Time discusses the topic of "pre-emptive prosecution." Like other pre-emptive strikes of late, it is risky. It means relying on often unreliable informants to infiltrate insular communities, and it means making arrests before anything close to a terrorist attack actually happens.
It is designed to apprehend terrorists in the plotting stage before they strike. Pre-emptive prosecutions also raise the odds that innocent people could wind up in jail, because intentions are more open to interpretation than actions. There is also the risk that the approach will stir fears in certain communities of entrapment, squelching communication between law enforcement and potential sources. If the rumors of entrapment become so corrosive that no one in the Muslim-American community feels safe talking to the FBI, then the government has lost its best potential ally.
The linked article describes a pre-emptive case where five men have been charged with conspiring to kill soldiers at Fort Dix.
Link:
The Fort Dix Conspiracy - TIME
It is designed to apprehend terrorists in the plotting stage before they strike. Pre-emptive prosecutions also raise the odds that innocent people could wind up in jail, because intentions are more open to interpretation than actions. There is also the risk that the approach will stir fears in certain communities of entrapment, squelching communication between law enforcement and potential sources. If the rumors of entrapment become so corrosive that no one in the Muslim-American community feels safe talking to the FBI, then the government has lost its best potential ally.
The linked article describes a pre-emptive case where five men have been charged with conspiring to kill soldiers at Fort Dix.
Link:
The Fort Dix Conspiracy - TIME