Is
there a spook near you?
May
Day Is Around the Corner, and the FBI Wants Us to Know They're
Watching
26
April, 2013
In
the past 24 hours, FBI agents in Seattle and Olympia have reportedly
been showing up at people's houses, favorite jogging locations (a
park), schools (Seattle University), workplaces, and at least one
nonprofit (which serves street-involved youth), asking: "Do
you want to talk about May Day?"
They're
also asking about people's coworkers, roommates, romantic situations,
and general social-mapping questions. (All the sources wished to keep
their anonymity, for the moment at least.)
The
agents are asking about May Day 2012, but it's difficult to believe
that their timing, when May Day 2013 is just around the corner, is
pure coincidence. We're all aware of the
crap
the FBI and US Attorneys have been willing to drag activists through
and their fondness for "we
know where you live, we know where you work, we know who you know"
leverage—even when it's convincing people to commit crimes they'd
never normally engage in.
The
Seattle agents, according to people who were present for the
conversations in the past 48 hours, are primarily two guys in a gold
SUV wearing jeans, button-up shirts, and vests (perhaps polar
fleece). "Honestly," one source said about the agents on
the front steps, "at first I thought they were salesmen—maybe
lawn service."
The
agents were mostly chummy with the people they contacted. As one
woman talked to agents, another housemate described their manner as
"jokey and flirty—I almost thought they were gonna ask her
out!"
Flirty
or not, they identified themselves as members of the FBI's domestic
terrorism unit.
Apparently, the vandalism of May Day 2012, and the potential
demonstrations on May Day 2013, are terrorism investigations. (Which,
frankly, seems to me like a grave insult to anyone from Boston to NYC
to Kandahar who's been a victim of, or lost a family member to,
actual terrorism.)
In
one case yesterday, the agents reportedly turned
up at a public park to intercept two joggers.
The joggers said "no, thanks" and went home. About 20
minutes later, the agents reportedly showed up at their house.
In
other cases, people approached have refused to give their names or
any information (sometimes politely, sometimes not so politely). As
of yet, that has not generated any push-back from the FBI.
If
the agency was really gathering evidence about May Day 2012 or 2013,
I'd guess they'd be more low-profile, waiting and watching and
quietly gathering evidence. This little blitz of visibility seems
calculated to freak people out and perhaps chill people's
participation in any upcoming May Day demonstration. (But what do I
know? I'm just a journalist.)
Ayn
Dietrich, a spokesperson for the FBI, said she could not confirm or
deny anything about the visits. "We do all kinds of routine
activities throughout the state on any given day," she said. "If
we have people out there, it could be community outreach, emergency
response, or investigative work... We sometimes knock on doors when
there's an issue of a missing child. We're around the community,
especially with ethnic minority groups, to let them know they can
come to us to report hate crimes."
Good
to know.
Meanwhile,
please enjoy this bit of homemade activist comedy about these kinds
of FBI visits (in activist circles, they've become a trope), courtesy
of independent journalist Will
Potter
(who I got to know when he spoke at the 2011 Smoke
Farm Symposium).
The abyss is starting to stare back
ReplyDelete- after Nietzche