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Large Volume of F.B.I. Files Alarms U.S. Activist Groups

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http://www.commondreams.org/headlines05/0719-13.htm

Published on Tuesday, July 19, 2005 by OneWorld.net
FBI Keeping Lengthy Files on Groups Opposed to Bush's Policies
by Abid Aslam

WASHINGTON - The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has amassed at
least 3,500 pages of internal documents from political protest groups in
what the targets say amounts to political surveillance of some of
President George W. Bush's leading critics.

The FBI has obtained 1,173 pages of internal documents on the American
Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) since 2001, the rights watchdog and prominent
administration critic said Monday. Federal agents also have collected some
2,383 pages from environmental group Greenpeace, a leading voice of
anti-Bush protest, the ACLU added.

The figures have emerged as part of a lawsuit under the Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA) brought by the ACLU and other groups alleging that
the FBI is engaging in politically motivated spying against law-biding
organizations.

''We now know that the government is keeping documents about the ACLU and
other peaceful groups,'' said Anthony Romero, the ACLU's executive
director. ''The question is why.''

The ACLU, in court documents, has contended that joint terrorism task
forces set up across the country and led by the FBI are structured and
funded in ways that facilitate violations of groups' and individuals'
rights to assemble and speak freely.

The organization said it filed its FOIA requests in response to widespread
complaints from students and political activists who said FBI agents were
questioning them in the months leading up to the 2004 political
conventions.

The FBI and Justice Department have said that any such
intelligence-gathering was aimed at preventing criminal activity, not
silencing speech.

Documents obtained through lawsuits also showed the FBI was monitoring
groups' Web sites and had prepared an internal report on at least one
anti-war protest organization, United for Peace and Justice (UFPJ), and
its efforts to organize a demonstration in the run up to the 2004
Republican National Convention, the ACLU said.

''The UFPJ report underscores our concern that the FBI is violating
Americans' right to peacefully assemble and oppose government policies
without being branded as terrorist threats,'' said Ann Beeson, the ACLU's
associate legal director. ''There is no need to open a counterterrorism
file when people are simply exercising their First Amendment rights.''

The ACLU is seeking FBI surveillance files on itself, Greenpeace, UFPJ,
Code Pink, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, American-Arab
Anti-Discrimination Committee, and Muslim Public Affairs Council.

The Justice Department has said it will take up to a year to review the
material the ACLU seeks. The civil rights group has accused the government
of stalling and has asked a judge to order federal agents to turn over the
documents sooner.

The FBI's ability to monitor political protest groups had been curtailed
since the 1970s amid outrage over a decade's worth of abuses under
then-agency director J. Edgar Hoover.

Many of the restrictions were lifted or relaxed after the Sep. 11, 2001
terrorist attacks, however, despite some lawmakers' stated concerns that
the expanded police powers granted under the USA Patriot Act, in
particular, could prompt civil rights violations and result in the
targeting of legitimate and legal dissent.

Key Patriot Act provisions are scheduled to expire on Dec. 31. Bush was
scheduled to speak about the law in Baltimore, Maryland, Wednesday, as
part of a sustained White House campaign to make permanent the law's
expanded powers.

Critics have said the powers infringe on citizens' civil liberties but
Bush has described the Patriot Act as ''one of the important tools federal
agents have used to protect America.''

New provisions would allow federal authorities to subpoena records from
businesses, hospitals, and libraries.

A novel coalition of conservatives and liberals normally at each other's
throats over the nature of government and free speech have made common
cause to oppose key parts of the antiterrorism law.

The ACLU, long vilified by conservatives, has joined forces with
right-wing groups the American Conservative Union, Americans for Tax
Reform, and the Free Congress Foundation to spearhead the ''Patriots to
Restore Checks and Balances'' coalition.

The coalition, formed in March, has lobbied Congress to roll back
provisions allowing law enforcement agents to look at library users'
records and to conduct unannounced searches of homes and private offices.

Short for the ''Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate
Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism Act of 2001,'' the USA
Patriot Act originally passed by 357-66 in the House of Representatives
and 98-1 in the Senate.

The Bush administration proposed the law, shepherded it through Congress,
and enacted it in the immediate aftermath of the Sep. 11, 2001 terrorist
attacks and the U.S. Senate's evacuation because of anthrax.

The measure passed with neither chamber issuing the usual reviews of
proposed legislation. ''As a result, it lacks background legislative
history that often retrospectively provides necessary statutory
interpretation,'' according to a detailed analysis of the law prepared by
the Washington, D.C.-based Electronic Privacy Information Center.

Grassroots opposition to the law has grown, according to the ACLU. Some
375 local and state governments representing more than 56 million
Americans have passed resolutions opposing the measure or some of its
provisions.

While many of these resolutions have no practical effect, proponents have
said the measures serve to notify federal policymakers and agencies of
public disapproval. Most of the resolutions called upon Congress to bring
the Patriot Act back in line with the U.S. constitution.

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