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FBI Patents Domestic Spying

By Earl Ofari Hutchinson, AlterNet. Posted January 4, 2006.


The tactics they use are the same as the ones used on Martin Luther King, Jr. and '60s radicals.
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The ACLU publicly and indignantly blasted President Bush and the FBI after it got documents that showed the FBI was back in the domestic spy business. FBI targets were peace, environmental and animal rights groups. The ACLU should be indignant, but it shouldn't be surprised.

The FBI has always been in the domestic spy business, and the tactics that it uses against today's activists are no different than those it used to hammer radicals in years past. During the 1960s, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover kicked into high gear the supersecret and blatantly illegal counterintelligence COINTELPRO program that targeted Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and black and anti-war protest leaders, as well as thousands of innocent Americans. The results were immediate and devastating.

Thousands were expelled from schools, lost jobs, evicted from their homes and offices, and publicly slandered. Few of these individuals were indicted, convicted or even accused of any crimes. Hoover gave local FBI offices wide discretion to pick and choose their targets, and the tactics they could use to go after them. Despite FBI protests that it only targeted those that are foreign spies, terrorists, or individuals suspected of criminal acts, in nearly all cases the groups and individuals under the FBI lens did not fit that bill.

With the death of Hoover in 1972 and congressional disclosure of the illegal program, the Justice Department scrambled fast to staunch the public and congressional outcry to rein in the FBI. It publicly assured Congress that COINTELPRO was a thing of the past, and that it had implemented ironclad control over FBI activities. That never happened.

During the 1980s, the FBI waged a five-year covert spy campaign against dozens of religious and pacifist groups and leaders that opposed American foreign policy in Central America. In the 1990s it mounted covert campaigns against civil rights, environmental, Native American, anti-nuclear disarmament and Arab-American groups. The FBI has never made complete disclosure to Congress the full extent of its supersecret domestic operations. The documents the ACLU got, which showed the current round of FBI domestic spying, are heavily censored. That fuels the deep suspicion that the domestic spy operations the FBI admits to and those in the past are only the tip of the spy iceberg.

Also, the FBI tactics used against these groups are a close replica of the tactics that the FBI routinely used against domestic groups in the 1960s, and that the 1970s guidelines supposedly banned. They include the ransacking of personal records, warrantless eavesdropping of calls, the monitoring of emails and almost certainly electronic and physical surveillance of political dissidents.

With much fanfare, Bush, and then Attorney General John Ashcroft, in 2002 announced that they were scrapping the 1970s guidelines that banned FBI spying on domestic organizations. The FBI quickly swung into even higher gear. FBI officials sent a memo to local police departments before the massive anti-Iraq war protests that year, urging them to keep close tabs on protesters. That is a virtual carbon copy of the FBI's trademark approach to political spying, which is to work closely with local police departments against targeted domestic organizations. The FBI launched search and destroy missions jointly with local police in several cities in 1969 against the Black Panther Party.

Following the big anti-Iraq war demonstrations, peace activists complained that FBI agents infiltrated anti-war meetings in some cities, and that local police fiercely grilled anti-war demonstrators in New York City about their political ties, and that their names wound up on the government's "no fly" list. This is the list that the airlines can use to deny passengers the right to board an airplane.

FBI officials claim that their aim wasn't to harass or intimidate protesters, or chill political dissent, but simply to ferret out violent prone radicals. When the ACLU went public with its documents, the FBI again loudly protested that it was only after terrorists and their supporters. But FBI officials have not offered a shred of proof that these organizations or individuals have broken any laws, let alone aided and abetted terrorists.

The ACLU disclosures of FBI domestic spying don't necessarily mean the FBI will again blatantly and brazenly bend, twist and break the law, ride roughshod over civil liberties and commit the willful acts of violence it did in the past against civil rights and political protesters. They do, however, make it much easier for FBI officials to skirt the law if they so choose when dealing with protest organizations, and they can do it under the guise of waging war against terrorists. The enemies of the state, of course, can be just about anyone and everyone that Bush and FBI officials suspect or finger.

The ACLU disclosures are a dangerous warning that official law breaking can happen again. And that the FBI can and will use the same dubious tactics that it has patented over the years.

Digg!

Earl Ofari Hutchinson is an author and political analyst. He is the author of "The Crisis in Black and Black" (Middle Passage Press).

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I understand
Posted by: Schnookums on Jan 4, 2006 9:06 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I don’t need anymore convincing…we have a bum president. Now what are we going to do about it? I know what I’m doing isn’t about to change the world overnight, but it does slowly tap away at the foundation that holds this man up. I write letters to my congressman, to my senator, to my state representatives, to my mayor, to my newspaper, and to my mother. I present my ideas with clean dialogue, and keep slander to a minimum. We could all profoundly change the debate in this country if we focused on simply writing letters to the people who represent us. Will you join me?

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

What about MLK, Malcolm X (and a few insignificant others!!!)?
Posted by: Mein Bush on Jan 4, 2006 11:04 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
J. Edgar Hoover was a cross dressing homosexual who blackmailed others because of their sexual preferences. In other words, a hypocrite of the first order.

Good ol' Edgar might have also been able to shed some light on what happened to JFK, RFK (and post-humously) John Lennon!!!

Former Director Louis F. recently wrote a "ground breaking" book on how he "spear-headed" the blow-job case against WJC. I wonder whether he was working on his book while "the evil doers" were "flying" jets into the WTC?

Can someone take a real close look at both the new so called czar of intelligence (Negroponte?) and the current FBI head (Mueller?)!!! Perhaps the cycle of history repeating itself can be stopped in its tracks.

America deserves better leadership than what is now being passed off as leadership.

But then again... "They're all doing a heck of a job! Heh-heh-heh."

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They Should Prosecute Everyone Involved.
Posted by: tomchristian on Jan 5, 2006 10:14 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hopefully they will prosecute the NSA people who did the illegal wiretapping.
But they shouldn't stop there. They should also go after the CIA personnel who ran secret torture prisons in Europe and who illegally kidnapped people in Europe.
I am also waiting to see if they take the next step and punish
the CIA for it's domestic spying activities.
I experienced this personally after applying for employment
at the CIA in 1995 and before a bogus job interview in
Novermber 1996. I experienced it again on several
occasions thereafter until 2003.
I have written a lengthy account of the whole affair and
posted it at
http://www.tomchristianonline.com/
for those who wish to know more.

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Just like "bad money," bad law enforcement drives out good
Posted by: Sojourner on Jan 6, 2006 6:04 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If one goal of the 9/11 attack was to divide the country, it has succeeded. It need not have done so. Remember the solidarity immediately after 9/11?

But the bumbling, fumbling caveman style of the administration and its lackies has succeeded in splitting us. FBI agents must do as they are told. Unfortunately, it is a string of pissant security chiefs letting Bush yank their chain that has now set us against one another.

Like the war on drugs, where the policy is to destroy you so that you don't harm yourself, the war on terrorism has turned into an attack on the very freedoms that America is all about.

The mess in Washington is now so thick and deep that we will either have to spend the next 15-20 years cleaning it up or give up. Guess which is most likely? Yeah. As in the 70s: a new administration will come in and overturn all of the protections set in place by the hardwork of the repair teams.

One problem with getting old in the US is seeing the same patterns again and again. The Demos patch things up. The Repigs come in and tear them down. Can't we put the GOP on an iceberg and send them out to sea?

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Wallace9
Posted by: Wallace9 on Jan 6, 2006 9:06 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I've written letters to everyone I think will do any good. I've sent them both email and snail mail. I have yet to get an answer from anyone.
These people are like cockroaches; you clean them out of one hole and they appear again after a generation in another. Each time, after Joe McCarthy, Viet Nam, Nixon, Reagan and now the neo-cons they are cleaned out only to return from some secret training camp where they have learned new and more insidious tactics. America is like an alcoholic. Each time we go on one of these insane binges we vow together that it will not happen again. This time is worse then all the others; the people are enamoured with their electronic pacifiers, the Democrats are contemplating their navel, the World is wondering once more what has happened to us & The Constitution is at the bottom of a toilet in the Capitol.
Does no one realize that we are about three steps away from a totalitarian government? Eventually there will be several cameras in every home, a chip with GPS planted behind every right ear & in every car & a soldier to check our ID's on every corner.
The worst day free is better then the best day safe!

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Doing My Part Also
Posted by: BlackMan on Jan 19, 2006 1:56 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Since 2004 we have an organization, a 527, that is actively participating in making the case for change in our communities at the local, state and national level. We have learned that there are more people thinking on the same wave length. Once we became active and visible, local Republicans and code enforcement organizations forced us to move from a centrally located office on the main street of our community. That did not stop us. Now we have a website that is a national discourse for those willing to hear a different point of view; the Truth.

Since our arrival in the community, Tom Delay is becoming a casualty for himself and his supporters. Yes, we were the ones responsible for a decrease in his support during the 2004 election. Now with the aid of criminal investigations, we already knew of them while attempting to expose him before the current publicity, and a candidate with very good credentials and support in Delay's district; we now will probably end his tenure as a Representative in the House with the election of a Democrat, Nick Lampson.

I appreciate your offer and doing the same. Your approach will bring positive results. Stay with it. Visit or send others to our site to help defeat the crooked Tom Delay at:
http://www.fortbenddemocrats.org

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