Shooting War Gen-We Getting A Grip Wolves In Sheep's Clothing

H07234

Hopium
Headlines : Civil Liberties
Summary:

As first reported in APN, the Pentagon has repeatedly spied upon concerned “peace moms” in Atlanta as well other peace protesters. NBC released pages of a Pentagon spying database late last year. The dots connected locally to a series of protests by the GPJC and “Leave My Child Alone” anti-recruitment campaign.

[Posted By ShiftShapers]
By by Matthew Cardinale
Republished from Atlanta Progressive News via InfoShop.org
Our government, at minimum, spied on vegans with signs, a protest medic, and the G8 Summit.

(APN) ATLANTA – The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Georgia released new documents on Pentagon spying on peaceful protesters, in a downtown press conference today at the Martin Luther King Federal Building. The documents are respondent to their Freedom of Information Act requests to several federal, state, and local agencies, regarding the Pentagon spying which occurred against local peace activists here in Georgia.

“We’ve taken it on behalf of ourselves to get to the bottom of this,” Gerry Weber, 41, Legal Director for the ACLU Foundation of Georgia, said. “We have compiled a report on the spying we’ve seen so far. Protesters have been spied upon, videotaped, and infiltrated. The government had no legal justification for this spying. We’ve only seen the tip of the iceberg.”

Meanwhile, members of Georgia’s Congressional delegation are adding their voices to those of many members of US Congress, especially in California, including US Senator Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) and US Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-CA), who have already been vocal on this issue.

Kyra Jennings of US Representative Lofgren’s office has advised Atlanta Progressive News that the Pentagon has scheduled an initial briefing on January 31, 2006, with her office to respond to her recent…

[end excerpt]
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ShiftShapers

Posted by ShiftShapers
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RECENT COMMENTS

Have you or anyone you know come across a complete list of all the groups the Pentagon spied on? I have seen a small part of the list, that showed that it was sorted by state. I think it would be real interesting to see what local groups did something to inspire the Pentagon’s curiosity.

mwm @ 01/27/06 06:35:53

i too have been looking for that list. you can be sure that if i ever find it, i will release it in my blog (which will most likely never happen for that very reason)

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Photos show U.S. spying on vegans

The ACLU of Georgia released copies of government files on Wednesday that illustrate the extent to which the FBI, the DeKalb County Division of Homeland Security and other government agencies have gone to compile information on Georgians suspected of being threats simply for expressing controversial opinions.

Two documents relating to anti-war and anti-government protests, and a vegan rally, prove the agencies have been “spying” on Georgia residents unconstitutionally, the ACLU said. (Related: ACLU Complaint — PDF file)

For example, more than two dozen government surveillance photographs show 22-year-old Caitlin Childs of Atlanta, a strict vegetarian, and other vegans picketing against meat eating, in December 2003. They staged their protest outside a HoneyBaked Ham store on Buford Highway in DeKalb County.

An undercover DeKalb County Homeland Security detective was assigned to conduct surveillance of the protest and the protestors, and take the photographs. The detective arrested Childs and another protester after he saw Childs approach him and write down, on a piece of paper, the license plate number of his unmarked government car.

“They told me if I didn’t give over the piece of paper I would go to jail and I refused and I went to jail, and the piece of paper was taken away from me at the jail and the officer who transferred me said that was why I was arrested,” Childs said on Wednesday.

The government file lists anti-war protesters in Atlanta as threats, the ACLU said. The ACLU of Georgia accuses the Bush administration of labeling those who disagree with its policy as disloyal Americans.

“We believe that spying on American citizens for no good reason is fundamentally un-American, that it’s not the place of the goverment or the best use of resources to spy on its own citizens and we want it to stop. We want the spies in our government to pack their bags, close up their notebooks, take their cameras home and not engage in the spying anymore,” Gerald Weber of the ACLU of Georgia said during a news conference.

“We have heard of not a single, government surveillance of a pro-war group,” Weber said. “And I doubt we will ever hear of a single surveillance of a pro-war group.”

The ACLU wants Congress and the courts to order government agencies, including the FBI, to stop unconstitutional surveillance.

Weber said the ACLU of Georgia may sue the government, in order to define, once and for all, what unconstitutional surveillance is in a post-911 America.

The FBI in Atlanta declined to comment. According to the Associated Press, FBI spokesman Bill Carter in Washington, D.C. said that all FBI investigations are conducted in response to information that the people being investigated were involved in or might have information about crimes.

As for Caitlin Childs’ protest against meat eating, the files obtained by the ACLU include the DeKalb County Homeland Security report on the surveillance of Childs and the others. The detective wrote that he ordered Childs to give him the piece of paper on which she had written his license tag number, telling her that he did not want her or anyone else to have the tag number of his undercover vehicle.

The detective did not comment in his report about why his license tag number was already visible to the public.

The detective wrote that Childs was “hostile, uncooperative and boisterous toward the officers.”
Childs said today that the agents shouldn’t have been there in the first place, squelching legal dissent.

“We have the right to gather and protest and speak out.”

ShiftShapers @ 01/27/06 10:19:37
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