Terrorism, Not Treason: The Rise and Fall of Criminal Charges

Faculty photo of Professor Shirin Sinnar

(Originally published by The University of Chicago Legal Forum on January 22, 2025.)

Two decades into the global war on terror, the United States has a vast legal and institutional architecture for prosecuting “international” terrorism. A sprawling global intelligence network, thousands of informants in U.S. communities, and a highly permissive legal regime feed the prosecution of hundreds of Muslim defendants. Despite this intense state response and the panoply of charges brought, the U.S. government has charged treason in these cases on only one occasion, over fifteen years ago. Given the prominence of treason charges as a response to political violence in earlier eras, commentators have periodically asked why the treason charge has now virtually disappeared.

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