Attorney: FBI Trained Blogger To Incite Others
Attorney:
FBI Trained Blogger To Incite Others
By Katie Nelson Associated Press
HARTFORD â A New Jersey blogger facing charges in two states for allegedly making threats against lawmakers and judges was trained by the FBI on how to be deliberately provocative, his attorney said Tuesday.
Hal Turner worked for the FBI from 2002 to 2007 as an âagent provocateurâ and was taught by the agency âwhat he could say that wouldnât be crossing the line,â defense attorney Michael Orozco said.
âHis job was basically to publish information which would cause other parties to act in a manner which would lead to their arrest,â Orozco said.
Prosecutors have acknowledged that Turner was an informant who spied on radical right-wing organizations, but the defense has said Turner was not working for the FBI when he allegedly made threats against Connecticut legislators and wrote that three federal judges in Illinois deserved to die.
âBut if you compare anything that he did say when he was operating, there was no difference. No difference whatsoever,â Orozco said.
Special Agent Ross Rice, a spokesman for the FBI in Chicago, said he would not comment on or even confirm Turnerâs relationship with the FBI.
Orozco spoke to reporters after a court hearing in Hartford on Tuesday. Turner, 47, of North Bergen, N.J., did not appear, because he is in federal custody in Illinois. His arraignment on the Connecticut charges was rescheduled to October 19.
In June, Turner urged his readers to âtake up armsâ against Connecticut lawmakers and suggested government officials should âobey the Constitution or die,â because he was angry over legislation â later withdrawn â that would have given lay members of Roman Catholic churches more control over their parishâs finances.
He wrote in Internet postings the same month that the Illinois federal appeals judges âdeserve to be killedâ because they issued a ruling that upheld ordinances in Chicago and suburban Oak Park banning handguns. He included their photos and the room numbers of their chambers at the courthouse.
Orozco officially joined Turnerâs defense team in the Connecticut case on Tuesday, with approval from Superior Court Judge David Gold. Orozco said his Newark, N.J.-based firm has been representing Turner for the past five years, including during his FBI informant years.
Turnerâs Connecticut attorney, Matthew R. Potter, said itâs too early to tell which trial will move forward first. Orozco said he plans First Amendment defenses in both cases.
Randall Samborn, a spokesman for the US attorneyâs office in Chicago, said the office would not comment on Orozcoâs statements.