Men Accused of Helping Ghosn Flee Japan Challenge US Extradition Case

Security footage shows Michael Taylor (center) and George-Antoine Zayek, both wanted by Japan, at passport control at Istanbul Airport in Turkey in December. (AP)
Security footage shows Michael Taylor (center) and George-Antoine Zayek, both wanted by Japan, at passport control at Istanbul Airport in Turkey in December. (AP)
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Men Accused of Helping Ghosn Flee Japan Challenge US Extradition Case

Security footage shows Michael Taylor (center) and George-Antoine Zayek, both wanted by Japan, at passport control at Istanbul Airport in Turkey in December. (AP)
Security footage shows Michael Taylor (center) and George-Antoine Zayek, both wanted by Japan, at passport control at Istanbul Airport in Turkey in December. (AP)

Lawyers for the former Green Beret and son wanted by Japan for helping former Nissan Motor Co. boss Carlos Ghosn flee the country on Monday argued US authorities wrongly arrested them for aiding a crime that they say does not exist in Japan: bail jumping.

Lawyers for Michael Taylor and his son, Peter Taylor, in a motion asked a federal judge in Boston to quash the US warrants issued last month for their arrests or release them on bail while their extradition case proceeds.

US authorities arrested the Taylors in May at Japan’s request for allegedly smuggling Ghosn out of the country in a box while he was out on bail awaiting trial on financial charges.

Their lawyers on Monday argued that neither bail jumping nor helping someone do so are crimes in Japan.

The defense attorneys said that fact is “so far beyond dispute that the Japanese government has begun considering whether it should amend the law to make such conduct a crime.”

While Japan has issued arrest warrants for the Taylors, their lawyers said the crime stated in the Japanese warrants is an immigration offense, a non-extraditable misdemeanor.

The lawyers added that neither Taylor, including Michael, a US Army Special Forces veteran who founded a private security company, pose a flight risk requiring them to be held without bail.

The Justice Department and Japanese embassy in Washington did not respond to requests for comment.

US authorities arrested the Taylors in Harvard, Massachusetts, on May 20 at the request of Japan, which in January issued arrest warrants for both men in connection with facilitating the Dec. 29, 2019 escape. A third man, George-Antoine Zayek, is also wanted by Tokyo in connection with facilitating the escape.

Ghosn fled to Lebanon, his childhood home, while he was awaiting trial on charges that he engaged in financial wrongdoing, including by understating his compensation in Nissan’s financial statements. He denies wrongdoing.



The Unraveling of the Man Who Almost Killed Trump

The Secret Service surrounded Donald J. Trump after shots were fired last year at his presidential rally in Butler, Pa. Credit...Doug Mills/The New York Times
The Secret Service surrounded Donald J. Trump after shots were fired last year at his presidential rally in Butler, Pa. Credit...Doug Mills/The New York Times
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The Unraveling of the Man Who Almost Killed Trump

The Secret Service surrounded Donald J. Trump after shots were fired last year at his presidential rally in Butler, Pa. Credit...Doug Mills/The New York Times
The Secret Service surrounded Donald J. Trump after shots were fired last year at his presidential rally in Butler, Pa. Credit...Doug Mills/The New York Times

Steve Eder, Tawnell D. Hobbs*

Thomas Crooks, 20, was a nerdy engineering student on the dean’s list. He stockpiled explosive materials for months before his attack on Donald Trump, as his mental health eroded.

Crooks was acting strangely. Sometimes he danced around his bedroom late into the night. Other times, he talked to himself with his hands waving around.These unusual behaviors intensified last summer, after he graduated with high honors from a community college.

He also visited a shooting range, grew out his thin brown hair and searched online for “major depressive disorder” and “depression crisis.” His father noticed the shift — mental health problems ran in the family.

On the afternoon of July 13, Crooks told his parents he was heading to the range and left home with a rifle. Hours later, he mounted a roof at a presidential campaign rally in western Pennsylvania and tried to assassinate Donald Trump.

A New York Times examination of the last years of the young man’s life found that he went through a gradual and largely hidden transformation, from a meek engineering student critical of political polarization to a focused killer who tried to build bombs.

For months he operated in secret, using aliases and encrypted networks, all while showing hints of a mental illness that may have caused his mind to unravel to an extent not previously reported.

Dark Path

Crooks followed his dark path with seemingly little notice from those closest to him. He stockpiled explosive materials in the small house he shared with his parents in Bethel Park, Pennsylvania.

Investigators later found a crude homemade bomb inside his bedroom, not far from where his parents slept.

Before his deadly assault, Thomas Crooks’s only record of trouble was a lunch detention in middle school for chewing gum.

In high school, he earned a top score on the SAT — 1530 out of a possible 1600 — and received perfect marks on three Advanced Placement exams, according to his academic records.

He did not socialize much, but came out of his shell in a technology program in which he built computers.

His teacher, Xavier Harmon, nicknamed him “Muscles” — an ironic nod to his slight frame — which made him laugh.

One high school classmate said Crooks enjoyed talking about the economy and cryptocurrencies, encouraging others to invest.

On the rare occasions when the conversation turned to politics, he seemed to be in the middle of the road.

No Political Affiliation

On President Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s inauguration day in January 2021, Crooks donated $15 to a committee backing Democrats.

But when he turned 18 that fall, he registered as a Republican.

His family’s political affiliations were as diverse as the swing state they lived in: His older sister, Katherine, and his father were registered as Libertarians, and his mother was a Democrat.

In April 2023, Crooks showed a glimpse of his frustration with American politics. In an essay arguing for ranked-choice voting, he lamented “divisive and incendiary campaigns which are pulling the country apart.”

“As we move closer to the 2024 elections we should consider carefully the means by which we elect our officials,” Crooks wrote. “We need an election system that promotes kindness and cooperation instead of division and anger.”

Around the time he wrote the essay, he began using an alias to buy from online firearms vendors, according to the Federal Bureau of Investigation. He would make at least 25 gun-related purchases before the fateful rally.

Final Preparations

On Dec. 6, 2023, about seven months before the shooting, he rapidly cycled through about a dozen news websites, including CNN, The New York Times and Fox News, before visiting the Trump administration’s archives, the logs show.

Minutes later, he visited seven gun websites, including one focused on the AR-15, similar to the rifle he would use in the attack. Later that day, he paid a visit to the shooting range.

Interviews with his teachers, friends and co-workers suggest that many people who interacted with him regularly did not know he was troubled, let alone capable of premeditated murder.

His father noticed his mental health declining in the year before the shooting, and particularly in the months after graduation.

He later told investigators that he had seen his son talking to himself and dancing around his bedroom late at night, and that his family had a history of mental health and addiction issues, according to a report from the Pennsylvania State Police, parts of which were shared with The New York Times.

About a week before the shooting, Crooks’s internet searches became especially focused, the FBI said.

In the weeks after the shooting, the FBI released preliminary findings based on details gleaned from interviews and Crooks’s devices suggesting that he had been planning an attack for over a year.

The New York Times