Chilling Political Speech:
The FBI's Pre-emptive Interrogations of "Possible"
Demonstrators
[Editor's Note: While reading over the many files and government
records (congressional committee hearings, etc) that I obtained from Ted
Gunderson on the Dr. Jeffrey MacDonald case,
it became very obvious to me just how utterly and thoroughly CORRUPT the
US Justice Department is. It is an organization that is controlled by criminals
mostly bent on obstructing justice and intimidating honest citizens who
wish to obtain justice, especially against high government officials. Here
we have a story about the new Gestapo in America, the FBI, intimidating
citizens who 'might' attend a political rally and the the US Justice Department
sees "no First Amendment concerns" about such interrogations.
Can it get any more Kafkaesque than this?..Ken Adachi]
By Bob Barr, FindLaw
http://educate-yourself.org/cn/fbiquestionsdemonstrators25aug04.shtml
August 25, 2004
The FBI, no longer content with working to maintain order
at political events, is now preemptively identifying and interrogating ("interviewing")
possible demonstrators. It has summarized this strategy in a memo.
To make matters worse, the Department of Justice blessed
the FBI strategy in its own memo - suggesting that no First Amendment concerns
are raised by the interrogations.
As I will explain in this column, however, the truth is quite
to the contrary: The strategy, as outlined in the memo, is a serious threat
to free speech.
Back When Politics Was Fun, Protest Was Part
of It
Throughout the Reagan and Clinton presidencies, and even to some extent
during the Nixon years, politics was fun. At least, political protesting
had its lighter moments. (Nothing was really fun during the dour Carter
Administration, and George H.W. Bush's presidency was, well, pretty boring
except for the First Gulf War.)
Who can forget the great costumes and Nixon face masks that
appeared at many political rallies and other events during the 1960s and
early 1970s? Reagan and Clinton masks, the latter sometimes adorned with
long, Pinocchio-type noses, added color and a bit of levity to political
demonstrations throughout most of the 1980s and 1990s. There was, in a word,
tolerance.
Reagan, with his constant good humor, almost always disarmed
protesters with his wit. Conservatives wearing anti-Clinton T-shirts frequently
showed up at
Clinton rallies. The worst they might face from the then-president's supporters
were scowls.
This atmosphere didn't mean security was absent; it was very
present. In the 1960s through the end of Clinton's second term in January
2001, everyone knew if you caused disruption, Secret Service agents would
be on you in an instant, as they should be.
But during that period, you didn't feel you were doing something
criminal if you simply decided to show up at a rally with a protest T-shirt
on, or lugging
around a sloppy paperboard sign criticizing the president. You didn't feel
intimidated.
The Bush Administration: Squelching Disagreement and Dissent
Now, things are very different. The Administration and campaign of George
W. Bush is squelching any possible hint of disagreement or protest at every
political rally or gathering.
For example, people with T-shirts that hint at disagreement
are not allowed anywhere near the events, nor even on the route traveled
by the presidential
motorcade. Think what they'd do to you if you showed up in a - shudder --
mask.
But it's gotten even worse than that.
The FBI's Preemptive Interrogation Memorandum
As the New York Times has reported, in an October 2003 memorandum to law
enforcement agencies, the FBI expressed great concern over the possibility
that marches and rallies in Washington, D.C. and San Francisco might become
"violent, destructive, or disruptive."
The memo went on to urge law enforcement to monitor the Internet,
because "protesters often use the Internet to . . . coordinate their
activities prior to demonstrations." It also urged law enforcement
to watch out for protesters who use cell phones to "coordinate . .
. or update colleagues." In the memo, law enforcement agencies at all
levels of government are warned to be aware of "possible indicators
of protest activity." Moreover, even though the memo does not cite
any evidence of violence likely to take place at "possible protests,"
the Bureau's memo concluded by telling law enforcement agencies to "report
any potentially illegal acts to the" FBI (italics added).
The Department of Justice Memo Blessing the
FBI Memo
Doubtless, the Department of Justice, aware of the FBI memo, was concerned
that it would be seen as urging law enforcement to begin monitoring persons
who might be contemplating staging political protests protected by the First
Amendment. So several months later, in April 2004 - as the New York Times
also reported -- the Department of Justice, which oversees the FBI, issued
its own memo - addressing, and dismissing, these constitutional concerns.
The memo came from DOJ's Office of Legal Counsel (OLC). In
the memo, OLC concluded, not surprisingly, that the monitoring, interrogating
and gathering of evidence on potential political protesters raised no First
Amendment concerns. In addition, it went on to conclude that even if, hypothetically,
such activities did raise concerns, any "chilling" effect would
be "quite minimal" and would be far outweighed by the overriding
public interest in maintaining "order."
Evidence Suggests Protesters Are Subjected
To Home and Office Interviews
No chilling effect? In the last few months, evidence has been mounting that
special agents are showing up at the homes and offices of potential protesters
- casting suspicion upon them in front of bosses, colleagues, family, friends
and neighbors. This activity apparently has increased as the Republican
Convention and the November election draw near.
If that's not a chilling effect, I don't know what is. The
price of free speech should not be a high-profile FBI visit that makes all
who know you wonder if you may be a criminal.
During these visits, the special agents "interview"
the potential protesters to determine if they -- or anyone they know --
might be planning any political demonstrations. Of course, the "anyone
they know" is especially worrisome - hints of McCarthyism.
Also according to the New York Times, the final question
the FBI agents ask is this: Does the interviewee know that withholding information
on
whether they know anyone else who might be planning a demonstration or "disruption"
is itself a crime?
One can only imagine how this parting shot plays out: "Oh,
by the way, ma'am, before me and my armed partner here leave your house,
we'd like to remind you that if you haven't told us if you know someone
else who might be planning a demonstration, you have committed a crime and
we can prosecute you for not telling us that. Have a good night, ma'am."
This, of course, is pure intimidation.
DOJ's Absurd Stance: Interrogation in Home
or Office Is Not Interrogation
The FBI, seemingly, takes an absurdly narrow view of what kind of tactics
would, in fact, chill speech - a view that excludes its own plainly chilling
measures. For instance, Joe Parris, an FBI spokesman, told the New York
Times that, because "no one was dragged from their homes and put under
bright lights," interviews of potential demonstrators are not "chilling."
So now we know the Administration's new First Amendment standard:
So long as the government agents don't "drag you from your home"
and interrogate you "under bright lights," you have nothing to
complain or worry about.
The fact of the matter is, tactics such as those contemplated
in last year's FBI memo, and approved by the Justice Department this past
spring, do chill free
speech. They do intimidate.
And, self-justifying memos by government lawyers notwithstanding,
such tactics usher in an era of intolerance and fear that has no place in
American
politics.
Bob Barr
Bob Barr served in the U.S. House of Representatives from
January 1995 to January 2003. He was a senior member of the Judiciary Committee.
He now
practices law, writes extensively, works with the American Conservative
Union, and consults on privacy matters with the ACLU.
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