Home  >  Posted July 16, 08
Police Tactics Suppress Free Speech
First Amendment Blues
Source: Public Eye. org
www.publiceye.org/magazine/v22n4/ freespeech.html


By Heidi Boghosian and Abby
Scher

"
Three of the cops had jumped out
of the white nondescript van and
attacked me. They were all wearing
ski masks and dressed as anarchist
black bloc protesters. I threw up my
hands and offered no resistance.

They punched me and I fell to the
ground and attempted to protect
myself. They kept punching me,
kicking me, and then they dragged
me into the back of the van. They
took me to a small windowless room
in the police station where they
proceeded to interrogate me
about my political affiliations,
schooling, and friends. They
never took off their ski masks
."
- Miles Swanson, Legal Observer at
the Free Trade Agreement of the
Americas meeting in Miami,
November 2003

Miles Swanson was a legal observer monitoring whether police stuck to the law in their
treatment of protestors at the November 2003 Free Trade Agreement of the Americas
meeting in Miami. That was the meeting where busloads of steelworkers were stopped
before they could join the demonstrations, while others protesting peacefully on the streets
were shot with rubber bullets.

Swanson is active in the National Lawyers Guild, a progressive bar association whose
members often serve as legal observers at protests. Even before the demonstration, police
featured him in a PowerPoint identifying key people coming to Miami for the protests.

Then he became victim of a "snatch squad," a new police tactic where officers drag
protestors off, having singled them out based on their perceived political ideology. Does a
protestor dress in black like an anarchist? Is she a ringleader? Better watch out.

It is unconstitutional to target someone for arrest based on their political views, but snatch
squads are only one of many new government tactics that are chilling Americans' free
speech rights.

These tactics are not authorized by laws passed by Congress or a state legislatures, but are
devised and adopted informally through expanding networks of police agencies.

Because the tactics emerge in relatively informal ways, the overall impact on activities
protected by the Constitution's First Amendment - particularly free speech and the right of
assembly - evades public scrutiny.

Yet as police violence and harassment grow, these actions become normalized, sending a
message that the very act of protest is unlawful. The police's aggression heated up as war
brewed and burst open, driving a politics of fear, suggesting that activists are violent,
activists are terrorists, and strong measures are needed to curb the threat from within. It
mutes opposition by raising the stakes of speaking out.

We now know more about these tactics and their spread thanks to lawsuits around the
country challenging federal, state and local police targeting of activists.

Because some of their worst - and most revealing - offenses took place around the party
conventions of 2004 and 2000, progressive lawyers are drawing lessons from the past to
prepare for defending constitutional free speech rights in another election year.

Even now the U.S. Secret Service and other agencies are preparing for the Democratic
Convention, August 25-28 in Denver and the Republican Convention, September 1-4 in St.
Paul. Whether or not the lawsuits - or the softening of the hysteria that accompanied Bush's
drive to war - will dampen the police response, those of us defending free speech
understand their playbook and will come prepared.


Pre-emptive Policing

These new tactics serve to chill speech even before concerned citizens have spoken.
Mass arrests round people up even as they are assembling. Police deny permits for
demonstrations based on who is doing the demonstrating and what they want to say.

Squads force demonstrators into constricted "free speech" zones, using pop-up police lines
to trap protesters before conducting mass illicit arrests and detentions for those caught on
the wrong side of the line.

They routinely use supposedly nonlethal weapons like rubber or wooden bullets, pepper
spray, and Tasers on people gathering peacefully. Less visibly but no less chilling, police
used fire code violations as a way to close down activists' organizing centers, as in
Philadelphia before the 2000 Republican convention.1

At the federal level, civil libertarians pay a lot of attention to the way the Bush Administration
has enlarged the scope of spying on citizens behind closed doors, with or without the
approval of Congress.

With the aid of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, organized regionally through Joint
Terrorism Task Forces, the same is happening at the local and state levels. New York City,
with its own homeland security director, is a lead innovator.

To avoid public scrutiny, the city's police department finds unconventional channels to enact
rules that subtly constrict free speech. In 2006, the NYPD proposed requiring permits for a
host of mundane activities such as riding bicycles and gathering with friends on sidewalks -
prompted by an increased suspicion of bicycle activists who ride monthly in "Critical Mass"
events to promote biking and safer city streets.

After a judge ruled the proposed parade permit law was beyond the bounds of the
constitution and a burden on free expression, the NYPD proposed even more impractical
regulations which were eventually enacted. By making protest a threatening or difficult
experience - as with free speech zones and pop-up police lines - police are discouraging
people from turning out to peaceably assemble and present their views.

The New York Times and others raised an outcry when the city denied demonstrators a
permit to gather on the Great Lawn of Central Park during the 2004 Republican Convention.
A lawsuit failed to win the permit in time for the convention - clearly legal delays are yet
another mode of repressing free speech.

More commonly, government agencies raise permit fees or require that the groups
sponsoring the gathering take out astronomical levels of insurance. The Pentagon
demanded thousands of dollars in fees from those organizing a March 2007 antiwar protest,
only to back down in the face of a threatened lawsuit.

There is another, insidious, form of pre-emptive policing: intimidating or preventing
concerned citizens from joining a demonstration. Sounding a media drumbeat about all the
trouble activists are planning is one way the authorities try to discourage people from
coming out.

Visiting and intimidating people is another. The FBI used both tactics before the 2004
Republican convention when agents dropped in on activists around the country who the FBI
claimed would have information on potential violence.

As the New York Times reported at the time:

    FBI officials are urging agents to canvass their communities for information about
    planned disruptions of the convention and other coming political events, and they say
    they have developed a list of people who they think may have information about
    possible violence. They say the inquiries, which began last month before the
    Democratic convention in Boston, are focused solely on possible crimes, not on
    dissent. 2

The article went on to quote Sarah Bardwell of Denver, a 21-year-old intern of American
Friends Service Committee who was visited: "The message I took from it was that they were
trying to intimidate us into not going to any protests, to let us know that,'hey, we're watching
you.'"

The FBI interviewed dozens, and three St. Louis, Missouri men represented by the local
American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) said they were trailed by agents. An FBI spokeman
explained, "We vetted down a list and went out and knocked on doors and had a laundry list
of questions to ask about possible criminal behavior.

No one was dragged from their homes and put under bright lights." An April 2006 report by
the FBI's Office of the Inspector General dismissed the idea that the agency had done
anything improper or encroached on people's First Amendment rights.

Sometimes the pre-emptive policing tactics are a bit more immediate, as with the
steelworkers trying to get to Miami. During the February 2003 anti-war demonstration on the
east side of Manhattan, police detained people in unheated vehicles who were heading for
the event, preventing them from attending, as a lawsuit by the New York Civil Liberties Union
(NYCLU) demonstrated.

Police set up a patchwork of crowded pens, then slowed people's ability to enter them by
searching bags, creating logjams in a demonstration that attracted at least 750,000; some
frustrated people turned back and never made it to the rally.

One of the most frightening examples of pre-emptive policing involves the gathering of
evidence from people merely because of their political opinions.

Local police have stopped by activists' homes requesting DNA for their files, and the NYPD
detained hundreds of peaceful protestors for mass fingerprinting during the 2004 RNC. The
NYPD only destroyed the fingerprints - which can legally be taken only from people charged
with a violation and whose identity is in question - after the NYCLU sued. 3

In Washington, D.C., a secret FBI intelligence unit and local police detained a group of
protesters in town in April 2002 to demonstrate against the invasion of Iraq.

Officers took them to a downtown parking garage where they were questioned on videotape
about their political and religious beliefs as well as about protests they had attended and
whom they spend time with.4

Police records reveal that the protesters were targeted because they were all wearing black
clothing and were thus believed by police to be anarchists.

In response to efforts by the activists' lawyers at the DC-based Partnership for Civil Justice,
the police expunged their arrest records. Still unresolved is their lawsuit charging that local
and federal law enforcement violated the U.S. Constitution by singling out people for arrest
based on their perceived political ideology, targeting people the government perceived by
their clothing to be anarchists.

Although officers cannot legally collect purely political information unless they suspect
criminal activity, this case shows agents doing exactly that.
The targeting of anti-war demonstrators goes well beyond this incident, as activists
themselves have long known.

Within the past two years, Freedom of Information Act suits and whistleblowers have
documented spying on the pacifist Thomas Merton Center in Pittsburgh, on Oakland's Direct
Action to stop the war, on anti-war groups on the Santa Cruz and Berkeley campuses and
scores more, plus the existence of a secret Pentagon database tracking 186 antiwar
protests and hundreds of groups in 20 states. 5

Police Tamper with Evidence

One of the most disturbing under-the-radar techniques used to impede free speech is
police tampering with evidence in order to justify roundups of peaceful protestors. Once
again, the NYPD is the leader in this area.

During the 2004 Republican National Convention, police doctored video evidence to justify
the unlawful arrests of peaceful bystanders and protesters, giving those altered tapes to
defense attorneys and the courts, and engaging in perjury and evidence tampering.

Alexander Dunlop was one person exonerated after it came out that the police had given his
lawyer a video of his arrest during the RNC which had been edited to justify their claim that
he had resisted.6 An unedited version clearly showed Dunlop asking a police officer for
directions and that he was not involved with a nearby demonstration.

The extent to which such evidence tampering is occurring in police departments around the
country is difficult to know. Had it not been for the volunteer-based group, I-Witness Video,
the doctoring would likely not have been discovered.

Over 200 I-Witness volunteers documented arrests and police activity at the protests,
making sure that their video evidence would be usable, if needed, in later court proceedings.

Working in alliance with legal observers from the National Lawyers Guild who monitored
most of the RNC demonstrations, their videos helped vindicate several people who were
falsely arrested on disorderly conduct charges, and were used in the defense of
approximately 400 of the 1,806 people arrested during the Convention. Eileen Clancy was
the
I-Witness Video volunteer who discovered the tampering on Dunlop's tape:

    "It really hadn't occurred to us that they [the police] were making these kinds of edits.
    It was really shocking. I mean, when we had to put these two tapes on monitors next
    to each other and run them at the same time, and we sat there and you saw the -
    when we saw the cut, I think - I mean, I was astonished that this happened. This is - I
    mean, it's just absolutely outrageous. They took out the parts that basically prove
    he's innocent. So, I mean, it was - it's quite extraordinary this happened." 7

In addition to physical evidence proving video tampering, other examples of police perjury
are now out in the open, thanks to litigation. At a February 2006 Critical Mass ride, NYPD
assistant chief Bruce Smolka pulled graduate student and Guild Legal Observer Adrienne
Wheeler off her bicycle, pinning her to the ground and causing several injuries.

He did not identify himself as a police officer, nor did he ask her to stop her bicycle before
hauling her to the ground. Police issued a traffic ticket to Wheeler, based on police
testimony that she was riding the wrong way on a one-way street.

As was proven later in court, the officer who gave a sworn statement saying she personally
say her riding the wrong way, had lied. In September 2006, a traffic court judge dismissed
charges against Wheeler after NYPD Officer Alfred Ortiz admitted he gave false statements
under oath.

The National Lawyers Guild New York City Chapter provided videotapes of the incident to the
Civilian Complaint Review Board (CCRB) in March showing clearly that Smolka did not
identify himself as an officer nor issue any warning beforehand.

Infiltration and Provacateurs

Beyond police perjury, police infiltration and provocation continues to be a difficult-to-monitor
constraint on free speech. Infiltration and provocation change the tone of protest by initiating
violence falsely attributed to protesters. Using provocateurs, police can actually change the
speech that political groups are trying to communicate.

Jim Dwyer of the New York Times drew on Clancy's forensic video analysis to reveal police
sparking confrontations by arresting police officers who were disguised as activists, both at
the RNC and at Critical Mass bicycle events. 8

Bystanders objected to the false arrests, and the police thus succeeded in creating a conflict
and an unruly situation. As history has shown, during the McCarthy period and other
moments in U.S. history, knowing that political activities could be under scrutiny can
intimidate people and stop them from stepping forward with their political opinions. Yet
infiltration has become widespread, at least in New York City and California, where the
ACLU of Northern California catalogued numerous examples in a July 2006 report. 9

In California, Camille Russell, a Fresno schoolteacher, discovered Peace Fresno was
infiltrated while reading an obituary of a sheriff's deputy killed in a motorcycle accident who
was a member of the group under another name. 10

Campus anti-war activists at Fresno State, a United Food and Commercial Workers at a
labor rally protesting Safeway supermarkets in Contra Costa, and other activists have also
stumbled over plainclothes or undercover officers at events.

In March 2007, Jim Dwyer of the New York Times broke the story of the secret surveillance
going on, as New York City police detectives traveled the world to spy on and infiltrate
groups that might attend RNC protests.11

Recently released records show they were even interested in the FTAA protest where Miles
Swanson was arrested.

Since 2003, New York police officers posed as activists and attended meetings of political,
artistic, and church groups, made friends and exchanged email messages, and, during the
RNC confrontations, reported daily with the NYPD Intelligence Division.

They also spied on a city councilman, Sean Combs, Jay-Z, Alicia Keys, and other stars
connected with the Hip Hop Voters Summit. The pages of intelligence reports - with many
sections blacked out and unreadable - were only released this spring, leaving you
wondering how they saw a threat in the comedy troupe Billionaires for Bush, or Brooklyn
Parents for Peace.

The new chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, Bennie Thompson, met
with the NYPD in May 2007 to express his concern that police spying had violated civil
liberties and gone into states and countries outside of its jurisdiction. 12

The New York Police Commissioner continues to say the RNC was his department's finest
hour, and continues to ignore a federal court order to release its intelligence records from
that period in response to an NYCLU lawsuit. 13

Weakening Old Limits on Surveillance

    " I went to the 2000 DNC prepared for trouble. I saw then-LAPD Chief Bernard Parks
    brandishing his new toys - an arsenal of "less-lethal" weapons - cavalierly pledging
    there would be no replay of the Seattle WTO in his city. That's why, along with pens,
    paper, and other tools of legal observing, I had a hockey helmet in my backpack.
    Not that it did much good. It didn't protect me from the pepper spray in my face or the
    club across my back. And it certainly didn't help when I got shot. The rubber bullet hit
    me on the thigh as I tried to run away, knocking me off my feet and leaving me
    helpless."

    "As I watched the LAPD beat peaceful demonstrators at the Immigrant Rights march
    on May Day [seven years later] I wasn't surprised. Disregard for the demonstrators'
    rights seems to be ingrained in the LAPD, no matter how much settlements, consent
    decrees or court judgments cost them. They'll do it again." -Dave Saldana, Asst. Prof.
    of Journalism at Iowa State University, attorney, and NLG member.


The NYPD widened its spying on political groups and people in 2003 despite a court ruling
restricting its power to do so. It burst the bounds of limits placed on it by the courts following
the exposure in the 1970s of decades of spying abuses, not just by cities but by the FBI's
COINTELPRO (counterintelligence program).

Police departments across the country faced consent decrees - agreements to modify
unconstitutional surveillance and other policies - that were diluted or dropped before but
especially after 9/11 under Democratic and Republican administrations. Police returned to
the bad old days, once again instilling a fear in people's minds that their antiwar or other
political activities are being watched.


Soon after September 11th, the NYPD asked U.S. District Court Judge Charles Haight to lift
the guidelines for investigating religious, political or other "associational" activity set out in
1986 in the wake of the lawsuit Handschu v. Special Services Division. 14

The settlement prohibited, among other things, creating files on groups or individuals based
solely on their political, religious, sexual, or economic preference. It required police to
submit a request for spying to a three-person panel and to show that the group or person
had "criminal intent."

Haight agreed that the new threat of terrorism justified changing the consent decree -
dropping the need to go to the panel or demonstrate criminal content - and he instructed the
police instead to adopt guidelines modeled on new ones created by Bush's Justice
Department to govern the FBI's political investigations.

What that means legally has been in dispute in the courts since early 2004. Nonetheless,
the police took the modified decree as an open door for widespread infiltration and
surveillance of political groups.


Another longstanding consent decree - Chicago's Alliance to End Repression Consent
Decree, or the Red Squad federal consent decree - was modified in January 2001 after
Chief Judge Richard A. Posner for the Seventh Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals wrote that it
essentially left the police helpless to protect the public.

Signed in 1981, the original agreement prohibited police from spying on or disrupting a
political group unless it is engaging in criminal activity. Now police can spy on
demonstrators as long as the intelligence gathering is documented and audited to monitor
compliance with the court order. The police admit that they videotape demonstrations with
the express purpose of identifying individual protesters for later action.

Denver, the location of the upcoming Democratic convention, has its own sordid history to
tell. Its police were spying on the local Amnesty International chapter, American Friends
Service Committee, and Chicano activists for years until it came out late in 2002 when
someone leaked a printout of some of the records.

Following an ACLU lawsuit, the Denver police agreed to purge their files and stop spying.
Yet officials worked hard to save funding for Colorado's "fusion center," where Denver police,
along with federal and state agents, sift through local and national intelligence and other
information to find signs of terrorist threats.

Even as local police go to court to remove themselves from judicial constraints over their
spying, the feds poured millions of dollars to set up such intelligence centers outside of
these courts' jurisdiction from coast to coast.

Subpoenas as Intimidation

In the past eight years, we have seen authorities intimidating activists by issuing them
subpoenas to appear before a grand jury. Environmental and animal rights activists but also
anti-war activists have found themselves hauled before these chambers. The FBI has
actually admitted that it uses both email monitoring and subpoenas to gather information on
activists.

Here is only one example that hit close to home to one of the authors, who is executive
director of the National Lawyers Guild. In October 2003, the NLG received word from a
member in Des Moines, Iowa that local authorities had told her that her e-mail was likely
being monitored.

On February 3, 2004 that same member, Sally Frank, a law professor and an advisor to the
Guild chapter at Drake University, called to say that the authorities had issued subpoenas
for four antiwar protesters in Des Moines to appear before a grand jury.

Federal prosecutors also subpoenaed Drake University for records of its National Lawyers
Guild chapter, including names of officers, information relating to an antiwar training in
November 2003 entitled "Stop the Occupation! Bring the Iowa Guard Home," and reports
dating back two years. The government also issued a gag order on employees of the
University.

These actions puzzled the locals, mobilized the Guild, and quickly attracted national
attention, because they seemed to target individuals based on their political activity. After the
U.S. Attorney's Office took the unusual step of issuing a statement confirming its
investigation, the Guild won its motion to quash the subpoena on First Amendment grounds.

Preparing for 2008

Long drawn out lawsuits to defend civil liberties may be victorious, eventually, but rarely
soon enough to allow the people to have their say, when they want to say it. So lawyers are
working with activists to prepare ahead of time for possible police responses to the next
party conventions.

In St. Paul and Denver, Guild and ACLU lawyers are already negotiating with public officials
to prevent demonstrators from being channeled into cramped, fenced off "free speech
zones" distant from events.

As one lawyer reported,
"In a free society, a security zone that corrals all dissenting voices
and treats us all like criminals cannot substitute for true law enforcement responding to
specific articulable facts that amount to reasonable suspicion that a crime is being
committed."

From previous experience, the lawyers have learned to go to court as soon as a so-called
free speech zone is proposed.

    "In the past, federal judges have expressed concern over the legality of restrictive
    protest zones but claimed it was too late for them to do anything about it. We have to
    seek relief sooner," says NLG member Thomas Cincotta of the law firm Kurtz &
    Peckham. "But how do you ask a court to enjoin a protest zone that hasn't even been
    put in place? We must make the case that these restrictive plans are in place now,
    despite the government's refusal to disclose them to us."

In both cities, the permitting process is being manipulated by authorities. The Twin Cities
NLG is prepared for any quick rules change; for instance St. Paul may refuse to even
consider demonstration permits until six months before the event, and civil liberties lawyers
are prepared to sue.

Denver embarked on a review of its permitting policy, and then suspended an application
deadline for a permit, saying it had not yet finished its review.

Denver is following New York in its refusal to issue summons to protestors who break the
law committing civil disobedience, rather than arrest them. The City Attorney recently
enacted a policy of no "cite and release" for protestors, which allows them to be detained
and indeed punishes them for exercising their free speech rights.

The city already used it at an October Columbus Day protest, where police arrested 83
people and held them overnight although they posted cash bond. And to transmit the idea
that these demonstrators were dangerous, police, like those in Miami, New York, and
indeed at a November anti-war protest in Seattle, appeared armed in full riot gear. In Seattle,
the police brought tanks.

Stonewalling by officialdom has already begun, despite regular meetings. In Denver, says
Cincotta, "My frustration stems from the lack of true dialog concerning security preparations
for the DNC.

Information-sharing has been a one-way street." As we've seen in New York at the RNC, an
incommunicative police force violates laws in their mistreatment of demonstrators, secure
that any redress will come long after the event. For citizen's free expression, the damage will
be done.

None of these threats to free speech and the First Amendment could take root without the
President of the United States setting the standard.

The decision by George W. Bush to authorize warrantless spying on Americans stands
as the supreme example of government disregard for the First and Fourth Amendments.

-----------------------------------------------

Heidi Boghosian is executive director of the National Lawyers Guild and author of the recent
report Punishing Protest: Government Tactics That Suppress Free Speech.

She cohosts a weekly radio program, "Law and Disorder," broadcast on WBAI-FM in New
York.

Abby Scher is editor of The Public Eye and a sociologist who writes frequently about civil
liberties.
----------------------------------------------------------

End Notes
1 Abby Scher, "The Crackdown on Dissent," The Nation (Feb. 5, 2001). http://www.thenation.
com/doc/ 20010205/scher

2 Eric Lichtblau, "FBI Goes Knocking for Political Troublemakers," New York Times, August
16, 2004.

3 Associated Press, NYPD to Destory GOP Protest Fingerprints," October 21, 2004. http:
//www.commondreams.org/
headlines04/1021-24.htm

4 Carol D. Leonnig, "PCJ Reveals FBI Intel Gatherine in Protestor Arrests," Washington
Post, April 3, 2007.

5 Copies of documents obtained under FOIA can be found in "No Real Threat: The
Pentagon's Secret Database on Peaceful Protest," ACLU (January 2007); Mark Schlesinger,
"The State of Surveillance: Government Monitoring of Political Activity in Northern and Central
California," ACLU of Northern California (July 2006). MSNBC broke the database story in
2005: Lisa Myers, et.al., "Is the Pentagon Spying on Americans," MSNBC, December 14,
2005. http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/ 10454316/

6 "Some Turn to Videotape to Challenge Police," abc news, http://abcnews.go.com/Nightline/
print? id=833389. Links to this and other stories of those exonerated can be found on the I-
Witness Video site, http://iwitnessvideo.info/news/
index.html.

7 Radio interview with Eileen Clancy, "NY Law Enforcement Caught Doctoring Video of RNC
Arrests," Democracy Now, April 14, 2005, http://www.democracynow.org/ article.pl?
sid=05/04/14/1349256
&mode=thread&tid=25

8 Jim Dwyer, "Police Infiltrate Protests, Videotapes Show," New York Times, December 22,
2005. http:// www.nytimes.com/2005/12/22/
nyregion/22police.html

9 See Schlesinger.

10 Schlesinger, p. 12.

11 Jim Dwyer, "City Spied Broadly Before GOP Convention," New York Times, March 25,
2007.

12 Ernie Naspretto and Alison Gendar, "Dem Big to NYPD: Butt Out," NY Daily News, May 13,
2007.

13 "Federal Court Orders NYPD To Release Intelligence Documents About RNC
Surveillance Operation," New York Civil Liberties Union, August 6, 2007. http://nyclu.
org/node/1275

14 Chip Berlet and Abby Scher, "Political Profiling: Police Spy on Peaceful Activists," Amnesty
International magazine, Spring 2003. http://www.amnestyusa. org/amnestynow/profiling.html

15 "History Repeated: The Dangers of Domestic Spying by Federal Law Enforcement,"
American Civil Liberties Union, May 29, 2007, p. 16.

16 David E. Kaplan, Monica M. Ekman, Angie C. Marek, "Spies Among Us: Despite a
troubled history, police across the nation are keeping tabs on ordinary Americans," US
News & World Report, (May 8, 2006), v. 140, no. 17: 40.
PATRIOT ACT'S THREAT TO FREE SPEECH

[now, it doesnt matter if you agree or
disagree with their politics, just watch
the violation of free speech]

The USA PATRIOT Act continues to pose a
threat to free speech. Section 215 allows
government agents to secure records and
determine which library books someone
has checked out, and which books
someone has purchased from a
bookstore. Even someone's browsing on a
library computer is open to scrutiny.

Prosecutors failed to convict a computer
science graduate student under Section
805 for providing "material support" to
terrorists in his role as webmaster.

In 2004, a jury declined to convict him. Yet
the material support statute remains as a
threat to free association and free speech.

The PATRIOT Act loosened restrictions on
the use of National Security Letters to
gather information in intelligence
investigations. The FBI bypasses the
courts and uses the letters to get customer
records from telephone companies,
internet providers, banks and other
institutions. The Department of Justice's
Office of Inspector General found
widespread abuse in the FBI's use of the
letters. Plus the FBI retains all the
information it collects, whether the person
is tied to terrorism or not.15
Targeting Animal Rights Activists
At the highest level, the Justice
Department chills free speech by applying
the emotion-laden designation of
"terrorist" to activists.

This opens the door to local police
intimidation, the levying of higher charges
and penalties, and can influence the
outcome of trials.

By marking environmental and animal
rights activists as "domestic terrorist"
threats,
the Justice Department emboldens local
"intelligence" units, like the one in DeKalb
County, Georgia, which was caught taking
pictures of vegan demonstrators leafleting
a Honey-Baked ham store in 2002.
(16)

The agents arrested two of the vegans,
and demanded they turn over their notes
on which they'd written the license plate of
an undercover officer's car. The
intelligence unit was funded by the feds to
the tune of $12 million.

Alabama's Department of Homeland
Security only removed a web site listing
environmental and animal rights groups
as potential terrorists in May 2007 after
bloggers discovered it
(The site also listed regional gay rights
and anti-abortion groups).

Congress did its part in criminalizing
political speech with the sweeping
language of the Animal Enterprise
Terrorism Act (AETA), passed in
November 2006.

This law makes it a crime to cause any
business classified as an "animal
enterprise" (e.g., factory farms, fur farms,
vivisection labs, rodeos and circuses) to
suffer a loss in profits - even if the
company's financial decline is caused by
peaceful protests.

The damage is already visible in an
animal rights case against seven New
Jersey members of the group Stop
Huntingdon Animal Cruelty. Jurors found
them guilty of criminal conspiracy under a
1992 law for listing the animal testing labs
of Huntingdon Life Science on their
website as a possible target for protestors.

This spring, the defendants received
sentences ranging from three to six years,
but their convictions reverberate far beyond
their families and friends into the courts
and other political groups by criminalizing
their use of the Internet.

The prosecution presented no proof that
anyone had actually attacked or even
protested outside the labs as a result of
reading the website. The government
premised its prosecution on two narrow
exceptions to the First Amendment: (1) the
defendants used Internet websites to
incite others to participate in a campaign
to close Huntingdon Life Sciences, and,
(2) the words on the websites and the
language of the campaign constituted a
true threat.

The website did not post targeted threats
against specific individuals, as did the
website in the so-called Nuremberg Files
Case decided in 1992, Planned
Parenthood v. American Coalition of Life
Activists, which posted personal
information about abortion providers, and
the names of doctors who were murdered
had lines through them, crossing them off.
THE FIRST AMENDMENT OF THE BILL OF
RIGHTS
'Congress shall make no law respecting
an establishment of religion, or
prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or
abridging the freedom of speech, or of
the press; or the right of the people
peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of
grievances.'

The decision by George W. Bush to
authorize warrantless spying on
Americans stands as the supreme
example of government disregard for
the First and Fourth Amendments.

Note-these police and military are
TRAINED to do this, & with our taxes.
We are paying for our enslavement.