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Friday, August 18, 2000

Officers Kept Eye on Protests From Within


By BETH SHUSTER, Times Staff Writer

     The Los Angeles Police Department calls them "scouts," and they are so good
at their job that, during this week's protests, some were shot at and others
were arrested--by their own colleagues.
     The LAPD undercover officers assigned to join the crowds of demonstrators
drawn by the Democratic National Convention are a young, purposefully ragtag
group that has blended easily and invisibly into the sea of young faces
protesting downtown.
     Throughout the week, they have provided a key element in the Police
Department's intelligence-gathering network, as they circulated unnoticed within
crowds across the city.
     They mingle with different groups of protesters, relaying information back
to intelligence officers working at several LAPD command posts.
     The LAPD's undercover operation was "an extremely critical part of the
[department's] plan," said Cmdr. Tom Lorenzen, who oversees the department's
convention planning unit. "Without good intelligence, we would not be as
efficient as we are."
     But civil libertarians and protest organizers question whether the
undercover officers are provocateurs or observers, particularly given the LAPD's
dubious history of political spying.
     Lisa Fithian, an organizer of D2KLA and the Direct Action Network, said she
is concerned that undercover police officers may have contributed to potentially
wrongful arrests and possibly to the problems Monday evening, when police used
horses and so-called less lethal weapons to disperse the crowd after a free
concert by Rage Against the Machine.
     "There are a lot of unknowns in this now," Fithian said. "The question is,
do they create problems in the midst of our meetings or actions?"
     She said members of her group saw people dressed as protesters sitting in a
police car after Sunday's anti-police rally. And she said others in her group
reported that officers, again posing as protesters, flashed a police badge at
the parking lot attendant to gain entrance to the Convergence Center, the
group's organizing headquarters.
     "It's standard operating procedure: infiltrate and disrupt," Fithian said.
"They are potentially trying to incite problems in the midst of our
demonstrations. We're not doing anything illegal; we're not doing anything
wrong."
     Erwin Chemerinsky, a professor of constitutional law at USC, said that
while he understands that the use of undercover officers is a valuable law
enforcement tool, they must be used carefully or "we could lose our protected
rights."
     "The concern always is the chilling effect it would have on protected
speech activities," Chemerinsky said. "Even if we're doing nothing wrong as a
group, we still might talk differently if we know there is an uninvited police
officer among us."
     LAPD officials, however, deny that undercover officers provoke incidents.
Rather, they say these officers merely circulate--always in public areas--to
provide valuable information.
     The LAPD has a particularly long and pungent history of spying on political
dissenters dating to the "Red Squad" of the 1930s that regularly broke up union
and leftist meetings, hustling protesters to jail. Then, in the late 1970s and
1980s, it was learned that officers from the department's Public Disorder
Intelligence Division had infiltrated left-wing groups and that others had spied
on local politicians and critics of the Police Department.
     Shortly after the controversial revelations about the division in the
1980s, the department replaced it with the Anti-Terrorist Division and settled a
lawsuit by agreeing to strict limits on its activities. Four years ago, however,
the civilian Police Commission, which oversees the department's management,
relaxed many of the rules governing undercover operations.
     As a result, the department now uses these officers routinely.
     One morning this week, some of these undercover officers met before going
out on the streets in their work clothes: T-shirts and shorts, bandannas, thong
shoes and sneakers. They even are allowed to break department policy by wearing
beards and keeping their hair long. One wore a "Free Mumia" bandanna, a
reference to a Pennsylvania inmate on death row for killing a police officer.
His face was unshaven, his hair tousled.
     When asked if they were worried about getting swept up in trouble, they
shrugged. It's all in a day's work for these officers.
     One, however, said, smiling, that he was a little worried about being shot
"by one of those," pointing to fellow officers in uniform checking out shotguns.
     In fact, a few were shot at by their colleagues with stinger rounds and
beanbag projectiles during Monday's melee in which hundreds of police attempted
to move the large crowd that lingered after the concert by rock group Rage
Against the Machine, police sources said. A day later, a couple of these
undercover officers were arrested during a bicycle protest in which about 100
cyclists allegedly tried to block city streets, the sources said.
     The arrests of 42 animal rights activists Tuesday--allegedly while in
possession of materials authorities said could be made into homemade
flamethrowers--came from information supplied by undercover officers, police
sources said Thursday.
     A Superior Court judge released 40 of the activists Thursday, however. Two
were held in lieu of $20,000 and $50,000 bail on felony vandalism charges. When
they were arrested Tuesday, all the activists asserted that they never had
planned to destroy property.
     Federal and other local agencies also had undercover officers working
inside the demonstrations this week, police sources said.
     LAPD officials, who are reluctant to discuss details of their undercover
operation, say the information it gathered this week was invaluable.
     Technology, LAPD officials say, has vastly improved the undercover
operation. The officers' use of cell phones to file continual reports, for
example, has allowed commanders to make key decisions on a "real time" basis.
     That intelligence has improved the department's ability to quickly move
officers to specific areas of trouble, officials said. Police at command posts
who are watching live video from department helicopters also have sent the
undercover officers to specific, potentially troublesome areas to provide
information.
     Intelligence officers working in several command posts throughout downtown
were assigned to take information from the undercover officers. That information
then was immediately shared with commanders and lieutenants.
     The undercover officers on the street were instructed to pay particular
attention not only to gathering information about the protesters' plans but also
to evidence of any weapons or hazardous materials in their possession.

    Copyright 2000 Los Angeles Times


Robert F. Tatman
Information Technology Consultant
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Jenkintown, PA, USA
*Artificial intelligence is no match for natural stupidity.*

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