A New Federal War on Dissent?
by
James Bovard
by James Bovard
On
October 15, 2003, the FBI sent Intelligence Bulletin #89 to 17,000
local and state law-enforcement agencies around the country. The
bulletin warned of pending marches in Washington and San Francisco
against Bushs Iraq policy and stated,
While the FBI possesses no information indicating that violent or
terrorist activities are being planned as part of these protests,
the possibility exists that elements of the activist community may
attempt to engage in violent, destructive, or disruptive acts.
The FBI catalogued
some of the new threats to public safety:
Several effective and innovative strategies are commonly used by
protesters prior to, during, and after demonstrations.... 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.
Saying that
dissenters are attending a training camp is intended
to suggest that they are akin to the killers who attended Afghan
terrorist training camps. And the fact that protesters use the Internet
is as irrelevant as that earlier generations of protesters used
the U.S. mail. Since FBI computers are far behind the technology
curve, FBI analysts may be unaware that Internet use is pervasive
among Americans of all political stripes.
After warning
about the danger that extremist elements could engage
in vandalism, trespassing, and the
formation of human chains, the FBI cast suspicion on almost
anyone attending a protest:
Even the more peaceful techniques can create a climate of disorder,
block access to a site, draw large numbers of police officers to
a specific location in order to weaken security at other locations,
obstruct traffic, and possibly intimidate people from attending
the events being protested.
The FBI promulgated
the doctrine of collective guilt for all demonstrators as
if anyone on the streets in the same city as a masked anarchist
troublemaker is as guilty as the person who throws the brick through
a Starbucks window.
The confidential
FBI intelligence bulletin revealed to the nations law officers
that protesters might use media equipment (video cameras,
photographic equipment, audio tape recorders, microphones, and computer
and radio equipment) ... for documenting potential cases of police
brutality and for distribution of information over the internet.
Apparently, the FBI sees videotaping an arrest as an illicit infringement
on a police officers creativity.
The FBI also
portrayed practically any defensive measures by demonstrators as
highly suspicious: Extremists may be prepared to defend themselves
against law enforcement officials during the course of a demonstration.
The FBI offered a list of tell-tale signs of subversion:
Masks (gas masks, goggles, scarves, scuba masks, filter masks, and
sunglasses) can serve to minimize the effects of tear gas and pepper
spray as well as obscure ones identity. Extremists may also
employ ... body protection equipment (layered clothing, hard hats
and helmets, sporting equipment, life jackets, etc.) to protect
themselves during marches.
Implying that
wearing layered clothing is an unfair or illicit tactic
is bizarre as if anything that blunts the impact of a policemans
baton should be considered aiding and abetting al-Qaeda. The FBI
also implied that any self-defense measures should be considered
a provocation. And does the FBI really think that wearing sunglasses
is a sign that a person is conspiring to avoid the effects of tear
gas?
The intelligence
bulletin concluded,
Law enforcement agencies should be alert to these possible indicators
of protest activity and report any potentially illegal acts
to the nearest FBI Joint Terrorism Task Force.
If local police take the hint and start pouring in information,
the task force could build a Total Information Awareness-like
database on anti-war groups and activists.
A policy of
domestic spying?
The FBI intelligence
bulletin was first publicly disclosed by the New York Timess
Eric Lichtblau on November 23, 2003. The Times added that
the FBI intelligence bulletin appears to offer the first corroboration
of a coordinated, nationwide effort to collect intelligence regarding
demonstrations.
Michael Ratner,
president of the Center for Constitutional Rights, observed,
Routine spying on dissidents is a sign of a police state, and unless
we stop this administrations cavalier attitude towards fundamental
rights we face a serious threat to our democracy.
Herman Schwartz,
a constitutional law professor at American University, commented,
If you go around telling people, Were going to ferret
out information on demonstrations, that deters people. People
dont want their names and pictures in FBI files.
An FBI official
who insisted on anonymity told the New York Times,
Were not concerned with individuals who are exercising their
constitutional rights. But its obvious that there are individuals
capable of violence at these events.
The capable
of violence standard justifies surveillance of almost anyone
except quadriplegics strapped into wheelchairs. The FBI in the late
1960s and early 1970s justified surveillance of Womens Lib
meetings including keeping detailed records of each attendees
sexual grievances on the basis of the fear that libbers might
become violent. Given the FBIs expansive definition of potential
violence in the past, this net can snare almost any group
or individual who falls into official disfavor.
In response
to the Times article, the FBI sent a letter to the editor,
which it publicly released along with the confidential intelligence
bulletin. The FBI stated,
The bulletin is not focused on political protesters or others who
exercise their first amendment rights to protest the policies of
the government, but simply cites the fact that anarchists and others
have used violent tactics to disrupt otherwise peaceful demonstrations....
The bulletin does not suggest that state and local law enforcement
should collect information on peaceful demonstrators.
But this sanitized
interpretation is at odds with the intelligence bulletins
specific request that local law enforcement watch for possible
indicators of protest activity and report to the FBI potentially
illegal acts. And the FBIs reference to extremists
who wear layered clothing implies that most wintertime
protesters north of the Mason-Dixon Line should be on the target
list.
Subpoena abuse
There are
other warning signs that the FBI is off the leash. In February 2004,
the FBIs Joint Terrorism Task Force issued subpoenas for information
on an anti-war meeting held at the Des Moines, Iowa, campus of Drake
University. The subpoena demanded all records of Drake University
campus security reflecting any observations made of the November
15, 2003, meeting, including any records of persons in charge or
control of the meeting, and any records of attendees.
The feds also
subpoenaed four anti-war activists, including the leader of the
Catholic Peace Ministry, to compel them to testify before a grand
jury. After controversy arose over the subpoenas, the feds issued
a new subpoena muzzling Drake University officials from making any
public comments about the prior subpoenas. The feds also demanded
information about leaders of the National Lawyer Guilds
Drake University chapter, the location of NLGs local offices,
its membership rolls, and any annual reports issued since 2002.
The president of the guild, Michael Ayers, complained, The
law is clear that the use of the grand jury to investigate protected
political activities or to intimidate protesters exceeds its authority.
According
to several experts, this was the first time in decades that the
feds had issued such a subpoena to a university. The feds lost control
of the spin on the investigation and, after widespread criticism,
canceled the Drake University subpoenas. There is no way to know
how many other subpoenas may have been quietly complied with by
colleges or other organizations that eschewed a public confrontation
with the feds.
The following
week, two U.S. Army Intelligence agents descended upon the University
of Texas law school in Austin. They entered the office of the Journal
of Women and the Law and demanded that the editors turn over
a roster of the people who attended a recent conference on Islam
and women. The editors denied having a list; the behavior of one
agent was described as intimidating.
The agents
then demanded contact information for the student who organized
the conference, Sahar Aziz. University of Texas law professor Douglas
Laycock commented,
We certainly hope that the Army doesnt believe that attending
a conference on Islamic law or Islam and women is itself ground
for investigation.
Though the
Posse Comitatus Act of 1878 prohibits the use of the military for
domestic law enforcement, the Bush administration is successfully
pushing to have the U.S. military become more involved in domestic
snooping.
It took more
than a decade after the first big anti-war protests in the 1960s
before Americans learned how far the FBI had gone to suppress and
subvert public opposition to the Vietnam War. There have been no
congressional hearings spurred as a result of FBI Intelligence Bulletin
#89 despite the FBIs stark animosity to free speech
therein.
Is the FBI
now considering a similar order to field offices as the one it sent
in 1968, telling them to gather information illustrating the scurrilous
and depraved nature of many of the characters, activities, habits,
and living conditions representative of New Left adherents
but this time focused on those who oppose Bushs Brave
New World?
Since
the FBI admits surveilling anti-war groups and urging local police
to send in information on protesters, how far might the feds already
be going? Is the FBI following the standard that former Attorney
General John Ashcroft publicly proclaimed in December 2001
presuming that those who invoke phantoms of lost liberty
are giving ammunition to Americas enemies? Unfortunately,
because of the Bush administrations secrecy policy, Americans
cannot know how far the feds have already gone to suppress dissent.
November
17, 2005
James Bovard
[send him mail] is the author
of The
Bush Betrayal and Terrorism
& Tyranny: Trampling Freedom, Justice, and Peace to Rid the
World of Evil serves as a policy advisor for The
Future of Freedom Foundation.
Copyright ©
2005 Future of Freedom Foundation
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