-Caveat Lector-

http://www.villagevoice.com/issues/0223/hentoff2.php

'There Would Be No Place to Hide'
Unleashing the FBI
by Nat Hentoff
Village Voice

Friday, 31 June, 2002

The [new] guidelines emphasize that the FBI must not be deprived of using
all lawful authorized methods in investigations, consistent with the
Constitution. --Attorney General John Ashcroft, New York Daily News, May 31

In reality, Mr. Ashcroft, in the name of fighting terrorism, [is] giving FBI
agents nearly unbridled power to poke into the affairs of anyone in the
United States, even where there is no evidence of illegal
activity. --Editorial, New York Times, May 31

As usual, television--broadcast and cable--got it wrong. The thrust of what
they call reporting on the reorganization of the FBI focused on the 900 or
so new agents, the primacy of intelligence gathering over law enforcement,
and the presence of CIA supervisors within the bosom of the FBI. (It used to
be illegal for the CIA to spy on Americans within our borders.)

But the poisonous core of this reorganization is its return to the time of
J. Edgar Hoover and COINTELPRO, the counter-intelligence
operation--pervasively active from 1956 to 1971--that so disgraced the
Bureau that it was forced to adopt new guidelines to prevent such wholesale
subversion of the Bill of Rights ever again.

Under COINTELPRO, the FBI monitored, infiltrated, manipulated, and secretly
fomented divisions within civil rights, anti-war, black, and other entirely
lawful organizations who were using the First Amendment to disagree with
government policies.

These uninhibited FBI abuses of the Bill of Rights were exposed by some
journalists, but most effectively by the Senate Select Committee to Study
Governmental Operations With Respect to Intelligence Activities. Its
chairman, Frank Church of Idaho, was a true believer in the constitutional
guarantees of individual liberties against the government--which is why we
had a Revolution.

In 1975, Church told the nation, and J. Edgar Hoover, that COINTELPRO had
been "a sophisticated vigilante operation aimed squarely at preventing the
exercise of First Amendment rights of speech and association." And Church
pledged: "The American people need to be reassured that never again will an
agency of the government be permitted to conduct a secret war against those
citizens it considers a threat to the established order."

Frank Church, however, could not have foreseen George W. Bush, John
Ashcroft, FBI director Robert Mueller, and the cowardly leadership,
Republican and Democratic, of Congress. (Notable exceptions are John Conyers
of Michigan, and Russell Feingold and James Sensenbrenner, both of
Wisconsin.)

The guidelines for FBI investigations imposed after COINTELPRO ordered that
agents could not troll for information in churches, libraries, or political
meetings of Americans without some reasonable leads that someone, somehow,
was doing or planning something illegal.

Without even a gesture of consultation with Congress, Ashcroft unilaterally
has thrown away those guidelines.

>From now on, covert FBI agents can mingle with unsuspecting Americans at
churches, mosques, synagogues, meetings of environmentalists, the ACLU, the
Gun Owners of America, and Reverend Al Sharpton's presidential campaign
headquarters. (He has been resoundingly critical of the cutting back of the
Bill of Rights.) These eavesdroppers do not need any evidence, not even a
previous complaint, that anything illegal is going on, or is being
contemplated.

Laura Murphy, the director of the ACLU's Washington office, puts the danger
to us all plainly: "The FBI is now telling the American people, 'You no
longer have to do anything unlawful in order to get that knock on the door.'
"

During COINTELPRO, I got that knock on the door because I, among other
journalists, had been publishing COINTELPRO reports that had been stolen
from an FBI office. You might keep a pocket edition of the Constitution
handy to present to the FBI agents--like a cross in front of Dracula.

The attorney general is repeatedly reassuring the American people that
there's nothing to worry about. FBI agents, he says, can now go into any
public place "under the same terms and conditions of any member of the
public."

Really? While the rest of us do not expect privacy in a public place, we
also do not expect to be spied upon and put into an FBI dossier because the
organizers of the meeting are critical of the government, even of Ashcroft.
We do not expect the casually dressed person next to us to be a secret agent
of Ashcroft.

Former U.S. Attorney Zachary Carter, best known for his prosecution of the
Abner Louima case, said in the May 31 New York Times that Ashcroft's
discarding of the post-COINTELPRO guidelines means that now "law enforcement
authorities could conduct investigations that [have] a chilling effect on
entirely appropriate lawful expressions of political beliefs, the free
exercise of religion, and the freedom of assembly."

So where are the cries of outrage from Democratic leaders Tom Daschle and
Dick Gephardt? How do you tell them apart from the Republicans on civil
liberties?

Back in 1975, Frank Church issued a warning that is far more pertinent now
than it was then. He was speaking of how the government's intelligence
capabilities--aimed at "potential" enemies, as well as disloyal
Americans--could "at any time" be "turned around on the American people, and
no American would have any privacy left--such is the capacity to monitor
everything, telephone conversations, telegrams, it doesn't matter. There
would be no place to hide . . .

"There would be no way to fight back," Church continued, "because the most
careful effort to combine together in resistance to the government, no
matter how privately it was done, is within the reach of the government to
know."

Frank Church could not foresee the extraordinary expansion of electronic
surveillance technology, the government's further invasion of the Internet
under the new Ashcroft-Mueller guidelines, nor the Magic Lantern that can
record every keystroke you make on your computer. But Church's pessimism
notwithstanding, there is�and surely will be�resistance. And I'd appreciate
hearing from resisters who are working to restore the Bill of Rights.

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