-Caveat Lector-

They spy
How law enforcement is keeping tabs on the new peace movement.

By A.C. Thompson

PERHAPS THE STORY of Malaysia Airlines Flight 91 is a harbinger of
things to come for the nascent peace movement.

The Sept. 8 flight was poised to take off from Newark, N.J., for
Dubai, United Arab Emirates, and a final destination of Kabul,
Afghanistan, when agents with the Federal Bureau of Investigation
strode aboard. The G-men escorted seven passengers off the plane and
into a room where they were interrogated for six hours. Flight 91
took off without the group.

Their offense? Signing up for a two-week "Reality Tour" of
bomb-pocked Afghanistan, a junket organized by San Francisco-based
human rights group Global Exchange.

"They wanted to know about Global Exchange," says one of the
detainees, Glenda Marsh, a Sacramento peace activist and
state-employed biologist. "They asked me if I'd heard the people I
was traveling with make anti-American statements."

Now Marsh is preparing to file a Freedom of Information Act request
to see if the FBI is compiling a dossier on her.

Hints of a new wave of COINTELPRO-style government surveillance
first surfaced in fall 1999 as protesters gearing up for the World
Trade Organization's meeting in Seattle complained about
infiltration by undercover cops and federal agents. After Sept. 11,
2001, the feds embarked on an unprecedented and brazen campaign of
domestic spying. Leading the charge, Attorney General John Ashcroft
signaled his intent to spy on law-abiding religious congregations
and political groups and pushed through the USA PATRIOT Act, which
vastly expanded the government's phone-tapping and e-mail-monitoring
powers and broke down barriers between the Central Intelligence
Agency and the FBI. Now there's mounting evidence that government
agents � returning to the ways of J. Edgar Hoover � are monitoring
political dissidents.

According to Steve Filandrinos, the Global Exchange staffer who
organized the tour, the FBI agents wanted to know why the group,
which included five Afghan Americans, was headed overseas and who
was sending them there. The tours, Filandrinos explains, "are a way
to give Americans a chance to connect with Afghans involved in the
reconstruction process, to make sure Americans know what's going on
there, and to bear witness to the [U.S.-led] bombing."

While the waylaid tourists eventually made it to Kabul, their fun
with the federal government wasn't over. Flying into Los Angeles
International Airport Sept. 20, one member of the group was grabbed
by U.S. Customs Service agents outside the airport, and another was
called at home by the FBI for more questioning eight days later.

The Global Exchange incident echoes the widely reported hassles of
Jan Adams and Rebecca Gordon, founders of War Times, a San Francisco
publication critical of President George W. Bush's passion for
dropping ordnance on foreign countries. On Aug. 7, Adams and Gordon
were attempting to fly from San Francisco to Boston when they were
detained by police and informed that their names were on a list of
people under scrutiny by the FBI. "We can only assume that the
government is laboring under the misapprehension that we're
terrorists," Adams says.

Neither woman has ever been charged with any serious crime, though
both have been arrested for civil disobedience.

After calls to police headquarters and two searches by airport
security, Adams and Gordon were escorted onto the plane.

There are several ways all of this government scrutiny could play
out. If the new peace movement develops the muscle to paralyze major
cities � � la antiglobalizers � it may find the feds doing more than
discreetly keeping tabs and occasionally pulling suspected
troublemakers off airplanes. There's the real possibility that FBI
agents will covertly slip into the movement with the aim of
crippling it from within (a favored tactic in the 1960s against the
Black Panthers and the New Left) or enticing more-militant activists
to participate in felonious behavior (as the bureau did more
recently with Earth First! and the militia and white separatist
movements).

"Surveillance and intelligence gathering are back," asserts Dennis
Cunningham, an attorney who has sued the FBI repeatedly, most
recently on behalf of Earth First!ers Judi Bari and Darryl Cherney.
"What's to stop them from engaging in disruptive activity designed
to neutralize a movement?"

Another possibility is that prosecutors could start collecting
information on movement leaders with an eye toward using the federal
Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations statute. Designed to
take down mafiosi and loaded with stiff penalties, RICO targets key
members of groups that engage in a pattern of criminal activity, and
the case could be made that protesters who repeatedly disrupt
business as usual fit that bill. In fact, that case has already been
made: the RICO statute was employed by the National Organization for
Women in a 1998 civil suit against abortion clinic blockaders in
Chicago. The save-the-fetuses side lost and was ordered to pay
$255,000 in damages.

Ashcroft's baby, the PATRIOT Act, includes some language similar to
that of RICO, and could be put to use as well.

Cunningham speculates that "we'll see them use the PATRIOT Act
first. They want to put it to the test, see what they can do with
it."

E-mail A.C. Thompson at [EMAIL PROTECTED]

http://www.sfbg.com/37/08/cover_spy.html

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