A "volunteer" police state

http://www.salon.com/opinion/feature/2005/04/25/denver_incident/index.html

Why were we forced out of Bush's Social Security talk? And why won't the
White House identify that fake Secret Service agent who stopped us?

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By Leslie Weise

April 25, 2005  |  Just over a month has passed since two friends and I were
forced out of President Bush's town hall-style "conversation" in Denver
about privatizing Social Security. Despite the support we have received from
elected officials in our request for answers from the White House regarding
this incident, Karen Bauer, Alex Young and I still await a satisfactory
explanation of why our First Amendment rights were violated.

I did not vote for Bush in the last election, but I was looking forward to
participating in this historic occasion. It would be my first time in the
presence of a sitting president, and I wanted to hear more about his plans
to alter the Social Security system.

At the entrance to the March 21 event, a man wearing an earpiece and lapel
pin was presented to us as a Secret Service agent. After Karen and I were
told that we had been "ID'd," this man threatened us with arrest several
times before stepping aside and allowing us to enter. (I asked if I was on
some sort of list but received no response.) Before I'd had much chance to
worry about what it meant to be ID'd by the Secret Service, the man with the
earpiece was back to demand that we leave.

As he aggressively moved the three of us toward the exit, we kept asking why
this was happening. He simply replied that it was a "private event" and we
had to leave. An unknown person then led us outside, where we were
surrounded by a group of law enforcement agents and other people who
repeated that we needed to leave. Intimidated and embarrassed, and getting
nowhere with our attempts to reenter the event or get an explanation, we
walked back to my car and drove away.

Some questions have been answered since that day. We now know that, despite
holding valid tickets and being properly dressed, Alex, Karen and I were
removed from the event because of the message on a bumper sticker on my car:
"No More Blood for Oil." This detail was revealed during a telephone
conversation with the Secret Service the day after the incident. A week
later, in a face-to-face meeting, the Secret Service also informed us that
the man who had removed us was not an agent but a "Republican staffer" on
the host committee responsible for managing security. They would not
disclose his identity to us, however.

What's more, we have confirmed that the president's Social Security
"conversation" was not a private event but, rather, a taxpayer-funded public
event open to anyone with a valid ticket. While all this information is
telling, as a tax-paying, law-abiding citizen with the right to peacefully
express an antiwar statement on a bumper sticker, I believe I deserve more
answers. Specifically, who is this person who represented himself as a
Secret Service agent empowered to use physical force? Further, who was
giving instructions to him and his cohorts?

Most important to me is getting an answer as to why this happened to us. Are
citizens who oppose the Iraq war less entitled than those who support it to
engage in a dialogue about Social Security -- or any other issue about which
Americans need to hear all sides to make informed decisions?

Why are our rights of free speech and assembly being so blatantly violated?
And why are other potentially illegal acts -- improper force, unreasonable
seizure and Secret Service impersonation -- being allowed and perhaps even
encouraged? Could it be that the administration has something to hide, that
it is carefully weeding out potential dissenters because they might expose
flaws in its Social Security agenda?

Ours was not an isolated incident. In Tucson, Ariz., on the same day, Steve
Gerner was denied entry to an event featuring the president because he was
wearing a Democratic Party T-shirt. The college student offered to remove
his shirt but was told he was a "risk" and could not enter. And in Fargo,
N.D., 42 people, including city commissioner Linda Coates, found themselves
barred from obtaining tickets to a February speech by Bush. Their crimes?
Being affiliated with the wrong party and writing letters to the editor
critical of the Bush administration.

On March 29 and again last week, the press questioned the administration
about the Denver incident. (We've now become known as the "Denver Three.")
The White House responded that a "volunteer" had acted out of concern that
we would disrupt the event. Yet since we did not in fact do anything
disruptive, does this mean that the administration is authorizing volunteer
thought police to preempt free speech, despite having assured the press that
it "welcome[s] a diversity of views at the events"? In any case, it remains
unclear why volunteers were charged with the primary responsibility for the
security of a presidential event.

The bipartisan support we have received speaks to the seriousness of this
matter and what it represents to all Americans. Among those who have spoken
out against the treatment we endured are Colorado Republicans Sen. Wayne
Allard and Reps. Bob Beauprez, Marilyn Musgrave and Tom Tancredo; Sens.
Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., and Kent Conrad, D-N.D. (writing to the U.S. attorney
general and treasury secretary); Rep. Earl Pomeroy, D-N.D. (writing to the
director of the presidential advance team); Sen. Ken Salazar, D-Colo.
(writing to the Treasury Department's inspector general and a district
attorney); Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif. (writing to the Government
Accountability Office about taxpayer funds spent on promoting Bush's
privatization agenda); Reps. Diana DeGette, D-Colo., and Ra�l Grijalva,
D-Ariz. (writing to the House Committee on Government Reform); and Rep. Mark
Udall, D-Colo. (writing to White House chief of staff Andrew Card).

On April 19, Udall received what he considered an inadequate response from
Conrad Everett, deputy assistant director of the Secret Service. In his
reply, Udall wrote: "While I am relieved to know that the Secret Service was
not engaged in a partisan purpose, I am still interested in knowing the
identity of the individual involved, and more importantly, what your
department did, if anything, to determine whether this person unlawfully
posed as a law enforcement official." He continued, "If you cannot identify
the person involved, I would like to know what provision of law prevents you
from doing so." Meanwhile, the request for an investigation by our attorney,
Dan Recht, in a March 30 letter to Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, has
not yet received a response.

Notably, last week the White House changed its label for these events from
"town-hall conversations" to "invitation-only, round-table discussions." Is
this meant to better assure the administration that the "diversity of views"
represented includes only people who sport the correct messages on their
bumper stickers?

We cannot allow our freedoms to be privatized in this way. If we lose the
fundamental right to express our opinions freely, all other rights will be
meaningless.

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About the writer
Leslie Weise has worked as a high-tech lawyer for Silicon Valley companies
and is currently pursuing a master of law degree in natural resources and
environmental law at the University of Denver. 



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