Proton Soup said:
yeah, and i don't think this was close at all. I'm sure he had motive, but i find the capability of a 17-year-old kid to build a decent bomb out of much more than diet coke and Mentos a bit suspect. so that left the obvious tactic of going down to the bombs-R-us store and purchasing one. but who, other than FBI informants provide such services in the US?
i think as a juror, i'd want to see that he was actively seeking out sources, and not that the gov't was actively seeking out malcontents.
You mean like
Hemant Lakhani? Bizarre story.
Muhammad Habib Rehman was a DEA informant in the 90's until they dropped him due to some of his help being unreliable and occasionally just plain bad. After 9/11, the FBI picked him up as an informant, seeing as how anyone with his language skills and contacts would be valuable in the war on terror - plus he already had experience as an informer.
Needing a terrorist to supply to the FBI, Rehman recruited the 70-year-old Lakhani, a clothing salesman whose business ventures had taken a turn for the worse (Rehman had done similar things before as a DEA informer, which resulted in them dropping him as an informant). When put in contact with FBI agents posing as terrorists, Lakhani claimed he could sell them 50 submarines, nuclear suitcase bombs, land mines, whatever they needed. The FBI terrorist impersonators finally requested some shoulder fired missiles to be used to shoot down airliners at the Newark airport.
Unfortunately, Lakhani had no more idea how to obtain shoulder fired missiles than the average person. After a year of asking Lakhani to deliver the missiles they requested, Rehman finally directed Lakhani to see if he could by the weapons from legitimate arms dealers in Russia. The requests from a US clothes salesman quickly got the attention of Russia's intelligence agency - the FSB. FSB agents stepped in as weapons salesmen impersonators, contacted Lakhani, and Lakhani claimed he wanted to buy 200 shoulder fired missiles.
It didn't take much investigation to find out Lakhani was intending to smuggle the missiles into the US. The FSB contacted the FBI only to find out Lakhani was the target of a sting and both agencies teamed up to complete the sting. The FSB agents eventually sold him one dummy missile which they shipped to the US as medical/dental equipment. Lakhani then sold the dummy missile to the FBI agents.
Fake suppliers, fake customers, fake missiles. Only one real person in the entire sting, and, to be honest, he wasn't that real either since there is no way he would have found weapons customers on his own, nor found missiles to sell on his own. For whatever reason, the 70-year-old man was more than willing to pretend to be a weapons smuggler with only a little prompting from Rehman.
All is well that ends well, however, and rest assured Lakhani was convicted and sentenced to 47 years. He'll be eligible for release in 2044, when he'll be 109 years old.
It wasn't exactly entrapment by government agencies, since both initially thought he was a real arms smuggler, but it shouldn't have taken either more than 10 minutes to figure out he'd never done anything remotely similar to this undertaking in his entire life and wouldn't have had a prayer of completing a real arms deal. It was more a rogue informant creating a crime that he could be paid for informing on than the FBI entrapping an innocent man.