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Wednesday, July 20th, 2016

Wednesday, July 20th, 2016

Federal Agents Went Undercover To Spy on Anti-Fracking Movement, Emails Reveal

by Steve Horn and Lee Fang / The Intercept

Police officers block the entrance to the Bureau of Land Management auction at the Holiday Inn of Lakewood, Colorado, May 12, 2016. Photo: Olivia Abtahi/Survival Media Agency

Police officers block the entrance to the Bureau of Land Management auction at the Holiday Inn of Lakewood, Colorado, May 12, 2016.
Photo: Olivia Abtahi/Survival Media Agency

Lee Fang and I have published a piece up on The Intercept* based on emails and documents obtained from the Lakewood Police Department in Colorado that show that the BLM — the one environmental NGOs have pushed to “Keep It in the Ground” — have utilized their law enforcement agents to go undercover and infiltrate the activist movement.

Further, we got ahold of documents (and a scan of the check) showing that the BLM reimbursed the Lakewood Police Department for its overtime pay for its policing and undercover agent activity at the protest of the May BLM oil/gas auction in Lakewood at the Holiday Inn hotel. Also, the documents reveal intelligence-sharing between fracking company Anadarko (infamous for saying it considers enviro activists “insurgents” in the “counterinsurgency” it is waging, while recommending that its PR/community affairs team read the Counterinsurgency Field Manual) and the BLM/Lakewood PD.

These documents and more are detailed within the article excerpted below. It comes as the BLM and Congress are pushing to move oil/gas auctions of public land online and have already decided to do so for the forthcoming bid in September. As we detailed earlier on DeSmog, the company EnergyNet stands to profiteer from that arrangement and unsurprisingly is the one that gets to oversee that September auction.

WHEN MORE THAN 300 protesters assembled in May at the Holiday Inn in Lakewood, Colorado — the venue chosen by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) for an auction of oil and gas leases on public lands — several of the demonstrators were in fact undercover agents sent by law enforcement to keep tabs on the demonstration, according to emails obtained by The Intercept.

The “Keep it in the Ground” movement, a broad effort to block the development of drilling projects, has rapidly gained traction over the last year, raising pressure on the Obama administration to curtail hydraulic fracturing, known as fracking, and coal mining on federal public lands. In response, government agencies and industry groups have sharply criticized the activists in public, while quietly moving to track their activities.

The emails, which were obtained through an open records act request, show that the Lakewood Police Department collected details about the protest from undercover officers as the event was being planned. During the auction, both local law enforcement and federal agents went undercover among the protesters.

The emails further show that police monitored Keep it in the Ground participating groups such as 350.org, Break Free Movement, Rainforest Action Network, and WildEarth Guardians, while relying upon intelligence gathered by Anadarko, one of the largest oil and gas producers in the region.

“Gentlemen, Here is some additional intelligence on the group you may be dealing with today,” wrote Kevin Paletta, Lakewood’s then-chief of police, on May 12, the day of the protest. The Anadarko report, forwarded to Paletta by Joni Inman, a public relations consultant, warned of activist trainings conducted by “the very active off-shoot of 350.org” that had “the goal of encouraging ‘direct action’ such as blocking, vandalism, and trespass.”

The protesters waved signs and marched outside of the Holiday Inn. The auction went on as planned and there were no arrests.

“I believe the BLM reached out to us,” Steve Davis, the public information officer for the Lakewood police, told The Intercept about preparations for the protest. He added that the protest was “very peaceful.”

“Our goal is to provide for public safety and the safety of our employees,” says Steven Hall, the BLM Colorado Communications Director, when asked about the agency’s undercover work. “Any actions that we take are designed to achieved those goals. We do not discuss the details of our law enforcement activities.”

BLM reimbursed the Lakewood police for costs associated with covering the protest, the emails and a scanned copy of the check show.

Read more here.

Check out these related Newswire posts:

One response to “Federal Agents Went Undercover To Spy on Anti-Fracking Movement, Emails Reveal”

  1. sgtcalico says:

    Anyone now in disagreement with oil company policies is viewed as a malcontent or worse. Time to weed out the undercover & frankly they are easy to spot. THINK. And boot ’em out….

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