Mom Accuses FBI Of Entrapping Her ‘Neurodiverse’ Teenager In Terrorism Scheme Authored by Ken Silva via Headline USA, In June 2022, Colorado woman Deanna Meyer contacted her local sheriffโs office about violent and terroristic statements that her mentally ill 17-year-old son, Davin Meyer, was making at the time. The Federal Bureau of Investigation building headquarters is seen in Washington. / PHOTO: AP The local sheriff, in turn, contacted the FBI, which then began communicating with the teenager online. Months later, the FBIย arrested Davin as he was about to board an airplane, ostensibly to travel to the Middle East to join ISIS. But Davinโs mother says he is no ISIS fighter. Instead, heโs an 18-year-old with no friends, who suffers from numerous mental health issues, including autism, depression and anxiety, according to the mom. At a detention hearing on Friday, Deanna reportedly expressed remorse that she ever sought help from law enforcement, blaming the FBI for ensnaring her son in a phony terrorism plot. โI bet my life he would never do that without that encouragement [from FBI informants],โ she said Friday, describing how her son communicated with at least two FBI informants in chat rooms from last November until he was arrested. U.S. Magistrate Judge Reid Neureiter disregarded Deannaโs pleas on Friday and ordered Davin to remain in custody. Neureiter pointed to the fact that Davin allegedly threatened his motherโs life when he was still a juvenileโeven though the mother said he hasnโt threatened her since he turned 18. The judge did acknowledge the motherโs arguments in his five-page order. โThe mother testified at the detention hearing that she never believed he would likely move ahead with his expressed intentions, and the defendant only took steps to travel to the Middle East after finding a โcommunityโ online, which included confidential FBI sources,โ Judge Neureiter said. โAccording to the defendantโs mother, he has โnever had a friendโ and finding this community that appeared to be supportive of his plans is what likely caused him to act by buying the ticket to fly to Turkey.โ Neureiter also acknowledged Davinโs mental health problems. โThe defendant is โneurodiverseโ and was diagnosed at the age of nine of being on the autism spectrum, and he has also been diagnosed with having a low processing speed and massive depression. The defendant may also have obsessive compulsive disorder,โ the judge said. โThe defendant has received diagnoses of autism spectrum disorder; attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder; adjustment disorder with mixed anxiety and depressed mood; specific learning disorder with impairment in mathematics; and major depressive disorder, recurrent episode, moderate.โ However, Judge Neureiter said itโs in the public interest to keep Davin incarcerated. โThis is a difficult situation, and must be extremely heart-wrenching for the defendantโs family, in particular his mother, who has long believed the defendant needs help and therapy,โ he said. โPutting a defendant with his disabilities in jail, pending trial, will not address his condition nor provide the therapy that he apparently needs. It will, however, ensure that he cannot do violence to anyone.โ The judge concluded by saying heโd reconsider his order if the Meyer family can find a suitable mental health facility to house Davin. Other bizarre details about the Meyer case can be found in the arrest affidavit of FBI task force officer Joni Tangeman. For instance, Tangeman said Davin followed โwhite supremacist ideologyโ when he was 15-years-old, before he began practicing Islam in late 2020. Tangeman further said that Davin said when he was 17 that if he didnโt go to the Middle East, he would build a fertilizer bomb in the United Statesโthe same bomb used in the Oklahoma City bombing. Additionally, the FBI officer admitted she knew about Davinโs mental health issues when investigating him. โI am aware that MEYER has previously received mental health treatment, including residential treatment programs,โ she said, adding that Davin apparently refused to take his medication when he converted to Islam. โMEYER refused to take any prescription medication prescribed by the psychiatrist because it would be against his Islamic religion, and he also refused to go to school or participate in online school programs,โ Tangeman said. โRecords show that MEYER has received diagnoses of autism spectrum disorder; attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder; adjustment disorder with mixed anxiety and depressed mood; specific learning disorder with impairment in mathematics; and major depressive disorder, recurrent episode, moderate.โ The Meyer case follows the FBI arresting another mentally challenged 18-year-old, Mateo Ventura, for allegedly intending to help ISIS. Last month, The Intercept published an interview with Venturaโs father, who also accused FBI informants of entrapping his son. โHe was born prematurely, he had brain development issues. I had the school do a neurosurgery evaluation on him and they said his brain was underdeveloped,โ Venturaโs father, Paul Ventura, toldย The Intercept. โHe was suffering endless bullying at school with other kids taking food off his plate, tripping him in the hallway, humiliating him, laughing at him.โ Ventura is currently in a private mental health facility as his case proceeds. Meyerโs preliminary hearing is set for July 31. Ken Silva is a staff writer at Headline USA. Follow him at twitter.com/jd_cashless. Tyler Durden Tue, 08/01/2023 – 18:40
Mom Accuses FBI Of Entrapping Her ‘Neurodiverse’ Teenager In Terrorism Scheme
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