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Teen TerrorAre teenagers like fundamentalist terrorists?

At first blush, it's merely outrageous. Across the country, teenagers are being tried as terrorists over plots to shoot their enemies in the lunchroom. Often they are charged under terrorism laws intended to keep us safe from al-Qaida, not from anguished Goths with delusions of grandeur.

Prosecutors say that angry teenage boys who amass guns and bombs really are terrorists; that the children killed in 1999 at Columbine are terror victims as surely as those killed in the WTC. Defense attorneys suggest that these prosecutions are overblown, enabling prosecutors to claim massive terror victories when they've merely put a pimply misfit behind bars.

The annual crop of Columbine wannabes flourished yet again this year. And where they may once have been charged with conspiracy or attempted assault, they are now charged as terrorists. Which probably rules out college.

In April, timed, as ever, to coincide with the seventh anniversary of Columbine, a string of disturbing plots were met with even more disturbing charges: Four New Jersey teens, aged 14 to 16, were charged with first-degree terrorism for plotting a lunchtime massacre of at least 17 people at Winslow Township High School on April 20. None of the students had even been able to obtain weapons. Two 17-year-olds in suburban Missouri were charged with making terrorist threats, in a plot to use guns and explosives in an April 20 assault against Platte County R-3 High School, again on the anniversary of Columbine. Prosecutors are now deciding whether to file terrorism charges against a 16-year-old boy in Oxford, Mich., who's accused of accumulating homemade bombs, napalm, and high-school blueprints in his parents' basement. And Andrew Osantowski, 18, of Macomb County, Mich., was sentenced to at least four and a half years in prison last June, after a jury found him guilty of terrorism and terroristic threats, for a plot to massacre students at his suburban Detroit high school. Amassed in his home were an AK-47, pipe bombs, a Nazi flag, printed materials about Adolf Hitler, and a schematic diagram of the school.

There is a difference between terrorists and angry schoolboys, and using stiff anti-terror laws to ratchet up penalties and punish juveniles as adults blurs an important distinction. As Michael Greenberger, a law professor at the University of Maryland Center for Health and Homeland Security recently told USA Today, charging troubled teenagers as terrorists "cheapens the war on terror." There's a profound difference between fundamentalist Islamic terrorism and domestic terrorism like Timothy McVeigh's attack in Oklahoma City. And there's a vast difference again between both of those things and juvenile plots to shoot the cool kids in study hall. Charging all three classes of offenders as "terrorists" only serves to blur the already porous legal definition of terrorism. It suggests that the lonely kid who posts bomb threats on his MySpace page is the moral equal of Mohammad Atta.

But that lonely kid can nevertheless prove to be a lethal kid, and as Columbine's Dylan Klebold and Eric Harris and D.C. sniper Lee Boyd Malvo all proved, the mere fact that you're in high school and suggestible hardly matters when your victim is dead of a gunshot wound. While it's clear we shouldn't be using terror laws to prosecute teen death threats, the striking parallels between fundamentalist terrorists and alleged school shooters offer some intriguing insight into the policy strategies for addressing both.

One of the striking similarities in all these school shooting plots is their stunning lack of originality. There's always the stupid Nazi flag. There's always the school schematic. There's usually an almost pornographically detailed written plan. It's as if the same adolescent drive to own the same Nikes as all the other kids animates a need to read the exact same fascist books and plot the exact same killing spree. Indeed, one might wonder whether one of the parallels between the Sept. 11 bombers and would-be school shooters is a fundamental passivity; a failure of imagination; a willingness to be led without thought.

There's another telling similarity between suicide bombers and teenaged would-be suicide-shooters: A comprehensive Secret Service study undertaken in response to the rash of school shootings in the late 1990s found that of the 41 teen shooters studied, ranging in age from 11 to 21, with little commonality in family background, income, or intelligence, the one common link was depression and suicidal tendencies. One commonality is that, like most terrorists, they are almost always male. Moreover, like conventional suicide bombers, the school shooter invariably sees himself as a victim. The Secret Service report indicated that more than two-thirds of the school shooters felt "persecuted or bullied." The motive for the shooting is frequently revenge. In a way, school shooters are a lot like terrorists in that they feel victimized and despairing, they hunger for revenge, and they need to have their lives matter, even if only in hindsight.

One of the most pathetic details that emerged with last month's release of nearly 1,000 pages of previously confidential diary entries, notes, and schoolwork of Harris and Klebold's was this: Sandwiched between the hatred and loneliness and alienation was a simple yet acute longing for girlfriends. As was recently reported in Newsweek, Klebold, 17 at the time, lamented, "I don't know what I do wrong with people (mainly women) it's like they set out to hate & ignore me." Later he mourned, "Want TRUE love ... I hate everything, why can't I die. ... " This is not unlike the complex sexual longings of the fundamentalist suicide bomber, whose religious beliefs often lead to a complicated mix of desire for and loathing of women. The extent to which such repressed sexual desire and frustration fuels violence in both cases is worth at least probing further.

Certainly, there are differences between disaffected Goths and suicide bombers. The role religion and the promise of a heavenly reward plays in the minds of the latter group can't be underestimated. More broadly, teenagers are teenagers, and they are just not criminally culpable in the way an adult might be, even when the results of their attacks are as lethal. And because teenage boys with grudges are fundamentally different from adult men with liquid explosives, we should resist the lure of using terror laws to prosecute them, even when those laws tempt us with the prospect of longer sentences and trial in adult court.

Still, it may well be the case that the best legal analogy we have for teens plotting a repeat of Columbine in this country is religious terrorism. In both cases the offenders are alienated and grandiose, bitter and vengeful. And while we shouldn't use laws fashioned for terrorists to try high-schoolers with homemade bombs, we should really consider the parallels between them in creating laws to deter and punish both.

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Dahlia Lithwick is a Slate senior editor.
COMMENTS

Remarks from the Fray:

A terrorist isn't some Arab dude with a rag on his dead and a stick of dynamite up his ass. But just as the definition shouldn't be narrow it shouldn't be a catch-all for anyone who gets whacky.

The Columbine kids were NOT terrorists, they were multiple murders, period. It doesn't matter how extravagant their setup was, they weren't forwarding someone else's religious/sectarian goals by going on a murder spree - they were just inadequate pissed off losers who's parent's should be sent to the pokey for raising them so poorly.

Yeah the line is grey, faintly grey, but don't we have enough definitions of killer so that we don't have to pile on to the latest fad in bloodshed?

--Eigenvector

(To reply, click here.)

Why doesn't the United States take advantage of the teen angst like the Islamists do?

It seems to me that we know that suicide is a leading cause of death for teens. Islamists take advantage of this by telling these teens that it is God calling them to kill infidels.
Instead of using psychologists to try (and fail) to fix this defect, why don't we seize the opportunity and send these people over seas to blow up terrorist cells? They are going to die anyway, we might as well get some value out of it. [...]

We can see the value afforded by having followers apparently willing to kill themselves for the cause. Lets jump on the bandwagon and use some losers too.

--Clown_Nose

(To reply, click here.)

Dahlia offers no support, zero, for her assertion that the two should not be analyzed under the same legal framework. In fact, the only analysis she does offer contradicts her assertion. After all, what is the difference between Timothy McVeigh and Mohammed Atta, other than one's motivation by Nazi fascism and one's motivation by a form of religious fascism? They were both terrorists and they both wanted to kill a lot of people. And how old do you think many of these terrorists are, Dahlia? Are they all thirty-somethings who have gotten past the pimply stage? Or are many young and impressionable teens just like your alleged victims here?

The only consistent thread I can find in Dahlia's various articles is sympathy for incompetent terrorists. She rooted for Zacarias Moussaoui because she feels he was incompetent. She roots for teenagers because she feels they are incompetent. But since, as Lithwick herself acknowledges, dumb, crazy, and incompetent people can nevertheless be very deadly, this is not a distinction that can hold up. Lithwick would prefer to sort out the incompetent from the competent. But you can only do that if you treat them all as competent and catch them ahead of time. Dahlia, once again, has not just failed to make her case, she has failed even to argue for her case. Argument by assertion doesn't count.

--HLS2003

(To reply, click here.)

While modern "terrorism as a political weapon" has changed our use of words, people have been terrorizing other people for millenia. "Terroristic threat" is not a new idea springing from the world-wide-war-on-terror, but an old concept in criminal law. While I would agree the teens you discuss are not "terrorists" as the word is used today, their actions do indeed constitute "terroristic threats".

A terroristic threat is any credible threat that terrorizes another: threatening to commit a crime of violence, burn or damage property with the purpose of terrorizing someone, phony bomb threats that cause building evacuation or other serious public inconvenience, etc. The threat must be credible, otherwise the victim may be annoyed, but won't be terrorized. My experience is in Georgia, but a quick surf online found numerous other states with similar statutes.

Depending on where you live, there are historical artifacts in these statutes. In Georgia, a terroristic act includes burning a cross or other symbol with the intent to terrorize another or another's household. Depending on the seriousness of the threat, the charge can be a misdemeanor or felony.

My experience with terroristic threats comes primarily from representing women in domestic violence cases. Men who threaten to kill, choke, shoot, rape or otherwise abuse wives or girlfriends are, indeed, terrorizing those women. [...] The goal in these crimes is the same goal as international terrorism, writ small. The abuser wants to control "his" woman. She won't talk back/leave/stand up for herself/challenge him so long as she is afraid of him. Usually VERY afraid of him -- I've seen these women the day after. Same goal for the violent bigots -- southern blacks did not exercise their right to vote for generations where doing so jeopardized their lives and/or property and their loved ones.

The teens you describe are also seeking to control those around them -- perhaps for different reasons but with the same tool -- terror. I agree that these kids are not international terrorists a la Osama Bin Laden. They are, however, mixed up adolescents who are INTENDING to scare the pants off other folks. That is the whole point of these activities: hurt or kill some folks, TERRORIZE lots more. The criminal code does address not only the physical assault, but the "terroristic threat".

--carolfb

(To reply, click here.)

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