A new ACLU report, "Policing Free Speech: Police Surveillance and Obstruction of First Amendment-Protected Activity," documents recent cases of politically motivated surveillance across America — cases in which people were put under surveillance "for doing little more than peacefully exercising their First Amendment rights."
At a California State University, Fresno lecture on veganism, six of the 60 in attendance were undercover officers from the local and campus police. The Oakland Police Department in California had infiltrated a police-brutality demonstration, and its undercover officers selected "the route of the march."A vegetarian activist in Georgia was arrested for jotting down the license plate of a Department of Homeland Security agent who was snapping photos of a protest outside a Honey Baked Ham store. A Joint Terrorism Task Force in Illinois went on a three-day manhunt in Chicago searching for a Muslim man for his suspicious activity of using a hand counter on a bus. As it turned out, the man was counting his daily prayers.
A Kentucky minister was detained at Canadian border trying to enter the United States because he had purchased copies of the Koran on the internet following the 2001 terror attacks. A New York, Muslim-American student journalist was detained for taking pictures of Old Glory outside a Veterans Affairs building as part of a class project. The authorities deleted the pictures before releasing her an hour later.
ACLU Study Highlights U.S. Surveillance Society
- Nokia and Siemens provided surveillance tools used to bust Iranian …
- Statistical fallacy of terrorist-hunting surveillance
- International day of protest against surveillance Oct 11
- Lawless Surveillance, Warrantless Rationales (a critique of Obama …
- US to provide domestic surveillance assistance to Mexico