Denver Post editorial: Combating the terrorism we fear, without a ban or a list
Even though it ultimately didn’t stop a tragedy, local mosque leaders deserve praise for sending an e-mail alerting law enforcement that a white Muslim from Texas had been radicalized and posed a threat.
That e-mail, obtained by The Denver Post, expressed concern about suspected killer Joshua Cummings, who had publicly expressed a desire for Sharia law in the U.S.
It was Scott Von Lanken’s best chance of surviving the night of Jan. 31, when, without warning, a gun was put to his neck as he worked security outside Denver’s Union Station.
It’s heartbreaking that the e-mail, sent on Dec. 24 to a U.S. Department of Homeland Security official in Colorado, didn’t save Von Lanken.