Disabled
Vet Labeled “Terrorist” For Investigating Cost Of Surveillance
Cameras
Characterization
was reprisal for open records request, charges Elbert County man
12
October, 2012
A
55-year-old disabled veteran was labeled a “terrorist” by three
county commissioners after he photographed security cameras at the
Elbert County administration building in Colorado as part of an
investigation, a designation the man claimed was retribution for him
filing multiple open-records requests.
Elbert
County resident Don Pippin took pictures of the security cameras back
in April as part of an open-records request that sought to discover
the cost of the surveillance system. An employee immediately reported
Pippin to the commissioners for engaging in suspicious activity.
“After
the commissioners met on the issue, “(Commissioner Kurt) Schlegel
asked for and received a temporary court order barring Pippin from
the building, saying the back of his hair stood up when he saw what
he says was footage of Pippin “casing” the building for a
possible attack,” reports
the Denver Post.
Schlegel
called Pippin a “terrorist” and attempted to secure a permanent
protection order against him, but a
judge threw the request out,
noting that Pippin posed no threat to anybody.
Pippin
charges that the commissioners were attempting to frame and demonize
him as a terrorist as a reprisal for his routine filing of open
records requests.
Pippin
and his attorney are now seeking $2.4 million in damages from the
three commissioners who characterized him as a terrorist, $1 million
for emotional distress, $500,000 for loss of enjoyment of life and
$900,000 for impairment of future earning capacity.
“It’s
been a very emotional thing for him,” Pippin’s attorney, Terry
Wallace, told the Denver Post. “When that county judge said,
‘You’ve been accused of being a terrorist — are you aware of
that?’ That’s when it set in.”
As
we have previously documented, the characterization of people who
both film surveillance cameras and those who ask questions of their
government as terrorists is rampant in America.
A
2011 Department of Homeland Security PSA depicted
photographers who “hang around for no apparent reason” as
terrorists and encouraged the public to report them to authorities.
Recent
federal training manuals and other documents have characterized those
suspicious of government or people who ask questions as potential
terrorists.
A
recent DHS-funded study produced
by the National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses
to Terrorism at the University of Maryland characterizes Americans
who are “suspicious of centralized federal authority” as “extreme
right-wing” terrorists.
Americans
“frustrated with mainstream ideologies” were also
identified as possible terrorists in
a recent U.S. Army training document.
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