Scared
of Anonymous: Tampa police prepare for mass arrests during Republican
convention
Are
computer hackers, political activists and an underground army of
anarchists preparing to overthrow next week’s Republican National
Convention in Tampa? Police in Florida seem to think so, and are
taking every precaution to prepare for violence.
RT,
23
August, 2012
Acting
on the assumption that hacktivists with the loose-knit, international
Anonymous collective will wage a war next week on Tampa with the help
of weapon yielding anarchists angry at the Republican Party and
American establishment all together, law enforcement agencies in
Florida are in a hurry to secure the Sunshine State in the event that
a mass orchestrated action disrupts the GOP’s national convention.
Authorities
had originally deciphered YouTube videos uploaded by alleged
Anonymous members to suggest that the group was calling for others to
provoke criminal acts across Tampa. The discovery earlier this week
of bricks and pipes on a Tampa rooftop has further led authorities to
assume that anarchists will engage in a mass violent uprising to
coincide with the RNC. To prepare for a mass revolt, the entirety of
nearby Orient Road Jail has been emptied out on the command of
Hillsborough County Sheriff David Gee, who wants to ensure that the
facility’s 1,700 beds can be utilized in the event of a mass
arrest.
In
Florida, it’s a classic case of fear mongering. Everywhere else,
it’s a joke.
"It
could be a 15 year old in the basement," security reporter Bruce
Schneier tells Tampa Bay Online. "Anonymous is a lifestyle.
Anyone can say they're with Anonymous."
Authorities
aren’t so eager to heed the expert’s advice, however, even if
Schneier has authored a tremendous amount of articles on Anonymous
throughout his career as a technology and security journalist.
Earlier
this year, Scheiner addressed a crowd at San Francisco’s RSA
conference with a lecture on cyberculture, at the time saying,
"Anonymous is more of a name that anyone can pub upon themselves
if they act in a way that is consistent with Anonymous' work. We
shouldn't think of them as an actual group".
The
police aren’t buying that explanation, though, and are linking the
hacktivism collective with balls-to-the-wall anarchy. In downtown
Tampa’s North Florida Ave. this week, authorities discovered a pile
of bricks and pipes on a businesses’ rooftop. Near the scene of the
“crime” was a graffiti portrayal of Guy Fawkes, the British
revolutionary whose likeness has been adopted by both Anonymous
activists and Occupy Wall Street protesters as a single identity that
a hive-mind can maneuver behind.
Florida-based
private investigator Bill Warner is weary, to say the least. He
doesn’t see the bricks and pipes as possible construction site
components, but weapons or destruction. After all, not every building
is erected with bricks and plumbing; only some. To Warner, this is an
indication that domestic terrorists on par with al-Qaeda insurgents
will disrupt the RNC.
"These
are tactics terrorists use in the Middle East. They will hide bricks
in piles in buildings and so forth. They will move into the area
start their little protests. Then they will find their pile of bricks
and pipes and start busting out windows," Warner tells Tampa’s
Fox affiliate.
In
a video posted earlier in the week by a person claiming allegiance to
Anonymous, a call-for-action is put forth asking supporters to
dismantle the “clean zone” being set up in Tampa where people
will be able to exercise their First Amendment right to protest
without fear of repercussion.
“Let
us band together and knock down the walls of the clean zone for it
violates our Constitution,” the video claims. “The city of Tampa
is our city, the peoples city. Together united by one divided zero we
will fight for what belongs to the people. May freedom be with you
all.”
Speaking
to local Bay News 9, Warner says, “This is pretty bad,” and takes
the video as an indication that “There's a lot of trouble coming
our way.”
"Have
they more locations with those bricks on roofs some place around
town? I don't know but they've done it already.They've done
surveillance around the area. They know where to go.This is right
across the street from the hotel where the media is going to stay,"
Warner adds.
On
one of his several personal websites, Warner writes, “Anonymous and
Black Block seek the overthrow of the US Government, they hate cops
and everything they stand for and seek to disrupt the Tampa RNC.”
In
another post, Warner says that Anonymous and Black Bloc — a
separate, underground protest group that regularly encourages acts of
violence — are one in the same and refers to them as “dirtbags.”
Tampa
Police Chief Jane Castor has already prepared the city for any
violence that a demonstration waged at the Republican Party could
bring. She, unlike Warner, refuses to publically group the alleged
Anonymous YouTube video with the other hairy evidence, though.
"This
is no surprise for us, but we are watching what is happening,” she
adds. “There's no doubt that a small percentage of people who are
coming here are bent on destruction and disruption."
"Don't
think that you are bothering us. It's our job to look into this, and
we take it very seriously," Chief Castor adds to WTSP News.
And,
for those people, Sheriff Gee has a simple warning, posted on the
county website in an open letter “to the agitators and anarchists
who want only to bring a dark cloud” to the RNC: “criminal
activity and civil disturbances will not be tolerated and enforcement
actions will be swift.”
Examiner.com
claims that the Tampa police have spent over $13 million on security
items, an dozens of high-def closed-circuit television cameras are
reported to have been installed in preparation too. In response,
activists have created a smart-phone app that allows protesters to
see where the city has installed surveillance cameras across Tampa.
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