Inside The FBI Entrapment Strategy - by CrimeThinc (Imposed Version For Printing)
Inside The FBI Entrapment Strategy - by CrimeThinc (Imposed Version For Printing)
Inside The FBI Entrapment Strategy - by CrimeThinc (Imposed Version For Printing)
Dont trust people just because other people trust them or because they are in influential positions. Dont let others talk you into tactics youre not comfortable with or ready for. Be aware that anything you say may come back to haunt you, even if you dont mean it. Always listen to your instincts; if someone seems pushy or too eager to help you with something, take some time to think about the situation. Reflect on the motivations of those around youdo they make sense? Get to know your comrades families and friends.
Perhaps, gentle reader, youve never been part of a social body targeted by the US government. Imagine undercover agents infiltrating your community with the intention of setting people up to be framed for illegal activity. Most of your friends and family would have the sense to keep themselves out of trouble, of coursebut can you be absolutely sure everyone would? What if someone fell in love with the agent and was desperate to impress him or her, and the agent took advantage of this? Every community has people in it that may sometimes be gullible or vulnerable, who may not display the best judgment at all times. And what if the agent provocateur is a person everyone trusts and looks up to? Government agents arent always outsidersthe FBI often recruit or blackmail longtime participants, or even well-known leaders. Perhaps youre still saying to yourself It would never happenall of us are lawabiding citizens. Sure you are, every last one of you. The US has 2.3 million people in prison, and over 5 million more on probation and paroleif there isnt a single person in your whole community who has ever broken a law, youre exceptional, and probably exceptionally privileged. Anyway, it doesnt matteryour unfortunate friend or neighbor doesnt even have to do anything illegal to get framed by the government. He just has to end up in a situation in which its possible to make it appear that he could have considered doing something illegal. Often the evidence is so tenuous that it takes the government multiple attempts to obtain a conviction. In an entrapment case resulting from the protests against the 2008 Republican National Convention, defendant David McKay received a hung jury at trial, only to be coerced into pleading guilty afterward behind closed doors. In another entrapment case, it took two hungjuries before a thirdjury finally convicted some of the defendantsprompting a law professor quoted by the New York Times to say,It goes to show that if you try it enough times, youll eventually find a jury that will convict on very little evidence. Agents provocateurs pick on the most vulnerable people they can find: the lonely, the trusting, the mentally or emotionally unstable, people who lack close friendships or life experience. This is easier than messing with shrewd, well-connected organizers. The point is not to catch those who are actually involved in ongoing resistance, so much as to discredit resistance movements by framing somebody, anybody, as a dangerous terrorist. If this means destroying the life of a person who never would have actually harmed anyone, so be ithonest, compassionate people dont become infiltrators in the first place. This is not to blame the victims of entrapment. We all have moments of weakness. The guilt lies on those who prey on others weakness for their own gain.
www.crimethinc.com
Why wasnt the sting operation before May Day 2012 set in Oakland? Surely there are plenty of anarchists plotting illegal activity there, and even a few imprudent enough to be set up in a terror plot?
But theres also a powerful movement in Oakland that would support arrestees. The last thing the FBI wants is to risk losing a casethe point is to set precedents framing anarchists as terrorists, starting wherever its easiest. The only way to block the entrapment strategy would be to spread a combative movement all around the country.
However, starting with the entrapment case of Eric McDavidframed for a single conspiracy charge by an infiltrator who used his attraction to her to manipulate him into discussing illegal actions1the FBI appeared to switch strategies, focusing on younger targets who hadnt actually carried out any actions. They stepped up this new strategy during the 2008 Republican National Convention, at which FBI informants Brandon Darby and Andrew Darst set up David McKay, Bradley Crowder, and Matthew DePalma on charges of possessing Molotov cocktails in two separate incidents2. Its important to note that the only Molotov cocktails that figured in the RNC protests at any point were the ones used to entrap these young men: the FBI were not responding to a threat, but inventing one. At the end of April 2012, the FBI shifted into high gear with this approach. Immediately before May Day, five young men were set up on terrorism charges in Cleveland after an FBI infiltrator apparently guided them into planning to bomb a bridge, in what would have been the only such bombing carried out by anarchists in living memory. During the protests against the NATO summit in Chicago, three young men were arrested and charged with terrorist conspiracy once again involving the only Molotov cocktails within hundreds of miles, set up by at least two FBI informants. None of the targets of these entrapment cases seem to be longtime anarchist organizers. None of the crimes theyre being charged with are representative of the tactics that anarchists have actually used over the past decade. All of the cases rest on the efforts of FBI informants to manufacture conspiracies. All of the arrests have taken place immediately before mass mobilizations, enabling the authorities to frame a narrative justifying their crackdowns on protest as thwarting terrorism. And in all of these cases, the defendants have been described as anarchists in the legal paperwork filed against them, setting precedents for criminalizing anarchism.
ular with the general public than the tactics infiltrators push them towards. Smashing bank windows, for example, may be illegal, but it is increasingly understood as a meaningful political statement; it would be difficult to build a convincing terrorism case around broken glass. Well-known activists also have much broader support networks. The FBI threatened Daniel McGowan with a mandatory life sentence plus 335 years in prison; widespread support enabled him to obtain a good lawyer, and the prosecution had to settle for a plea bargain for a seven-year sentence or else admit to engaging in illegal wiretapping. Going after disconnected young people dramatically decreases the resources that will be mobilized to support them. If the point is to set precedents that criminalize anarchism while producing the minimum blowback, then it is easier to manufacture terror cases by means of agents provocateurs than to investigate actual anarchist activity. Above all, this kind of proactive threat-creation enables FBI agents to prepare make-to-order media events. If a protest is coming up at which the authorities anticipate using brutal force, it helps to be able to spin the story in advance as a necessary, measured response to violent criminals. This also sows the seeds of distrust among activists, and intimidates newcomers and fence-sitters out of having anything to do with anarchists. The long-range project, presumably choreographed by FBI leadership rather than rank-and-file agents, is not just to frame a few unfortunate arrestees, but thus to hamstring the entire anti-capitalist movement.
The individuals we charged are not peaceful protesters, they are domestic terrorists. The charges we bring today are not indicative of a protest movement that has been targeted.
Illinois state attorney Anita Alvarez, quoted in the New York Times