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  RECORD TYPE ......... ANNOTATION — SOURCED RECORD
  REGISTRY NO. ........ MARG-0362
  SLUG ................ /post-9-11-terrorism-prosecutions-entrapment-and-outrageous-government-conduct-ou
  STATUS .............. ACTIVE
  FILED ............... 2026-06-18 20:17 UTC
  LAST ANNOTATED ...... 2026-06-18 20:17 UTC
  CLAIMS ON FILE ...... 4
  MEAN TAG CONFIDENCE . 0.85
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PENDING

Post-9/11 Terrorism Prosecutions: Entrapment and Outrageous Government Conduct Outcomes (2001-2024)

Since the September 11, 2001 attacks, the U.S. government has prosecuted a significant number of individuals on terrorism charges. A key area of contested narrative revolves around the use of entrapment and outrageous government conduct defenses in these cases, particularly given the extensive use of informants and sting operations. While some scholars and journalists claim a high number of convictions resulted from entrapment [4], available research indicates a near-complete lack of acquittals solely on entrapment grounds in federal terrorism cases [1]. The U.S. Department of Justice categorizes these cases as domestic and international terrorism, with many international terrorism defendants never leaving the U.S. [2]. Despite numerous prosecutions, the precise count of cases resulting in acquittal, mistrial, dismissal, or appeal reversal specifically citing entrapment or outrageous government conduct remains largely unquantified in public sources.

The strongest argument for a significant impact of entrapment or outrageous government conduct is that law enforcement, particularly the FBI, has increasingly relied on confidential informants to initiate and facilitate supposed terrorist plots. These operations often target individuals who might not have otherwise engaged in illegal activities without sustained prompting, financial incentives, or planning assistance from government agents. The difficulty in proving entrapment in court, or the classification of related dismissals/reversals, might obscure the true extent to which such conduct undermined the legitimacy of prosecutions.

The strongest counter-argument is that entrapment defenses have been largely unsuccessful in terrorism prosecutions, indicating that courts generally find defendants were predisposed to commit the offenses. The legal standard for entrapment requires demonstrating both government inducement and a lack of predisposition on the part of the defendant. The near-complete absence of acquittals solely on entrapment grounds suggests that prosecutors have successfully demonstrated predisposition, or that judicial standards for 'outrageous government conduct' are exceptionally high, making such defenses difficult to establish.

  1. CORROBORATEDCONF 0.90

    No US terrorism defendants have been acquitted solely on entrapment grounds by judges or juries in post-9/11 cases.

    — attributed to: Cambridge.org, citing Laguardia (2013)

    • https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/law-and-social-inquiry/article/accounting-for-the-almost-complete-failure-of-the-entrapment-defense-in-post911-us-terrorism-cases/1B69DE977ACEE0549B35AECCAE32F2F6
  2. SINGLE-SOURCECONF 0.70

    Many scholars and journalists suggest that a high number of terrorism convictions since September 11, 2001, have been the product of entrapment.

    — attributed to: Researchgate.net

    • https://www.researchgate.net/publication/341132366_How_Entrapment_Still_Matters_Partial_Successes_of_Entrapment_Claims_in_Terrorism_Prosecutions
  3. SINGLE-SOURCECONF 0.80

    Most of the 992 terrorism defendants prosecuted by the U.S. Department of Justice since 9/11 were classified as international terrorism, even if they never left the United States.

    — attributed to: The Intercept

    • https://trial-and-terror.theintercept.com/
  4. VERIFIEDCONF 1.00

    The 'outrageous government conduct' defense presupposes predisposition to commit the offense but seeks dismissal if law enforcement conduct was 'so outrageous that due process principles would absolutely bar the government from invoking judicial process'.

    — attributed to: U.S. Department of Justice Criminal Resource Manual

    • https://www.justice.gov/archives/jm/criminal-resource-manual-648-entrapment-outrageous-government-conduct
  • 2001-09-11September 11th attacks, marking the beginning of the post-9/11 period for terrorism prosecutions.
  • 2013Research (Laguardia) cited as finding no acquittals in US terrorism cases solely on entrapment grounds. [src]
  • 2019-11-07Publication discussing the failure of entrapment defenses in post-9/11 US terrorism cases. [src]
  • ORG U.S. Department of JusticeProsecuting body for terrorism cases
  • ORG FBILaw enforcement agency conducting counterterrorism operations
  • PERSON Terrorism defendantsIndividuals prosecuted for terrorism-related offenses
  • EVENT EntrapmentLegal defense asserting government inducement to commit a crime
  • EVENT Outrageous Government ConductLegal defense asserting governmental conduct violated due process
  • How many federal terrorism prosecutions between 2001-2024 resulted in mistrial, dismissal, or appeal reversal specifically where an entrapment defense was argued?
  • How many federal terrorism prosecutions between 2001-2024 resulted in mistrial, dismissal, or appeal reversal specifically where an 'outrageous government conduct' defense was argued?
  • What specific court opinions or declassified Department of Justice records detail cases where entrapment or outrageous government conduct led to non-conviction outcomes in terrorism cases from 2001-2024?
  • Are there any publicly accessible databases or reports that track the specific outcomes (acquittal, mistrial, dismissal, reversal) of terrorism prosecutions that include 'entrapment' or 'outrageous government conduct' as a key defense argument?
  • What is the precise count of 'partial successes' of entrapment claims in terrorism prosecutions as mentioned by Researchgate [4], and what were the outcomes of these 'partial successes'?
  1. [WEB] https://trial-and-terror.theintercept.com/
    The U.S. government segregates terrorism cases into two categories â€" domestic and international. This database contains cases classified as international terrorism, though many of the people charged never left the United States or communicated with anyone outside the country. S
  2. [WEB] https://sclawreview.org/article/2-the-politicization-of-criminal-prosecutions/
    This effort produced some 326 federal prosecutions in the period between May 31, 2020, with 20 of the prosecutions featuring the involvement of integrated ...
  3. [WEB] https://www.researchgate.net/publication/341132366_How_Entrapment_Still_Matters_Partial_Successes_of_Entrapment_Claims_in_Terrorism_Prosecutions
    How many of the terrorism convictions since September 11, 2001 have been the product of entrapment? Some scholars and journalists have suggested that the number is quite high.
  4. [WEB] https://da.lacounty.gov/sites/default/files/pdf/032326-Legal-Policies-Manual.pdf
    23 Mar 2026 · I am pleased to introduce the Los Angeles County District Attorney's Legal Policies Manual. (LPM), originally restored in December 2025.
  5. [WEB] https://www.justsecurity.org/86456/u-s-domestic-terrorism-prosecutions-the-reality-behind-the-governments-inflated-numbers/
    Over the last decade, the department has asked Congress for more than $500 million to pay for terrorism-related prosecutions. These funds support more than 300 positions in the U.S. Attorneys Offices around the country, which claim to have won more than 2,000 domestic terrorism-r
  6. [WEB] https://osad.illinois.gov/content/dam/soi/en/web/osad/publications/digest-by-chapter/ch-14-counsel.pdf
    The violation of defendant's right to assert ・ marks the start of adversarial judicial proceedings ・ of the criminal prosecution.
  7. [WEB] https://www.justice.gov/archives/jm/criminal-resource-manual-648-entrapment-outrageous-government-conduct
    While the essence of the entrapment defense is the defendant's lack of predisposition to commit the offense, the "defense" of outrageous government conduct presupposes predisposition but seeks dismissal of the indictment on the ground that the conduct of law enforcement agents wa
  8. [WEB] https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/law-and-social-inquiry/article/accounting-for-the-almost-complete-failure-of-the-entrapment-defense-in-post911-us-terrorism-cases/1B69DE977ACEE0549B35AECCAE32F2F6
    7 Nov 2019 · Yet in no US case have judges or juries acquitted terrorism defendants solely on entrapment grounds (Laguardia Reference Laguardia2013). The ...