A US court has heard how a man was building an X-ray gun to kill all Muslims from the back of his van to “help Jews get rid of their enemies.”
Secret audio was played in which Glendon Crawford, 49, discussed technical aspects of his Muslim-killing ray gun.
Crawford first aroused suspicion when in 2012 he approached staff at a Schenectady synagogue with a plan to “help Jews get rid of their enemies.” The alleged plot involved remotely firing a death ray that would kill victims with radiation poisoning weeks later, a plot officials say may have worked.
FBI agents acknowledged they didn’t initially know if the upstate New York man was serious when he talked about assembling a mobile X-ray device to sicken or kill Muslims – or if he was even capable of it.
Testifying in federal court, Special Agent Chris West and an undercover operative identified only as Special Agent Jeff said they were trying to determine those answers in 2012. Jeff kept contacting Glendon Scott Crawford about the proposal, even bringing him key components, citing concerns he might go elsewhere.
The 49-year-old Crawford has denied the charges, including conspiracy to use a weapon of mass destruction. A General Electric industrial mechanic, he has been jailed since his arrest two years ago. He could face 25 years to life in prison if convicted.
Under cross-examination, West said the FBI made only basic inquiries about Crawford for several weeks, acknowledging they didn’t see an immediate threat.
Subscribe to our newsletter and stay updated on the latest news and updates from around the Muslim world!
“You didn’t know if he was serious guy or a wacky guy?” defense attorney Kevin Luibrand asked.
West said that’s what they were trying to determine. He also quibbled with the question whether the FBI encouraged Crawford to commit a crime.
Luibrand argued that Crawford was targeted in an elaborate FBI sting, and that no crime otherwise existed. Federal authorities allege Crawford first contacted two local Jewish groups with a proposal for destroying Israel’s enemies, prompting the investigation.
Crawford first made contact with Kathryn Laws, an administrative assistant at Congregation Gates of Heaven in Schenectady, through whom he wanted to offer help to Israel, reports Times Union.
Prosecutors presented secret audio and video recordings and wiretapped phone conversations with Crawford discussing supposed technical aspects of such a machine and making political observations
He described himself as a member of conservative and religious groups, including his church, though his feelings about Islam cost him his position as a deacon.
“We all would like our country restored to what it was,” Crawford said in a recording. “And the vast majority of Americans would, too.”
The tapes came first from the FBI’s paid informant, who first approached Crawford, then from the undercover agent who the informant introduced to Crawford. Jeff presented himself purposely as a disgruntled U.S. military member who like Crawford was unhappy with the government and the state of the country.
“You want to build a device?” Crawford said at an early meeting. “I can give you my advice.”
A Navy veteran and married father of three, Crawford had no previous criminal history.
At another point in the excerpted tapes, he said, “So we can get rid of all the medical waste lying around the country.”
West testified that he understood that to mean, “Killing Muslims.”