ACLU of Maryland Lawsuit Uncovers Maryland State Police Spying Against Peace and Anti-Death Penalty Groups (7/17/2008)
FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
CONTACT: media@aclu-md.org
BALTIMORE – The American Civil Liberties Union of Maryland today made public
what it called "shocking" documents obtained through a Maryland Public
Information Act (MPIA) lawsuit, revealing that the Maryland State Police (MSP)
engaged in covert surveillance of local peace and anti-death penalty groups for
over a year from 2005-2006. The organization expressed alarm at the
incomprehensible spying revealed in 43 pages of summaries and computer logs,
none of which refer to criminal or even potentially criminal acts, other than a
few isolated references to plans for completely nonviolent civil
disobedience.
ACLU of Maryland Executive Director Susan Goering blasted the program as
"Un-American," and said, "I fear that the documents released today, which the
MSP wrongfully withheld for almost two years, may be only the tip of the
proverbial iceberg."
Goering continued: "The documents show that the MSP engaged in surveillance
operations against peaceful activists similar to those abandoned in the 1970s
with the end of FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover's infamous COINTELPRO program. The
ACLU will soon file additional requests under the Maryland Public Information
Act to assess other activities and targets of the MSP's ‘Homeland Security and
Intelligence Division' and will seek legislative reforms to ensure this kind of
improper spying never happens again."
"In our America, you should be able to attend a meeting about an issue you
care about without having to worry that government spies are entering your name
into a database used to track alleged terrorists and drug traffickers," said
David Rocah, Staff Attorney for the ACLU of Maryland. "Americans have the right
to peaceably assemble with others of a like mind and speak out about what they
believe in. For undercover police officers to spend hundreds of hours
entering information about lawful political protest activities into a criminal
database is an unconscionable waste of taxpayer dollars and does nothing to make
us safer from actual terrorists or drug dealers."
The documents obtained in the MPIA lawsuit reveal that for 14 months, MSP's
Homeland Security and Intelligence Division sent covert agents to infiltrate the
Baltimore Pledge of Resistance, a peace group, the Coalition to End the Death
Penalty (CEDP), and the Committee to Save Vernon Evans. The agents collectively
spent at least 288 hours on their surveillance over the 14-month period.
An agent also joined the electronic listserv of the CEDP under an alias using a
spoof email address. Agents from the Division monitored private organizing
meetings, public forums and events held in several churches, as well as
anti-death penalty rallies outside the state's SuperMax facility in Baltimore
and in Lawyer's Mall in Annapolis.
Despite the fact that reports from these events consistently said that
activists acted lawfully at all times, the agents continued to recommend that
the spying continue. Reports of this surveillance were sent to at least seven
federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies, including the National
Security Agency, Baltimore City, Baltimore County, and Anne Arundel County
police departments, and the state General Services police. Logs of the
surveillance do not contain any reports of illegal activity, but rather consist
entirely of reports on the groups' and individuals' lawful political
activities.
The MSP's Homeland Security and Intelligence Division also appears to have
been working to specially track the activities of at least one individual
activist, Max Obuszewski, who was entered into the "Washington/Baltimore High
Intensity Drug Trafficking Area" (HIDTA) database. That database, which is
funded by the federal government, was intended to facilitate information sharing
among federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies engaged in drug
interdiction. In December 2006, Congress modified the federal law to allow
HIDTA funds to be used to assist in terrorism investigations as well. The
entry for Mr. Obuszewski indicates that the "Primary Crime" linked to him in the
database is "Terrorism-Anti Govern[ment], and the "Secondary Crime" is
"Terrorism – Anti-War Protestors" – which are outlandish and blatantly false
accusations.
Mr. Obuszewski, a client of the ACLU and a well known peace activist from
Baltimore, is a lifelong pacifist. He engages in principled civil disobedience
and strongly believes in and promotes nonviolence. Needless to say, there
is nothing at all in any of the reports that links Mr. Obuszewski to any violent
crime, much less drug trafficking or terrorism. Rather, all of his activities
reported in the database concern lawful First Amendment activity, or non-violent
civil disobedience, including a report about a meeting between activists and
Rep. Benjamin Cardin in 2005 in which they asked him to support a timetable for
withdrawal from Iraq.
"As a long-time peace activist who is familiar with our government's past
history of surveillance of dissidents, I surmised that groups involved in First
Amendment activities would be watched and infiltrated after 9/11," said Max
Obuszewski, a client of the ACLU. "With the growth of the surveillance state
after 9/11, it was evident that government agencies would come looking for
groups and individuals engaged in peaceful protest activity and label them
terrorists. So in all honesty, I was not surprised to be informed that I
was wrongfully labeled a terrorist."
In 1976, following revelations of the FBI's COINTELPRO (Counter Intelligence
Program), the Federal Bureau agreed to limit its spying to situations in which
criminal conduct was suspected. But after 9/11, Attorney General John Ashcroft
rewrote the guidelines so that "for the purpose of detecting or preventing
terrorist activities, the FBI is authorized to visit any place and attend any
event that is open to the public, on the same terms and conditions as members of
the public generally." Yet even under those draconian rules, much of the spying
apparently conducted by the MSP would have been forbidden. In addition, the
Ashcroft rules cautioned that "no information obtained from such visits shall be
retained unless it relates to potential criminal or terrorist activity." Clearly
information has been retained by the MSP that does not relate to any unlawful
acts.
Attorneys representing the plaintiffs in the lawsuit are Kit Pierson and
Richard Rinkema from the Washington, DC office of the law firm Heller Ehrman
White & McAuliffe LLP, donating their time pro bono, and ACLU of Maryland
staff attorney David Rocah.
Go online to see the MSP documents and read further background about the case: www.aclu-md.org/aPress/Attachments/MSP_Documents.pdf
LEGAL DOCUMENTS: 7.17.08 letter to Governor O'Malley National ACLU Report: "No Real Threat" Northern California Report on Government Monitoring of Political Activity Complaint Exhibit A: Log indicating surveillance of BERN activities 1.10.07 letter from MSP 9.7.07 letter from ACLU to MSP 12.18.07 letter from MSP
To read ACLU-MD’s original FOIA and MPIA requests: www.aclu-md.org/aPress/Press%202006/082906_FOIA.html
For more information about government spying on ordinary
Americans: www.aclu.org/safefree/spyfiles/index.html
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