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Update on Raisethefist.com creator Sherman Austin, now in prison
- Date: Mon, 15 Sep 2003 02:28:16 -0400
- To: politech@politechbot.com
- Subject: FC: Update on Raisethefist.com creator Sherman Austin, now in prison
- From: Declan McCullagh <declan@well.com>
---
From: "Bodhi Man" <bodhiman@hotmail.com>
To: declan@well.com
Cc: jya@pipeline.com
Subject: sherman watch
Date: Sat, 13 Sep 2003 08:36:54 +0000
on august 29 zach de la rocha former lead singer of rage against the
machine appeared at che cafe on the UCSD campus for a concert benefitting
sherman austin / raisethefist.com. local bands and hundreds of people
showed up enabling sherman to pay off his court ordered fines (about
$2,000). the capacity of the building was 250 and about 450 showed up with
many people being turned away.
sherman surrendered to fed custody a week later on sept 4 at the roybal
federal building. he spent a few weeks in san bernardino county jail and
on sept 12 was transferred to oklahoma. according to shermans girlfriend,
he saw his transfer papers and he says he is headed for tuscon, arizona next.
Looks like he is getting a dose of diesal therapy.......
---
From: "Bodhi Man" <bodhiman@hotmail.com>
To: declan@well.com
Subject: sherman austin cited by senator feinstein
Date: Sat, 13 Sep 2003 10:13:37 +0000
http://feinstein.senate.gov/03Releases/r-bombmaking3.htm
Senator Feinstein Urges Department of Justice to
Aggressively Enforce Bombmaking Statute
- First person prosecuted under law is scheduled
to be taken into custody tomorrow -
September 3, 2003
Washington, DC - U.S. Senator Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) has called upon
the Department of Justice to aggressively enforce a law that makes it
illegal to distribute bombmaking information with the knowledge or intent
that the information will be used to commit a violent federal crime.
This statute, which was established through legislation sponsored by
Senator Feinstein in 1997, was recently applied for the first time in a
case against Sherman Austin, an anarchist who put links to bombmaking
information on his website. Austin, who is scheduled to surrender to U.S.
Marshals tomorrow, was sentenced to 12 months in prison, a $2000 fine,
three years of probation, as well as other restrictions.
In this case, according to press reports, the federal prosecutor reached
two separate plea agreements with Austin, but the presiding judge threw out
the initial pleas, saying that they were insufficient and that the
government was not taking the crime "seriously" enough.
In a letter to Attorney General John Ashcroft, Senator Feinstein wrote: "I
was pleased to learn recently that Sherman Austin was sentenced earlier
this month in federal court in Los Angeles for violating 18 U.S.C. 842(p),
a law I authored mandating up to 20 years in prison for anyone who
distributes bombmaking information knowing or intending that the
information will be used for a violent federal crime. However, I remain
concerned by reports that federal prosecutors may not be taking this
important anti-terrorism tool seriously. Thus, I write to request your
assistance in ensuring that DOJ personnel know about section 842(p) and are
aggressively enforcing it.
A few weeks ago, because of Mr. Austin's admitted violation of section
842(p), U.S. District Court Judge Stephen Wilson sentenced him to 12 months
of custody, a $2000 fine, three years probation, and as well as other
restrictions. However, I was dismayed to learn that Judge Wilson imposed
this sentence only after throwing out two previous plea agreements reached
with Mr. Austin as too lenient. The first plea agreement gave Mr. Austin
one month in prison followed by five months in a halfway house and the
second agreement gave him four months custody and four months in a halfway
house.
According to press reports, Judge Wilson stated at a hearing on the second
plea agreement that, while the Austin case had 'national and international
implications,' the government was not taking it 'seriously' and that in
fact the plea agreement was 'shocking.' Subsequently, upon learning that
the plea agreement had not been cleared by top DOJ officials, the judge
asked the prosecutor to contact Main Justice as well as FBI Director Robert
Mueller and solicit their views on the matter.
In my view-and apparently the view of at least one federal judge-the
Department of Justice needs to do a better job making prosecutors aware of
section 842(p) and ensuring that they take the law seriously. It is
dismaying that there has only been one conviction under section 842(p) in
the four years that the law has been on the books and that, once that
conviction was obtained, a federal judge described the final recommended
plea bargain for the convicted individual as 'shocking' in its leniency.
Moreover, I was also disturbed to read that Mr. Austin, in an interview
after his sentencing, stated that 'The fact that bomb-making information is
readily available on the Internet doesn't concern the feds. If someone were
to use a bomb to do something illegal, there's plenty of information out
there….'
Last May, I met with then Deputy Assistant Attorney General Alice Fisher
and FBI Director Robert Mueller. Both Ms. Fisher and Director Mueller
assured me that they would arrange for widespread distribution of
information about section 842(p) within their respective agencies. A month
later, Director Mueller informed me that the FBI had sent an electronic
communication to all field offices encouraging awareness and enforcement of
section 842(p). However, I never received word that the DOJ Criminal
Division had issued any similar communication.
Section 842(p) should be an important tool in fighting terrorism but,
unfortunately, it has been little used. I would greatly appreciate your
assistance in getting the word out to all to all appropriate components of
the Department of Justice about this statute
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