by MARGARET KIMBERLEY

Arrests of members of the Turtle Island Liberation Front are the latest in a decades-long effort to criminalize the left and to make examples of anyone who might fit the profile of being a “designated terrorist.”
The United States has a long history of using informants and entrapment as tools to discredit or to defeat leftist movements. There are other objectives as well, as Black Agenda Reportexplained in 2010, “The object is to terrify the public into surrendering their civil liberties in a twilight struggle with a mostly nonexistent domestic enemy.” It is important to remember the many examples of state repression as we learn of the arrest of members of a little-known and newly formed organization called the Turtle Island Liberation Front, who stand accused of planning New Year’s Eve bombings in Southern California. It is an understatement to say that the charges against them should not be accepted at face value.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has traditionally used paid informants to undermine movements or even to justify its existence by convincing the public they are in danger of terrorist attacks with high-profile cases that they and their informants create out of whole cloth. There were many such instances in the years after the September 11 attacks, and two of the most infamous were those of the “Newburgh Four” and the “Liberty City Seven.” In both cases, paid informants entrapped Black men who actually had no discernible political activity or ideology. In the 2009 case of the Newburgh Four, they were charged with planning to blow up a Bronx, New York synagogue in a plot that was hatched entirely by the FBI informant. They stated they never intended to carry out the deed, but merely hoped to be paid for doing nothing at all. In 2023, a federal judge ordered compassionate release for three of the four men, describing them as “… hapless, easily manipulated and penurious petty criminals.” A fourth defendant was released in 2024, and the judge added that he and the others were victims of an “FBI-orchestrated conspiracy.”
In Florida, the Liberty City Seven also fell under the sway of an informant in 2006, but two juries were deadlocked before a third convicted them, under circumstances similar to those of the Newburgh Four. The thinness of the case was revealed by Attorney General Alberto Gonzales and the FBI Deputy Director when they took questions at the press conference announcing the arrests.
“Question: Did any of the men have any actual contact with any members of al-Qaeda that you know of?
Attorney-General: The answer to that is “No”.
Question: Did they have any means to carry out this plot? I mean, did you find any explosives, weapons?
Attorney-General: You raise a good point … We took action when we had enough evidence.
Question: Was there anything against the Sears Tower other than this one apparent, just, kind of mention of the Sears Tower? It doesn’t look like they ever took pictures or …
Deputy Director of the FBI: One of the individuals was familiar with the Sears Tower, had worked in Chicago, and was familiar with the tower. But in terms of the plans, it was more aspirational than operational.”
Despite the obviously flimsy case, the men were convicted and were freed after serving their sentences, which ranged from six to thirteen years.
Donald Trump has spoken of an “enemy within” and of what he calls domestic threats. He wants to frighten anyone who might oppose his policies into silence by threatening them with legal action. His definition of what makes a person or group a terrorist is quite broad and may serve to criminalize any opposition that he chooses.
Attorney General Pam Bondi’s leaked December 4 memo, “Countering Domestic Terrorism and Organized Political Violence,” lays out how the Trump administration defines a group or individual as being domestic terrorist. “These domestic terrorists use violence or the threat of violence to advance political and social agendas, including opposition to law and immigration enforcement; extreme views in favor of mass migration and open borders; adherence to radical gender ideology, anti-Americanism, anti-capitalism, or anti-Christianity; support for the overthrow of the United States Government; hostility towards traditional views on family, religion, and morality; and an elevation of violence to achieve policy outcomes, such as political assassinations.”
Political assassinations, like any murder, are illegal, and so is overthrowing the government. But mostly, Bondi has produced a list of rights that are allegedly protected by the First Amendment. We are told that we have the right to hold the opinions of our choice regarding law enforcement, and we have the right to oppose capitalism or Christianity or any other religion. As for “anti-Americanism,” we can also have any opinion we want about this country or its government. Trump wants obedience and has created a definition of domestic terrorism that applies to millions of people in this country.
BAR for more