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F.B.I. Scrutinizes Antiwar Rallies

News ArchiveSubmitted by Reverend Chuck0:

F.B.I. Scrutinizes Antiwar Rallies



By ERIC LICHTBLAU

NY Times

Published: November 23, 2003

WASHINGTON, Nov. 22 — The Federal Bureau of Investigation has collected extensive information on the tactics, training and organization of antiwar demonstrators and has advised local law enforcement officials to report any suspicious activity at protests to its counterterrorism squads, according to interviews and a confidential bureau memorandum.

The memorandum, which the bureau sent to local law enforcement agencies last month in advance of antiwar demonstrations in Washington and San Francisco, detailed how protesters have sometimes used "training camps" to rehearse for demonstrations, the Internet to raise money and gas masks to defend against tear gas. The memorandum analyzed lawful activities like recruiting demonstrators, as well as illegal activities like using fake documentation to get into a secured site.

F.B.I. officials said in interviews that the intelligence-gathering effort was aimed at identifying anarchists and "extremist elements" plotting violence, not at monitoring the political speech of law-abiding protesters.

The initiative has won the support of some local police, who view it as a critical way to maintain order at large-scale demonstrations. Indeed, some law enforcement officials said they believed the F.B.I.'s approach had helped to ensure that nationwide antiwar demonstrations in recent months, drawing hundreds of thousands of protesters, remained largely free of violence and disruption.

But some civil rights advocates and legal scholars said the monitoring program could signal a return to the abuses of the 1960's and 1970's, when J. Edgar Hoover was the F.B.I. director and agents routinely spied on political protesters like the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

"The F.B.I. is dangerously targeting Americans who are engaged in nothing more than lawful protest and dissent," said Anthony Romero, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union. "The line between terrorism and legitimate civil disobedience is blurred, and I have a serious concern about whether we're going back to the days of Hoover."

Herman Schwartz, a constitutional law professor at American University who has written about F.B.I. history, said collecting intelligence at demonstrations is probably legal.

But he added: "As a matter of principle, it has a very serious chilling effect on peaceful demonstration. If you go around telling people, `We're going to ferret out information on demonstrations,' that deters people. People don't want their names and pictures in F.B.I. files."

The abuses of the Hoover era, which included efforts by the F.B.I. to harass and discredit Hoover's political enemies under a program known as Cointelpro, led to tight restrictions on F.B.I. investigations of political activities.

Those restrictions were relaxed significantly last year, when Attorney General John Ashcroft issued guidelines giving agents authority to attend political rallies, mosques and any event "open to the public."

Mr. Ashcroft said the Sept. 11 attacks made it essential that the F.B.I. be allowed to investigate terrorism more aggressively. The bureau's recent strategy in policing demonstrations is an outgrowth of that policy, officials said.

"We're not concerned with individuals who are exercising their constitutional rights," one F.B.I. official said. "But it's obvious that there are individuals capable of violence at these events. We know that there are anarchists that are actively involved in trying to sabotage and commit acts of violence at these different events, and we also know that these large gatherings would be a prime target for terrorist groups."

Civil rights advocates, relying largely on anecdotal evidence, have complained for months that federal officials have surreptitiously sought to suppress the First Amendment rights of antiwar demonstrators.

Critics of the Bush administration's Iraq policy, for instance, have sued the government to learn how their names ended up on a "no fly" list used to stop suspected terrorists from boarding planes. Civil rights advocates have accused federal and local authorities in Denver and Fresno, Calif., of spying on antiwar demonstrators or infiltrating planning meetings. And the New York Police Department this year questioned many of those arrested at demonstrations about their political affiliations, before halting the practice and expunging the data in the face of public criticism.

The F.B.I. memorandum, however, appears to offer the first corroboration of a coordinated, nationwide effort to collect intelligence regarding demonstrations.

The memorandum, circulated on Oct. 15 — just 10 days before many thousands gathered in Washington and San Francisco to protest the American occupation of Iraq — noted that the bureau "possesses no information indicating that violent or terrorist activities are being planned as part of these protests" and that "most protests are peaceful events."

But it pointed to violence at protests against the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank as evidence of potential disruption. Law enforcement officials said in interviews that they had become particularly concerned about the ability of antigovernment groups to exploit demonstrations and promote a violent agenda.

"What a great opportunity for an act of terrorism, when all your resources are dedicated to some big event and you let your guard down," a law enforcement official involved in securing recent demonstrations said. "What would the public say if we didn't look for criminal activity and intelligence at these events?"

The memorandum urged local law enforcement officials "to be alert to these possible indicators of protest activity and report any potentially illegal acts" to counterterrorism task forces run by the F.B.I. It warned about an array of threats, including homemade bombs and the formation of human chains.

The memorandum discussed demonstrators' "innovative strategies," like the videotaping of arrests as a means of "intimidation" against the police. And it noted that protesters "often use the Internet to recruit, raise funds and coordinate their activities prior to demonstrations."

"Activists may also make use of training camps to rehearse tactics and counter-strategies for dealing with the police and to resolve any logistical issues," the memorandum continued. It also noted that protesters may raise money to help pay for lawyers for those arrested.

F.B.I. counterterrorism officials developed the intelligence cited in the memorandum through firsthand observation, informants, public sources like the Internet and other methods, officials said.

Officials said the F.B.I. treats demonstrations no differently than other large-scale and vulnerable gatherings. The aim, they said, was not to monitor protesters but to gather intelligence.

Critics said they remained worried. "What the F.B.I. regards as potential terrorism," Mr. Romero of the A.C.L.U. said, "strikes me as civil disobedience."

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F.B.I. Scrutinizes Antiwar Rallies | 13 comments | Create New Account
The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.
comment by Reverend Chuck0
Authored by: Anonymous on Saturday, November 22 2003 @ 02:37 PM CST
What should our response to this be? I would argue that we should just continue to do what we are doing and not let this government psyops put a damper on our movement. I know that I\'m not changing anything I\'m doing or backing away from speaking my views. Since I haven\'t changed anything anyway since 9-11, I just see this as more noise coming from a government that has lost its legitimacy and is getting more desperate. Many of you talk about fighting a class war against the capitalists--well, some of us have been taking that seriously for many years. And we really haven\'t even been pushing the envelope, if you look at what American radicals back in the late 19th and early 20th century were doing.

Activists and freedom-loving people cannot afford to let thiese threats slow us down. We all know that the FBI is an incompetent organization that can\'t be everywhere at once. And we are, so to speak, \"everywhere.\" So let\'s all just have a collective laugh at the FBI.

This news also means that we may see more people joining our ranks, as they get radicalized by the disconnect between what America is supposed to be and the right wing police state it has become.

F.B.I. = Famous But Incompetent
comment by aaron
Authored by: Anonymous on Saturday, November 22 2003 @ 03:20 PM CST
So they\'re talking about our \"training camps\" now. That sounds familiar--isn\'t there some other group that utilizes training camps? Oh, that\'s right, TERRORISTS.
comment by Reverend Chuck0
Authored by: Anonymous on Saturday, November 22 2003 @ 03:33 PM CST
You mean like that one terrorist training camp in Georgia called the School of Americas?
comment by walking revolution
Authored by: Anonymous on Saturday, November 22 2003 @ 05:23 PM CST
i say just keep what were doing but up a notch!
unfortunately nothing about this story is surprising.
comment by
Authored by: Anonymous on Saturday, November 22 2003 @ 05:52 PM CST
The memorandum discussed demonstrators\' \"innovative strategies,\" like the videotaping of arrests as a means of \"intimidation\" against the police.

Uh... it scares the police to have its brutality exposed?? No way!
comment by Frank
Authored by: Anonymous on Saturday, November 22 2003 @ 06:12 PM CST
The FBI attending our training camps is no new phenomena. In 2000, while we were training people for the the TABD protests in Cincinatti, the FBI and Indianapolis Joint Terrorism Task force sent at least one undercover agent to our training meeting in Bloomington, IN. We found out about it in my FBI files obtained through discovery when they falsely arrested me for spiking trees. The same agent tried to gather information at a support rally for those arrested in a critical mass bike ride that kicked off a week of resistance against government harassment. He was pointed out, and chased away to the sounds of everyone singing the song people sing when a basketball player fouls out (na na na naa, na na na naa, hey hey hey, good bye). He ran away literally.

The point is that they have never stopped spying on activists. They have just become more public about it in the last couple of years. They are using the patriot act now to help them collect the same evidence legally that they always have collected, illegally.

I agree with chuck that we have to keep on doing what we are doing and spend minimal time on dealing with their bullshit. But we do need to spend at least some time exposing them for the fascists they are. Our safety as a movement depends upon us doing this.

Now I live in Michigan, and the police have begun to film the anti-war demonstrations. These demonstrations are pretty small and really tame.

The police actually prevented us from having a demonstration in front a ford dealership a few weeks ago. They threatened us with arrest if we stayed, and attempted to search me. We could not get arrested that day, so we left. They pulled us over as we drove away and tried to get all of our id. They said they were conducting an investigation. We still refused to give information and they let us go.

It was obvious that they had been prepped by someone and made to feel that we were a real security risk, even though all we were going to do was hold a few signs during rush hour traffic.

It just so happens that earlier in the week Marie and myself had been visited by the FBI and issued subpoenas to give hand prints and DNA to a federal grand jury, and we had resisted. (we are still fighting the subpoenas). Everyone else in the movement who they made contact with just recieved a visit to ask questions (which people refused, by and large). It is a blatant attempt to intimidate and silence the movement to stop water privatization.

One last story. The week before we were subpeonaed, we had a demo at a meijer grocery store to protest the sale of Ice Mountain bottled water. Meijer was on edge. They had been told by someone that our group is unpredictable. They had a couple of cops on duty and at least 10 security guards, two of which infiltrated our pre-demo meeting. THey were looking for trouble, and looking to make trouble. They ended up arresting Marie in the store for wearing a t-shirt that read \"Ask me about Ice Mountain.\"

This stuff parrallels the story above. The FBI preping local law enforcement to be \"vigilant\" at protests to prevent violence and \"terrorism.\" It really starts to put some facts behind what we have been experiencing over the last month or so.

comment by Reverend Chuck0
Authored by: Anonymous on Saturday, November 22 2003 @ 06:28 PM CST
Thanks, Frank, for this informative comment. The police are always spying on activists, but we activists often help them out by being overly paranoid, using \"security culture\" to justify stupid things, and being irresponsible with gossip about other activists. The cops normally put people into protest groups around the time of big protests. My feeling is that long term cop survelliance is reserved for hard core direct action movements, like animal rights. But everybody should keep in mind that the cops just don\'t have the resources to spy on us constantly. I probably have one of the biggest FBI files around, but I just don\'t let this stuff bother me. Only a few of us are going to soak up the majority of police attention, which leaves the rest of you to do all kinds of interesting things. And in the long run, the best thing we can do to fight back is to create more anarchists and radicals.
comment by anok
Authored by: Anonymous on Saturday, November 22 2003 @ 06:47 PM CST
So anyways, all this shit is just scare tactics to prevent people from wanting to attend demos, or organise.

That just means we have to be more aware of the people around us. Security is the issue to press, and staying incognito (if you want to stay off the radar).

But anyways, all you need is a bug sweeper and an understanding of what and what not to say.
comment by
Authored by: Anonymous on Saturday, November 22 2003 @ 08:19 PM CST
Training camps, intimidating the police, and \". It warned about an array of threats, including homemade bombs and the formation of human chains.
\"


bombs and human chains
comment by pr
Authored by: Anonymous on Saturday, November 22 2003 @ 10:33 PM CST
They were letting their informants carry out hits and setting up totally innocent people while releasing serial killers like Sammy gravano loose.Now its just come out that their ballistics evidence is suss...must be time to give them more money to help set up the next \'replacement killers\' to take over form Al Quida.
Like the CIA, the more incompetent they get the more money they get.
Well it wont help them much now as small groups and individuals have exponentially increasing power and they just keep tripping over their big flat feet.
I advise everyone who is \'out\' to write in under FOI and snow them under with paper work.
Those still anonymous hoax call them and photo them and map their networks and nodes.Their organization is much more vulnerable to sabotage than ours.
With the net CoinTelPro doesn\'t work for them anymore either.
These are the death rattles of a STASI style top heavy homeland security titanic - FBI intelligence!?

Here\'s laughing at you.
comment by ek
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, November 23 2003 @ 08:40 AM CST
If anyone writes a response please post it- we\'re better at PR, and much better dressed generally.
Might be a good time to make sure your friends have freshened up their knowledge about COINTELPRO.

If anyone has a good, especially updated to the War on Terror, article to counter this and respond please post some links and send em to your friends who have just gone to their first marches... or make one maybe...

sigh someday the NY Times will be \"anectodal evidence\"...
comment by mishap
Authored by: Anonymous on Monday, November 24 2003 @ 11:28 AM CST
Another aspect of this kind of release of FBI information is to create dissension amongst various groups, anti-war or others. For a while now the authorities have sought to drive a wedge between non-violent, traditional protesters and anarchists/assorted other radicals. By portraying anarchists as violent and wishing to cause violence regardless of target or reason, the idea is to horrify the pacifists and less radical people who oppose the war/government action. I\'ve heard the following so many times over the last few years from Clinton down to street cops: We\'re fine with peaceful protest, but we won\'t allow laws to be broken or violence or vandalism.
For those engaged in demonstrations, it is probably important to make connections with those less radical, preferably face to face, but even with a statement of some sort.
comment by Reverend Chuck0
Authored by: Anonymous on Monday, November 24 2003 @ 06:04 PM CST
Right. Almost all of the charade surrounding \"peaceful protests\" is an attempt to divide people and marginalize radicals. And many less radical protesters fall for it. Just look at how this crap grows--witness the myths about police infiltration of black blocs. I suspect that some protesters honestly think that the black bloc is all cops.