FROM THE EDITOR.

AuthorCruickshank, Paul

In this month's feature article, Raphael Marcus, a supervisory intelligence research specialist at the NYPD Intelligence Bureau, examines the nature of the crime-terror nexus in the United States based on a dataset of 237 U.S. Islamic State defendants and perpetrators. He writes that although seemingly less prounounced than for racially and ethnically motivated violent extremists, "the crime-terror nexus in the United States is observable in about one-third of Islamic State cases and had an impact on defendants' pathway to terrorism." He notes that "the prevalence of prior violent crime in 20 percent of U.S. Islamic State defendants may provide indicators to law enforcement related to the propensity for violence of a subject exhibiting signs of extremism" and that "in the United States, there appears to be little organizational overlap between gangs and Islamic State extremists despite some similarities related to recruitment patterns and underlying mechanisms that draw individuals to such groups." He adds that "in prison, relationships formed by U.S. Islamic State inmates only occasionally had plot relevance, but exposure to charismatic or high-profile terrorist inmates was a key factor in the cases of prison radicalization."

Our interview is with Robert Hannigan who served as Director of GCHQ, the United Kingdom's largest intelligence and security agency and NSA equivalent, between 2014 and 2017. Prior to that, Hannigan's...

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