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now, thousands of activists who have gathered in Pittsburgh to protest at the
G20 summit have been met with what we have come to expect: overreaction by
authorities and illegal preventive tactics by law enforcement officials at all
levels. A secret communications hub with "electronic eyes" has been established
by the Secret Service, working with over 40 other agencies to infiltrate, spy
on, and disrupt all forms of opposition. Raids and arrests are mounting, and the
aggressive and well-planned system of cracking down on dissenting voices and
reducing media coverage is strongly in effect. CCR has responded to the
increasing threat to dissent in a number of ways. For months now a CCR board
member and cooperating attorney, Jules Lobel, has worked with on the ground
organizations to secure permits and challenge restrictions to protests. Last
week, in collaboration with the ACLU, he successfully represented several
organizations in court and secured the right to demonstrate in a city park
during the G20 gathering. And in a filing on Monday, we charged the local police
with illegal searches, vehicle seizures, raids and detentions of Seeds of Peace
members aimed at preventing them from providing food to protestors. CCR's legal
director, Bill Quigley, is in Pittsburgh advocating on behalf of the protestors,
and CCR will continue its support. On the topic of dissent, Bill Quigley wrote
an article on the protests at the G20 Summit in Pittsburgh, PA. The Center for Constitutional Rights
(CCR) is re-issuing our pamphlet, "If an Agent Knocks," to provide advice to
activists likely to be targeted by FBI agents or other federal investigators, in
Pittsburgh and beyond. This booklet is a resource to protect activists from
government investigation. We also want to support the power you show when you
exercise this fundamental right of dissent.
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