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Feds Won't Let Go of Case Accusing Artist of Bioterrorism

By Patricia Williams, The Nation. Posted October 12, 2007.


Pity artist Steve Kurtz, whose life has been turned upside down for a few petri dishes police found in his house which were going to be part of his latest installation.

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In May 2004 Steve Kurtz's life was turned upside down. Kurtz, a founding member of the award-winning collective Critical Art Ensemble, was a tenured art professor at SUNY, Buffalo. His work and that of the collective was of a kinetic conceptual sort, much of it aimed at informing audiences about the lack of regulation and potential risks of genetically modified (GM) food. Shortly before his show was to open at MASS MoCA, a museum in North Adams, Massachusetts, Kurtz's wife of twenty years died in her sleep. When police responded to his 911 call, they saw petri dishes in his home -- part of the scheduled installation -- filled with bacteria cultures. They called the FBI.

At that point, the nation was still reeling from the 2001 anthrax scares. Kurtz was detained (not arrested, not charged but held beyond the range of due process, under the USA Patriot Act) on suspicion of bioterrorism. Within days, FBI tests showed that there were no harmful biological agents in his house and that his wife had died of natural causes. But the case against Kurtz has not gone away.

Forced to drop charges of weapons manufacture, a federal prosecutor charged mail fraud against both Kurtz and Robert Ferrell, a professor of genetics at the University of Pittsburgh who sent Kurtz the uncontestedly harmless, legal, unregulated bacterial cultures used in his artwork. The "fraud" alleged is that they did not reveal, in a requisition form, the purpose of the mailing. Neither the University of Pittsburgh nor Buffalo has asserted fraud, and neither Ferrell nor Kurtz believed that there was anything fraudulent in their dealings. The allegation of fraud is made exclusively by the federal prosecutor -- a first as far as anyone knows.

Even assuming that there was a defrauded party, one wonders why any putative misrepresentation regarding paperwork isn't being handled as a civil rather than a criminal matter. But to give it the ultimate Kafkaesque twist, the charges against Kurtz and Ferrell have been pursued under the Patriot Act. This means that the sentence for otherwise ordinary crimes will be doubled. Since mail fraud carries a sentence of ten years, Kurtz and Ferrell each face a possible sentence of twenty years.

After all this time, the prosecution has yet to set a date for trial. For the record, I do not like commenting on cases before they are resolved in court. That said, the implications of Kurtz and Ferrell's continued prosecution are far-reaching enough to warrant comment. The dropped charges make it clear that this case has nothing to do with the threat of terrorism or Al Qaeda or violence. Yet Steve Kurtz, like Andy Warhol, works in a genre of art that inverts, performs and challenges the iconography of common understanding.

If Warhol made us re-examine the representational power of a Campbell's Soup can, Kurtz opens up the proverbial can and takes a good hard look at what's inside. His art is designed to label GM food, even though it is not marked for consumers except in the European Union. He illustrates the processes by which that food is engineered as much as grown, and how corporate control of that genetic modification challenges the notion of what we think of as farming.


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For more information about this case go to caedefensefund.org.

Patricia J. Williams, a professor of law at Columbia University and a member of the State Bar of California, writes The Nation column "Diary of a Mad Law Professor."

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View:
Monsanto on the Rampage
Posted by: DrSuess on Oct 12, 2007 6:54 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Does anyone else notice the seemingly innocent statement at the top of the piece – “His work and that of the collective was of a kinetic conceptual sort, much of it aimed at informing audiences about the lack of regulation and potential risks of genetically modified (GM) food.”

Monsanto (and their allies) are famous for going for the juggler vein of anyone who challenges genetically modified food. They refuse to allow us the option to “choose” our food- for fear that we would choose not to eat corn with cockroaches in its genes. They have made it illegal for any company to separate out genetically modified food from other non-modified food.

When I heard that Monsanto was a major backer of Bush in the days after his election- it was the first warning bell that I had about the corruption of the current administration.

This guys real crime was to challenge Monsanto. Like the PETA (people for ethical treatment of animals) criminals who freed little animals from labs, and the guys who firebombed some Hummers- this man will go to jail for challenging the most disturbing corporate examples of “profit above all else”.

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Just more...
Posted by: JoshuaLudd on Oct 12, 2007 7:16 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Waste of time, manpower, money, and credibility... to pursue non-terrorists as "terrorists". It will get worse, of course... they are already trying to cast those who disagree with government as "terrorists".. calling a soldier standing up to Pillsy Limbaugh's lies a "suicide bomber" and calling a kid in a commercial for SCHIP a "human soldier".

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The National Security State Goes Too Far Yet Again
Posted by: InsertNameHere on Oct 12, 2007 7:39 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
For the last six years, I have watched in disbelief as the citizens of the United States have allowed themselves to be corralled into one disastrous policy after another, into the new national security state. Being Canadian, I realize that I am more likely to die in an auto accident or be hit by lightning than being killed in an act of terrorism, or 'Terror' as they like to shorten it down to these days. What does being Canadian have to do with it? Well, because we still have some balance of viewpoints in our media and we aren't as easily swept up into patriotic fervor.

Yet recently, the ridiculous clowns in charge of your country have seen fit to push their idiotic 'Terror' laws onto their neighbors. First they convinced our pliable conservative minority government into forming a no-fly list. Now this:

Click

Your government now wants Canadian Airlines to disclose very personal information about its passengers for flights moving over American airspace, even if the flight flies direct from Canada to another country. So if the paranoid security freaks decide they think that passenger in seat 22B is a 'security risk', and that is still loosely defined, would they request that plane be diverted to the US so that passenger could be illegally extricated and left to the same fate as Mahar Arar? Would they scramble fighter jets?That is so completely outrageous, I don't even know where to start. What's more outrageous is that our own transportation minister doesn't seem to think its such a bad thing. It angers me beyond all belief that our own government would even agree to discuss the plan. The reason for that is that our conservative government is falling all over itself to prove it is friendly to Bush. What can I say? A conservative is a conservative the world over.

Luckily, industry associations are aghast at the idea and will be putting pressure on the government to abandon any such plan.

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Well, Duh! Monsanto
Posted by: StPeteRican on Oct 12, 2007 9:43 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How could anyone be surprised at the harrasment of this artist with Monsanto in the picture? Even then it's a great way to slap the Patriot/Police Act into non-terrorism related investigations and spread the scope of its power. This artist's case show the real purpose of the Patriot Act is not combatting terrorism but silencing those with a contrarian view of the corporate-industrial-congressional status quo.
People who say they have nothing to hide and don't fear the Patriot Act, simply don't understand the creative ways the new security apparatus can create things to hide.

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Speaking of Monsato, Big Agri gets to rape farmlands country after country but
Posted by: maxpayne on Oct 12, 2007 9:48 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
in a really sane world, Big Agri would have been crushed ages ago for terrorizing the farmers and the working class like that. When you ban the good stuff and reward corporate RAPISTS and in the process set up a RIGGED capitalism where you're forced to pick between the same choices that are only cosmetically different, and the more the Big Religion defends it, I feel ashamed to be a Christian and seriously doubt the existance of the Lord unless it's acting like Zeus by fucking around !

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» Forced?? Posted by: gellero
Really I think I am turning into a Communist....
Posted by: WitchyNy on Oct 12, 2007 11:06 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I just don't think Capitalism and the Military- Industrial -Complex-or bushandco.-are able to handle the governing of our world anymore.

Profit is not the way to run the world. They are killing the planet. We The People and the Environment are what matters. So what if we all have to drive the same kind of cars-or wear the same kind of clothes--or live in small simple houses that all look alike-there is always paint and tie-dye!


These rich people are like a cancer on our earth--they are sick and evil. But we-the workers of the world-outnumber them a million to one. Somehow- we must rise up and take back our farmlands-our right to protest and organize-our country-our world.

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The Rich (above)
Posted by: gellero on Oct 12, 2007 5:08 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Many have grown rich by providing you with the things you want........like the computer you type this diatrabe on. And don't forget, they pay most of the taxes that support the government and the benefits you get from it.

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» RE: The Rich (above) Posted by: WitchyNy
Thugs
Posted by: frank69 on Oct 13, 2007 2:38 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This administration is like the Mafia, only dumber. The Mafia wouldn't waste their time with attacking professors. Only assholes like this stupid administration attack professors!

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Organic farming
Posted by: herbal on Oct 14, 2007 11:07 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So welcome to the furtive and sinister world of alternative farming. Organic farming is the first alternative technology to prove unassailable by the corporatists, knock on wood.

Most organic farmers are becoming quite informed and adept at microbiology and bacteria culture in one form or another. Monsanto is a formidable and vindictive opponent of any technology that they do not own. The old world of pre-patented farm low-tech is experiencing a rennaisance. Perhaps we will all be in the new Washington State Homeland security concentration camps before it is done.

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You think this is harsh, just wait...
Posted by: dobermanmacleod on Oct 16, 2007 12:27 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You need to understand that the world is not prepared for the genomic revolution. Read the CIA report "The Darker Bioweapon Future." Advances in the life sciences are dual-use, meaning they can be used for great good or great evil (mankind has eaten from the Tree of Life).

Imagine a catastrophic bioterrorist attack inside the US homeland. Symptoms of a bio-attack don't appear right away, letting the culprits escape. US authorities will go on a pog-rom, a witch-hunt, a massive fish exhibition, making the treatment of that poor artist look like a picnic.

Especially a bioterrorist pandemic. Study history: what happened when a disease the American Indians had no resistence to was spread by the European colonists. Panic will ensue, our economy will be disrupted, bodies will pile up. The over-reaction of the US government and the outrage of the US public as more and more people die.

That poor artist is a harbinger. I suggest you read the article "Preparing for the next pandemic" for an overview, or read my blog http://www.myspace.com/dobermanmacleod

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