Man
Arrested by FBI for Faking Green Connection to "Terrorism"
by Mike Lehman
In the interests of fuller disclosure, here is more
background on a case that is getting limited coverage
in the dominant media. Reports in the September 6-12
Cityview and the September 7 News-Gazette indicate
that a local man, 21-year old Max Weissberg of Champaign,
was indicted this week on a federal charge of sending
a threatening communication. Weissberg appeared in
federal court in Urbana on Friday, August 30, following
his arrest on August 26. He was released on bond,
ordered to have no access to the Internet and then
was allowed to travel to Oregon to attend college,
pending further court action on his case. What is
left unclear in the above reports is the apparent
motivation for Weissberg's alleged threat.
The incident that led to Weissberg's
arrest, and an FBI raid on his mother's Mahomet home
where a computer was seized that was used in the commission
of the e-mail threat, began when the editors of the
CU Cityview received a threatening e-mail in the supposed
name of 'terrorists' in opposition to the Cityview's
recent decision to suspend Carl Estabrook's column
until after this November's election. Estabrook isrunning
on the Green Party ticket for the Congressional seat
currently held by Republican Tim Johnson.
The threat mentioned blowing up
buses and implied that, unless Estabrook's column
was immediately restored to the Cityview, such action
would be taken by the fictional group in support of
the Green Party's campaign at some unspecified date
and location. The clear implication behind the threat
was that 'terrorists' were working in support of Estabrook's
campaign.
The FBI was then called in by the
Cityview editors to investigate this threatening communication.
The FBI tracked the source of the message to the computer
in Mahomet, which was seized after a warrant was issued
authorizing a raid on the house of Weissberg's mother.
Left unmentioned by both the News-Gazette
and the Cityview articles on the arrest was Weissberg's
apparent motivation. He has been a regular writer
of letters to the editor in the Cityview, hotly disagreeing
with Estabrook's stance on the Middle East, in particular
the situation that exists in the struggle for a Palestinian
state and the current Israeli government's brutal
suppression of this desire. It seems that Weissberg,
like President Bush, Attorney General Ashcroft, and
Defense Secretary Don Rumsfeld, has a myopic view
of why opposition exists to brutal policies of oppression
and hoped to connect all resistance to such policies
to a vast international "terrorist" conspiracy.
Weissberg apparently chose to imply
that the "terrorist" group in whose name
he sent the threatening message was of Arab or other
Middle Eastern origin in the hopes that the faked
threat would draw an FBI crackdown on local Muslims,
in addition to smearing the Estabrook campiagn by
associating it with "terrorism". The message
was sent in name of the non-existent "Mohammed
Arkady, Al-Aman Martyrs Brigade."
This incident follows other recent
attempts to smear local activists by associating them
with unpalatable groups or messages. University of
Illinois Law Professor Francis Boyle, a well-known
international law expert and supporter of a Palestinian
homeland, was the subject of a fake e-mail campaign
earlier this summer. This was apparently done as part
of a wider campaign of disinformation against supporters
of the Palestinian cause that is said to have been
traced to Israeli computer hackers. The Urbana-Champaign
IMC site, like much of the rest of the IMC network,
has been bombarded by supposed pro-Palestinian posts
that have a distinctive white supremacist message
in an apparent attempt to smear opponents of Israeli
policy by falsely associating supporters of Palestine
with neo-Nazi ideas and viewpoints.
The next court date for Weissberg
was not mentioned in other coverage of this incident.
He faces up to five years in prison and a $250,000
fine, if convicted of the charge.
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