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NEWS FLASH :: Police Infiltration revealed by court affidavits (fwd)

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Aimee L Smith)
Sat Sep 9 03:02:50 2000

Message-Id: <200009090702.DAA15767@emat1.mit.edu>
To: thistle@MIT.EDU
cc: peace-list@MIT.EDU
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Date: Sat, 09 Sep 2000 03:02:37 -0400
From: Aimee L Smith <alsmith@MIT.EDU>


Our tax dollars at work!

	Regards,
			Aimee

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STATE POLICE INFILTRATED PROTEST GROUPS, DOCUMENTS SHOW

Search-warrant affidavits reveal an undercover operation aimed at 
activists in Philadelphia for the GOP convention.

By Linda K. Harris,, Craig R. McCoy and Thomas Ginsberg
INQUIRER STAFF WRITERS

State police undercover agents posing as demonstrators infiltrated 
activist groups planning the protests at the Republican National 
Convention, search-warrant documents made public yesterday showed.

The undercover operation was detailed in legal documents filed Aug. 1 
by Philadelphia police seeking search warrants for a raid that day on 
a so-called "puppet warehouse" at 4100 Haverford Ave. in West 
Philadelphia. The documents were under a court seal until yesterday.

About 75 people were arrested in the raid at the warehouse.

The infiltration was immediately condemned yesterday by the state 
chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union and the city public 
defender's office.

"It's worse than sleazeball," said Stefan Presser, the ACLU's legal 
director. "This is an outrage."

Presser and other critics said dissenters needed the right to rally 
and to organize without fear that police were spying on them. They 
said they feared that police undercover officers could cross the line 
from intelligence-gatherers to provocateurs.

"The legality and propriety of this potentially unconstitutional 
police conduct will certainly be an issue at the time of trial in all 
of these cases," said Bradley Bridge, a senior lawyer with the 
defender's office.

During the convention, Police Commissioner John F. Timoney repeatedly 
denied that police had engaged in infiltration.

"We had not infiltrated any group," he said the day after police 
raided the warehouse that had become one of several gathering spots 
for demonstrators during the convention.

A spokeswoman for the commissioner said yesterday that he would have 
no comment. Lt. Susan Slawson, commander of the police public-affairs 
unit, said the commissioner could not talk because "it's in 
litigation," a reference to a civil suit filed by demonstrators 
challenging their arrests during the protests.

The use of state police as the undercover operatives took place as 
the city itself was restricted from using its own officers for such 
infiltration under a long-standing mayoral directive. The directive 
says the police may not infiltrate protest groups without the 
permission of the mayor, the managing director, and the police 
commissioner.

Mayor Street and City Solicitor Kenneth Trujillo declined comment 
yesterday.

In seeking search warrants, police cited the work of the undercover 
operatives and detailed the intelligence gathered as the convention 
approached. The information is sketched out in affidavits of probable 
cause seeking warrants to search the warehouse, a U-Haul van, another 
van, and a pickup that police deemed suspicious.

"This investigation is utilizing several Pennsylvania state troopers 
in an undercover capacity that have infiltrated several of the 
activist groups planning to commit numerous illegal direct actions," 
said one affidavit, signed by Detective William Egenlauf of the 
Philadelphia Police Department.

It says the state police undercover operatives arrived at the 
warehouse on July 27, four days before the convention began.

Once there, the agents assisted "in the construction of props to be 
used during protests," the affidavit says.

It says agents observed demonstrators building street barriers 
and "lock boxes," devices used by protesters to lock arms together 
when blocking streets. The papers say they overheard discussions that 
indicated protesters planned on "using the puppets . . . as 
blockades."

The operatives also reported that "persons indicated they would be 
throwing pies, bottles and cardboard boxes filled with water at the 
police," the affidavits stated.

Timoney held a news conference after the convention to display items 
seized during the raid, including two massive slingshots and chains 
wrapped in kerosene-soaked rags. Such devices were not used during 
the protests. Police also displayed seized "lock boxes."

Protesters have claimed the facility was nothing more than an art 
studio to fashion the puppets, floats and other props that were a 
hallmark of the demonstrations.

Demonstrators also said their protests would be nonviolent, with 
illegal actions limited to the blockading of streets. Their lawyers 
have complained that numerous people were arrested in the warehouse 
without any proof they had any connection to illegal items.

A key subject of controversy has been the raid on the warehouse.

The request for the search warrants for the warehouse and lengthy 
affidavits detailing police intelligence-gathering was made 
yesterday, a month after Municipal Court President Judge Louis J. 
Presenza approved the searches.

At the request of the District Attorney's Office, the warrants were 
sealed - barred from public inspection - for a month as soon as they 
were issued. The legal request for the warrants maintained that 
premature "disclosure of this affidavit could endanger the lives" of 
the undercover operatives.

The affidavits cite sweeping police intelligence-gathering before the 
convention. This included monitoring of unspecified "electronic 
messages" sent among demonstrators, an apparent reference to police 
scrutiny of Web sites and electronic mailing lists.

The police documents identified what investigators viewed as the key 
protest groups and their goals. Funds for one group "allegedly 
originate with Communist and leftist parties and from sympathetic 
trade unions" or from "the former Soviet-allied World Federation of 
Trade Unions," according to the affidavits.

The affidavits go on to identify a handful of leaders of the various 
groups. Among those cited by name are John Sellers and Kate Sorensen, 
who were later arrested during demonstrations in Center City. The two 
were held in jail for days in lieu of $1 million bail - a sum critics 
said was extraordinary. In recent interviews after their release from 
jail, people who were inside the warehouse said that they had 
suspected early on that four undercover officers were working among 
them. Four men - known as Tim, Harry, George and Ryan - showed up 
together at 41st and Haverford about a week before the convention, 
introducing themselves as union carpenters from Wilkes-Barre who 
built stages, several demonstrators said.

They were big, burly men who were older than most of the people 
working in the warehouse. They did not seem particularly political or 
well-informed, according to demonstrators. All four, however, were 
considered hard workers.

Soliman Lawrence, 20, of Tallahassee, Fla., worked closely with the 
four on a massive satirical float built for a protest march.

"They gained our trust," Lawrence said. "The fact that we didn't know 
them very well wasn't a big deal.

"I remember thinking to myself, 'Why does everyone who looks like 
that have to be a cop?' " Lawrence said. "I didn't like that I 
thought like that."



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