It figures

United Press International: Figures show ‘hype’ of terror war By Shaun Waterman, UPI

[An] analysis, carried out by statisticians and long-time law enforcement observers at the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse based at Syracuse University, found that in the two years after the Sept. 11 attacks about 6,400 people were referred to prosecutors in connection with terrorism or terrorist offenses. But of the 2,681 cases that had been wrapped up by the end of September 2003, some 879 were convicted of a crime and less than half of those — 373 — were sent to prison. Five received sentences of 20 years or more, which was actually fewer than in the two years before Sept. 11.

The figures analyzed have been repeatedly cited by administration officials to justify their contention that the government is winning the war against terror. …

Tim Edgar of the ACLU told UPI that the data showed the government was “cooking the books” on the war against terror.

In a speech at the FBI academy in Quantico, Va., on Sept. 10, President Bush — ticking off a long list of continuing achievements in the war on terror — said, “More than 260 suspected terrorists have been charged in U.S. courts; more than 140 have already been convicted.”

“This report reveals the gap between that rhetoric and the reality,” said Edgar.

“These figures have been used over and over again by the president and others to make people feel safer and to stifle the debate about whether the administration’s strategy and the new laws they’ve passed are working.”