Activists demand answers after news of NYPD spying on political groups
by alethoRT | May 27, 2014
Following
the news that the New York Police Department sent undercover officers
to monitor political organizations, multiple activist groups are looking
for an audit of the department’s wide-ranging surveillance program.
The
complaint has been filed with the NYPD’s new office of the inspector
general, which the City Council created against the wishes of former
Mayor Michael Bloomberg in order to oversee the police department’s
policies – particularly in light of criticism regarding its
stop-and-frisk tactics and surveillance of Muslim communities.
According to the New York Times,
the groups are calling for a comprehensive investigation into the
NYPD’s intelligence division, which has been operating the police
force’s surveillance program for years. The move comes as the groups
seek more transparency from police following the election of new Mayor
Bill de Blasio, whose administration they believe will be supportive.
“We
need tangible, concrete proposals of how we can ensure the NYPD does
not target an entire group, set of groups, or political activists in
general based on their participation in political advocacy,” the
complaint reads.
Although most of the parties involved were not named, the Times
revealed that one of the organizations behind the complaint is Friends
of Brad Will – a group dedicated to increasing public awareness of human
rights abuses connected to the “War on Drugs.”
As
noted by the newspaper, the group believed it had attracted the
attention of the police for years, and investigative reporting by the Associated Press
confirmed that “an undercover officer had infiltrated a Friends of Brad
Will meeting in New Orleans in 2008 and had sent a report noting plans
for future actions by the group.”
In addition to spying on political groups, Reuters
reported that police classified those employing civil disobedience as
“terrorist organizations” and kept secret files on individual members.
Much of the NYPD’s surveillance efforts could be traced to the aftermath of the September 11
attacks on the World Trade Center, but the groups claim police activity
has negatively affected their ability to organize and that their
constitutional rights to assemble, petition the government, and practice
free speech have been violated.
“These
kinds of police programs can’t just be laid at the feet of a post-9/11
world and the argument that security outweighs legal protections,”
Friends of Brad Will coordinator Robert Jereski told Reuters.
According to the Times,
the complaint is requesting that the inspector general disclose “a full
description of the training which officers undergo before being tasked
with targeting political activists.”
This
isn’t the first time that the NYPD has come under fire for political
surveillance, either. In 2004, police were found to be monitoring church
groups, anti-war organizations and others in the lead-up to the
Republican National Convention. Police defended their behavior, arguing
their efforts were aimed at preventing unlawful activity, not silencing
dissent.
“There
was no political surveillance,” NYPD intelligence unit leader David
Cohen testified regarding past tactics. “This was a program designed to
determine in advance the likelihood of unlawful activity or acts of
violence.”
The
most recent complaint also comes a little more than a month after the
NYPD disbanded a controversial “Demographics Unit” tasked with detailing
everyday life in predominantly Muslim communities in the wake of 9/11.
As RT reported previously, no terrorism-related leads were generated despite the resourced dedicated.
“The
Demographics Unit created psychological warfare in our community,” said
Linda Sarsour of the Arab American Association of New York. “Those
documents, they showed where we live. That’s the cafe where I eat.
That’s where I pray. That’s where I buy my groceries. They were able to
see their entire lives on those maps. And it completely messed with the
psyche of the community.”
No comments:
Post a Comment