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SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/260424_spies22.html

Peace groups under watch

Authorities keep tabs on non-violent Seattle activists in

hunt for al-Qaida

Wednesday, February 22, 2006

By MIKE BARBER AND PAUL SHUKOVSKY

P-I REPORTERS

 

In the post-9/11 world, some unlikely figures have attracted

the attention of local police and federal agents: the Raging

Grannies, known for musical satire, and Quaker peace

activists, known for non-violence.

 

Recently disclosed FBI files show that in Seattle in recent

years, federal agents and local police looked for signs of

civil disobedience among activists preparing to protest Navy

ships arriving for Seafair:

 

* Local anti-war groups such as the Raging Grannies, Not in

Our Name and Ground Zero were watched for intent to disrupt

Navy ships through civil disobedience such as chaining

themselves to ships. It never happened.

 

* A Navy criminal investigator traveled to Eugene, Ore., to

find out if anarchists blamed for violence at Seattle's 1999

World Trade Organization conference might return to protest

the fleet. They never did.

 

* A law enforcement agent conducted surveillance as two

small, Peace-Fleet boats were launched in West Seattle.

 

Authorities argue that they had a duty to protect Navy

ships. They don't want to happen in Puget Sound what

happened six years ago in Yemen when a small suicide boat

blew a hole in a Navy destroyer, killing 17 sailors.

 

As the Bush administration and Congress argue about how far

domestic spying to protect the nation should go,

Seattle-area peace activists and constitutional watchdogs

are concerned that programs intended to thwart al-Qaida

could become a witch-hunt against American political

dissenters. Concerns are heightened by the storage of

massive amounts of raw information in government databases

that have proliferated since 9/11.

 

One key Pentagon database was piloted here, the Joint

Protection Enterprise Network. Its purpose is to share

intelligence to safeguard military bases, including seven

around Puget Sound. It's controlled by the Pentagon's

secretive Counterintelligence Field Activity office. The

Pentagon did not return numerous calls for an explanation

about the database.

 

'Threat assessments'

 

" Surveillance of actual threats might be warranted.

Surveillance of known, non-violent activists is not

warranted and has a chilling affect on protest or

demonstrations against our government, " says Glen Milner,

53, an electrician from Shoreline.

 

Milner, a Quaker peace activist, was watched by local and

federal law enforcement who feared his peace fleet protest

boats could interfere with Navy ships at Seafair -- or worse

be a Trojan horse for terrorists. The Coast Guard charged

Milner with intruding into security zones around the Navy

ships during the 2004 peace fleet demonstrations. Milner

denies it.

 

Milner's name and those of local peace organizations appear

throughout 18 pages of documents about government " threat

assessments " of the 2003 and 2004 peace fleet demonstration.

The papers were acquired through the Freedom of Information

Act by the American Civil Liberties Union of Washington last

year on Milner's behalf.

 

" This is part of a troubling pattern by the government of

spying on peaceful groups, " said Kathleen Taylor, executive

director of the ACLU of Washington.

 

Keeping watch on " groups like Raging Grannies doesn't make

us safer, " she said. " And it interferes with people's right

to protest government policies. When government believes

that advocacy of peace is a threat, we are going in the

wrong direction. The government needs to focus on real

threats to public safety rather than to presume that anyone

who objects to government action is a safety threat. "

 

Duke University law professor Scott Silliman, executive

director of the Center on Law, Ethics and National Security,

sees no legal problem with the actions of Seattle-area

police and federal agents surrounding Seafair. The retired

Air Force lawyer said agents watching protesters in a public

place is not against the law. " It's the same thing as a

bunch of cops watching, " Silliman said. " It may be

intimidating, but it's nothing illegal. "

 

In the wake of 9/11, the Bush administration responded to

its failure to detect the attacks by broadening the rules

for the FBI to open a national security investigation.

 

The old guidelines required that a crime had been committed

or was being planned. The new guidelines create a category

called " threat assessment, " and no crime has to be committed

or planned to perform a threat assessment.

 

Under a threat assessment, a federal criminal justice source

said, agents can attend public meetings without identifying

themselves and conduct such simple surveillance as watching

a protest march.

 

The Naval Criminal Investigative Service and the FBI

acknowledged that their agencies collect and disseminate

information on U.S. political activists. But the agencies

say that they only gather information on those who either

break laws or plan to do so.

 

The FBI " has no interest in investigating individuals

engaged in the exercise of their constitutional rights, "

said Laura Laughlin, special agent-in-charge of the FBI's

Seattle office. " We are interested in individuals or groups

who are actively conspiring to commit criminal acts. Our

investigations are intelligence-driven and predicated on

specific information about potential criminal acts. "

 

Scott Jacobs, former special agent in charge of the Naval

Criminal Investigative Service in Bremerton, agreed. " If I

were a citizen protester, I wouldn't want people reporting

on me, and we don't. ... Ground Zero has had a regular

protest activity at the Bangor (submarine base) front gate.

We don't collect on any one of those individuals out there.

They are exercising their rights and are peaceful

demonstrators, " said Jacobs, now chief of anti-terrorism

activities at Naval Criminal Investigative Service

headquarters in Washington, D.C.

 

But Jacobs drew a bright line between protesting at the base

front gate and launching peace vessels to protest Navy warships.

 

" If you get within 500 yards of a naval vessel, you're

breaking the law, " Jacobs said. " If we have information that

folks are going to disrupt that flotilla, we would collect

information on that specifically. We don't know who is on

those demonstrators' boats. They could be a terrorist group

trying to get closer to our vessels under the guise of a

protest activity. "

 

Getting in the database

 

It's unclear whether information about local political

activists has been collected in the database intended for

military installations to use to share intelligence. The

Pentagon did not make itself available to answer the question.

 

The database is fed raw, unclassified information from

another government database, said a federal criminal justice

source. That second database often contains unverified

information about possible threats to military

installations. If you get off the wrong exit on Interstate

5, pull up to the Fort Lewis gate, then turn around and

leave, guards might enter your license and vehicle

description in that database.

 

In general, " civil disobedience on a federal reservation, "

such as a military base, could be enough to prompt

collecting intelligence on an individual or activist group,

said Dave Gomez, the FBI assistant special agent in charge

in Seattle.

 

" We don't investigate people's exercise of First Amendment

rights. We investigate criminal activity and the potential

for criminal activity. "

 

One of the documents in Milner's FBI file, says the Naval

Criminal Investigative Service, mindful of Seattle's violent

World Trade Organization confrontations, sent an agent to

Eugene, Ore., in July 2000 to gauge anarchists' intentions.

 

Milner said the peace fleet protests at Seafair have been

held since 2000 without incident until 2004 when he was

charged with violating the security zone around the Navy

ships in his small boat. He believes flawed intelligence was

exaggerated and created a confrontational climate that led

to the charge.

 

" Personally, I tend to be one of those people who feels that

if you aren't doing anything wrong, you should have nothing

to fear. In this case their intelligence was faulty and used

against me, " he said.

 

A year earlier, a memo apparently from a police member of

the FBI's Washington Joint Analytic Center says: " The

Snohomish County Peace Action of Edmonds is a merge between

the Lynnwood SNOW and Peace Action of Snohomish County. They

support the anti-war, anti-Bush, anti-nuclear, anti-weapons

movements. "

 

The memo from an unknown local police agency to the FBI says

Milner was the speaker at a May 2003 potluck attended by the

Raging Grannies, older women who dress outlandishly and

oppose war through humorous song.

 

Raging Granny Shirley Morrison, 83, of Seattle says it was a

Mother's Day potluck. She's not surprised to find that the

Grannies are mentioned in FBI files. " Frankly, we've been

expecting to be in a database, " Morrison said. " We're all

going to be investigated under this administration. "

 

An FBI memo dated a few days later says its domestic

terrorism squad had opened a " special events investigation "

into possible civil disobedience during Seafair's public

tours of Navy ships. Other memos from various federal and

local agencies in the bureau files discuss demonstration

plans of local peace groups including Ground Zero, Not In

Our Name and Peace Action of Snohomish County.

 

Most information in the police and federal investigative

agency memos about the 2003 Peace Fleet demonstrations

appears to have been gleaned from activist Web sites.

 

But on July 30, 2003, Peace Fleet activists were watched as

they launched their small vessels.

 

" Yesterday (redacted) conducted surveillance at the boat

launch on Alki Beach, " said one memo in FBI files. " Two

16-18 foot boats launched at approximately 11:00 a.m. Each

boat had three individuals aboard, and each boat was flying

a blue flag with 'NO WAR IN IRAQ.' "

 

The memo cited " uncorroborated information " indicating plans

for a sit-in during public tours of the Navy ships, perhaps

by an " attempt to secure themselves (via handcuffs or other

means) inside the vessels. "

 

It was the FBI, however, that counseled against violating

protesters' civil liberties.

 

" It may be advisable to allow the activist groups to conduct

as much exercise of their First Amendment rights as possible

and avoid confrontation, only becoming involved in issues of

safety and national security, " the FBI said.

 

P-I reporter Mike Barber can be reached at 206-448-8018 or

mikebarber

 

 

" NOTICE: Due to Presidential Executive Orders, the National Security Agency may

have read this email without warning, warrant, or notice. They may do this

without any judicial or legislative oversight. You have no recourse nor

protection save to call for the impeachment of the current President. "

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