ruskin said.
This allows authorities, he points out to do an extensive background check on Morgan’s most recent movements abroad.
“What they are now doing is going through his phone records, computer files, texts, and who he has associated with,” Ruskin said. “They are trying to determine nexus between him and a terrorist group.”