Documents Obtained by ACLU Expose
FBI and Police Targeting of Political Groups
ACLU Files Federal Lawsuit and FOIA Requests to Uncover More Files
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
May 18, 2005
CONTACT: Christopher Ahmuty, ACLU of Wisconsin, 414-272-4032, ext. 13
Emily Whitfield, ACLU, 212-549-2566 or 2666; media@aclu.org
Tracy Zimmerman, 202-518-8047; tracy@PublicInterestPR.com
The American Civil Liberties Union charged today that the FBI and local
police are engaging in intimidation based on political association and
are improperly investigating law-abiding human rights and advocacy groups,
according to documents obtained through a series of Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA) requests. ACLU affiliates, including the ACLU of Wisconsin,
today filed FOIA requests seeking similar documents in ten states.
In response to widespread complaints from students and political activists
who said they were questioned by FBI agents in the months leading up to
last summer’s political conventions, the ACLU filed FOIA requests
in six states and the District of Columbia in December 2004 on behalf
of more than 100 groups and individuals. To date, the ACLU has received
fewer than 20 pages in response to the FOIAs.
The ACLU charged that the FBI is wrongfully withholding thousands of
pages of documents, and today filed a lawsuit in federal court to compel
the FBI to comply with the FOIA requests. The complaint seeks files kept
by the FBI on the ACLU, as well as Greenpeace, United for Peace and Justice,
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals and the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination
Committee.
The ACLU said that the few documents received to date through the December
FOIA requests shed light on the FBI’s misuse of Joint Terrorism
Task Forces to engage in political surveillance. In Colorado, one memo
indicates an ongoing federal interest in Food Not Bombs, a group that
provides free vegetarian food to hungry people and protests war and poverty.
The same memo suggests that an FBI interview of Sarah Bardwell and call
to Scott Silber prior to last fall’s political conventions were
intended as a means of intimidation. The FBI notes that although they
did not obtain information about criminal activity from either student,
it was unnecessary to contact others in the area as the “purpose
of the interviews was served.”
“The FBI is taking tax dollars and resources established to fight
terrorism and instead spying on innocent Americans who have done nothing
more than speak out or practice their faith,” Ann Beeson, ACLU Associate
Legal Director, said. “By recruiting the local police into these
activities, they are also sowing dissent and suspicion in communities
around the country.”
In Wisconsin, the ACLU made requests on behalf of Peace Action-Wisconsin,
the Islamic Society of Milwaukee, the Wisconsin Coalition to Normalize
Relations with Cuba and the Milwaukee Chapter of the National Lawyers
Guild. Local concerns about government surveillance of activists were
heightened after the ACLU of Wisconsin obtained “Daily Protest Reports”
generated by the Milwaukee Police Department’s “Intelligence
Division.” These reports document routine police surveillance, including
videotaping, of peaceful protests and include the names of local political
leaders participating in them. The ACLU of Wisconsin sought information
on local police involvement in FBI-sponsored Joint Terrorism Task Forces
under state open records law and obtained redacted copies of contracts
between the FBI and numerous local police forces.
ACLU of Wisconsin Executive Director Christopher Ahmuty noted that at
least two communities participating in JTTF activities have also passed
resolutions to defend the bill of rights and prevent local police from
participating in unlawful spying at the behest of the FBI. “Unfortunately,
the FBI and local police have been less than forthcoming with information
about their activities,” Ahmuty said. “It is crucial that
there be local oversight to prevent a return to the days of J. Edgar Hoover
and the ‘red squads’ that sought to intimidate and embarrass
civil rights leaders and others who questioned government policy.”
The controversial FBI-led task forces came under scrutiny last month
after Portland, Oregon became the first city in the nation to withdraw
local law enforcement participation from the JTTFs rather than allow them
to participate without proper oversight. The JTTF partnerships between
the FBI and local police, in which local officers are “deputized”
as federal agents, are intended to identify and monitor individuals and
groups implicated in terrorism. The ACLU charges, however, that these
task forces are allowing local police officers to target peaceful political
and religious groups with no connection to terrorism.
The documents obtained by the ACLU are not the only evidence that the
FBI is building files on activists, according to Beeson. A classified
FBI intelligence memorandum disclosed publicly in November 2003 revealed
that the FBI has actually directed police to target and monitor lawful
political demonstrations under the rubric of fighting terrorism. This
memo is available at: http://www.aclu.org/SafeandFree/SafeandFree.cfm?ID=14450&c=206.
For details and legal papers regarding the FOIA requests filed today
by ACLU affiliates around the country, including a list of clients, go
to www.aclu.org/spyfiles.
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