Hardee insisted that Goldstein had a political motive for his plan. A big part of it, Hardee told authorities, was payback. Goldstein, he said, wanted revenge for the September 11, 2001, attacks on
But Goldstein's lawyer, Myles Malman, saw things differently. To him, the root of Goldstein's rage was more internal than external and had little to do with his Jewishness or lack of it.
As Malman put it in an interview with The Forward, Goldstein's motivation wasn't as much politics as it was madness, the product of a variety of maladies, "obsessive compulsive disorder, bi-polar disorder and... depression," for which Goldstein was taking a "cocktail" of psychiatric drugs that led him to collect a massive arsenal of explosives.
There was, Malman said, no question that Goldstein planned to destroy the mosque and community center the "physical building" as Malman put it. But Malman said he was convinced that the rest of the plan, the detailed plot to gun down or knife victims as they ran for their lives, was all a fantasy. "He never actually planned to do that," Malman insists.
To the psychiatrist, the Associated Press wrote, "that suggested the plan had the makings of a fantasy, though Goldstein at times believed he could carry it out.
All the same, prosecutors insisted that Goldstein's plan was far from simply the product of a fevered imagination. It was a calculated hate-fueled plot to inflict as much carnage as possible.
Goldstein's plan, prosecutors were quoted as saying at the time, involved "real people, real locations, real bombs." His target was not an individual Muslim, but "an entire population of people."