http://www.greenisthenewred.com/blog/fbi-file-reveals-discussion-of-discrediting-animal-rights-activists-by-planting-rumors/3282/
Greenisthenewred. 6 December 2010.
FBI File Reveals Discussion of Discrediting Animal Rights Activists by
'Planting Rumors'
by Will Potter
The FBI and a previously-unknown informant in the animal
rights movement discussed, among other topics, how to disrupt
political activism, according to FBI documents. The topics
discussed echo COINTELPRO-era tactics of the 1960s, including
the possibility of discrediting activists through planting
rumors.
The FBI file is dated May 12, 2005, by the FBI’s Johnson City
Resident Agency, which is part of the Knoxville field office.
It is based on conversations between an FBI agent and
“Source,” who is only identified as someone who was involved
in “direct actions” and is willing to share information with
the government in exchange for immunity from prosecution.
The result is an FBI agent’s notes that offer a rare glimpse
of how the government is targeting its “number one domestic
terrorism threat.” Of particular interest to the FBI agent was
how the animal rights movement has responded to the
government’s use of informants. I have reported here
previously about the FBI infiltrating vegan potlucks, and much
more serious cases involving an informant named “Anna,”
Brandon Darby, and Jacob Ferguson, among others.
These high-profile cases have made activists fearful of FBI
spying. According to the FBI agents’ notes, the informant
reported that fear alone of such infiltration can be enough to
sabotage political activity:
“The Animal Rights Movement does little research on newcomers
into the movement and basically goes with its gut instinct as
to whether a person is an informant or not. Organizers of the
Animal Rights Movement can be discredited and removed from the
scene by planting rumors that they are plants and/or
informants.” [emphasis added]
The potential for such tactics appears to be validated in the
mind of the FBI agent, who notes that there is “no risk of
violence to these persons about whom these false rumors may be
started as most of the animal rights people are also strict
advocates of nonviolence against human persons.”
A common term in activist circles is “security culture,” which
means being aware of government surveillance and taking
reasonable steps to protect your privacy, and the privacy of
others. One aspect of security culture, for instance, includes
email encryption via PGP.
Activists who have had homes raided by the FBI or been
harassed through grand jury witch hunts have learned the
importance of protecting their privacy, and making it less
easy for the FBI to snoop into their political activity.
“Security culture” has been cited in court cases and
Congressional hearings as a source of frustration for FBI
agents.
In this document, the FBI agent notes “the day of those strict
rules may be passing. Source believes that many of the younger
activists do not subscribe to these strict requirements as
they are extremely inconvenient.”
This FBI document was provided to me by Ryan Shapiro, who is a
PhD candidate at MIT. Shapiro, a historian of science, is
researching conflicts over animal experimentation and national
security. This document surfaced in one of his Freedom of
Information Act requests. Shapiro’s research is a
ground-breaking investigation of early campaigns to exploit
national security fears in order to fight animal rights
activists. As he told me:
“Politicians, industry, and law enforcement have long employed
the rhetoric and apparatus of national security to counter
animal advocacy. Today’s Green Scare actually stands on the
shoulders of a century of similar efforts to marginalize
animal protectionists as threats to American security.”
COINTELPRO Tactics Resurface
Throughout U.S. history, there have been government campaigns
against progressive social movements. This document reveals a
continuation of that trend, not only in terms of the
ideological motivations, but in terms of the specific tactics
used by law enforcement. One of the most notorious eras of FBI
spying in recent memory was dubbed COINTELPRO. According to
FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, COINTELPRO aimed to “expose,
disrupt, misdirect, discredit, or otherwise neutralize”
radical social movements in the 1960s, using any means at
their disposal.
The tactics discussed in this document, including the details
about spying, informants, and rumor-spreading, are direct
parallels to those used in COINTELPRO. The Church Committee
hearings in the 1970s ostensibly put an end to those
operations, reining in rogue police operations. This is yet
another example of how the COINTELPRO legacy has been
institutionalized, and continues to endure.
The FBI agent’s notes, no matter how disturbing, are actually
quite astute throughout the document. That is, except for a
final section on the potential threat posed by animal rights
activists:
“The Animal Rights Movement activists will not resort to
violence as a source of funding. By that, source means that
activists will not become bank robbers or armed robbers and
commit crimes of that nature in order to fund their movement.”
To anyone familiar with the animal rights movement (such as
the informant), the thought of this is quite odd. Animal
activists have not robbed banks. They have not taken up arms.
Judging by the structure of the document, though, and the
accompanying material, it is clear that these transcribed
comments were the informant’s response to direct questions by
the FBI agent.
In other words, the FBI agent was seriously questioning the
informant about the feasibility of animal rights activists and
“eco-terrorists” building a true guerilla-style revolutionary
movement.
In many ways, this is the most revealing segment of the entire
file. The animal rights movement has never injured a single
human being in the name of protecting animals, let alone in
the name of money. For the FBI to entertain the possibility,
and press an informant for further information, is another
reflection of how much the bureau has lost touch with reality.
As I have discussed on this website at length, the creation of
animal rights and environmental activists as the “number one
domestic terrorism threat” has been a coordinated campaign by
corporations and the politicians who represent them. As we see
here, the rhetoric has taken on a life of its own; even the
most far-fetched ploys are discussed straight-faced, business
as usual, and the scare-mongering has been institutionalized
into national security operations.