Showing posts with label Carlos Montes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Carlos Montes. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Victory Against Repression: Carlos Montes Court Case Ends in Victory!

June 5, 2012 Stopfbi.net

Los Angeles, CA - On June 5, 2012 Carlos Montes' criminal court
prosecution ended in a victory for Carlos and the movement.

Carlos Montes' home was raided on May 17, 2011, by the combined
forces of the LA County Sheriff's Swat Team and the FBI, by crashing
his door down at 5:00 a.m., with automatic assault rifles
drawn, almost killing him.. He was charged with 6 serious felonies
with a possible jail time of up to 18 years.

With local and national support, via solidarity protests, call-in
campaigns to President Obama and U.S. Attorney General Holder, local
rallies and protests, and an offensive legal strategy , two felonies
were dropped - this was a first partial victory. However the District
Attorney still stated that they wanted Montes to do at least 5 years
in state prison for the 4 felony charges remaining.

The local and national Committees Against FBI Repression launched a
petition drive and a "Call the D.A." campaign, with phone banking and
a robo call by Carlos to over 4 000 supporters, urging folks to call
District Attorney Steve Cooley. The D.A.'s office was flooded with
calls and letters.

Montes' attorney made several motions to get charges dropped on
various grounds, but the Los Angeles Superior Court judge rejected
them. Preparations were made for a trial, knowing well the state
judicial system is not 'fair and impartial.' Montes and his attorney
Jorge Gonzalez got widespread support and media coverage including in
the Democracy Now TV show, La Opinion and the Guardian UK newspaper.

The local D.A. on the case then sought for a resolution and proposed
to drop three additional felonies, if Carlos pled out to one count of
perjury. This proposal included no jail time, three years of
probation and community service. Under advice from supporters,
friends and his attorney Montes moved forward with this proposal.

This is a victory for Carlos Montes and the movement against police
political repression. A trial had the danger of him being convicted
of four felonies with jail time and the additional old felony - a
total of 5 felonies. At this point Carlos is out of jail, will
continue to organize against repression, for public education,
against U.S.-led wars and for immigrant rights. He is already
planning to attend the protest at the Republican National Convention
on August 27, 2012 in Tampa, Florida.

Next steps: The local committee with supporters and rank-and-file
members of SEIU 721 will hold a victory party to thank everyone who
worked on this campaign and to help pay off legal expenses. It is set
for Saturday, June 23, 7:00 p.m. Details will follow.

Carlos wants to thank all the people, organizations, unions and
community people who worked and supported him in this struggle
against police/political repression.

The struggle continues to defend the 23 other anti-war and
international solidarity activists who are STILL under an FBI
investigation for showing solidarity with the oppressed people of the
world, especially the Palestinian and Colombian people. Stay updated
via:
www.stopfbi.net!

Los Angeles Committee to Stop FBI Repression
June 5, 2012

Sunday, May 20, 2012

Protesters rally for Alhambra Chicano activist Carlos Montes on first day of trial

May 15, 2012 by Lauren Gold, SGVN
Chicano activist Carlos Montes, of Alhambra, greets supporters at a rally Tuesday morning, May 15, 2012 at the Clara Shortridge Foltz Criminal Justice Center before he was to appear in court on felony gun charges. Montes' home was raided last year by police and FBI and his arrest appears to be linked to the arrests of other organizers. Montes founded the Committee to Stop FBI Repression soon before his own home was raided. (Sarah Reingewirtz/Staff Photographer)

Gallery: Rally for activist Carlos Montes at LA court

LOS ANGELES - Protesters gathered outside the Clara Shortridge Foltz Criminal Justice Center Tuesday to rally in support of Carlos Montes, a longtime Chicano activist who was set to begin the first day of his criminal trial.

Judge Patricia Schnegg postponed Montes' trial until June 20.

Montes, 64, faces up to five years for charges stemming from a raid in May 2011 of his home by FBI and L.A. Sheriff's SWAT team. He faces one count of possession of a firearm by a felon, one count possession of ammunition and two counts of perjury for lying
Carlos Montes's daughter, Felicia, holds up a t-shirt for her dad's cause. (Lauren Gold/Staff Writer)
 
on gun registration paperwork and saying he had never been convicted of a felony. The district attorney's office said that Montes was charged with a felony in 1969 during an education reform protest at East Los Angeles College.

Montes says, however, that the charges stem from his outspoken criticism of the U.S. government and its foreign wars.

"I am being targeted because of my 42 years of activism in L.A. and my solidarity work," said Montes, who co-founded Chicano youth organization the Brown Berets in the 1960s and L.A. Latinos Against War in 2006.

Montes' lawyer Jorge Gonzalez said Tuesday that two of Montes' original four perjury charges have recently been dropped, though the District Attorney's Office could not immediately confirm that information.

He said he and district attorney prosecutor postponed the trial because a key witness is out of the country. He said he hopes new evidence from that witness will prompt Cooley to drop the charges against Montes without having to go to trial.

"(Not going to trial) is a very real possibility," Gonzalez said. "And it's seldom that the D.A.'s Office will just say we are searching for the truth and whatever it is we stand by it
and that's what they are saying to us now and my hat is off to them." 
 
Montes' daughter Felicia Montes, 36, of Monterey Park, said Tuesday's protest was not only for her father's case, but for everyone across the nation who protests against government decisions.
"It's not only him but its representing many activists that are asking for peace ... in this world," she said. "Today is to keep our legal right to protest."

Saturday, May 19, 2012

Carlos Montes Tuesday TRIAL!

Carlos Montes goes to trial on Tuesday. Now is the time we need to
do everything we can to support him. Please call the DA to demand he
drop the charges. Call early and call often. If the number is
busy, keep dialing. Also please sign the NEW petition. Scott

National Call-in Days to Los Angeles District Attorney

Drop the Charges Against Carlos Montes!
Stop the FBI frame up!
Call off the trial now!


Starting today, and through the end of the trial (beginning May
15th), call Los Angeles District Attorney Steve Cooley every day at
213-974-3512

Demand that all charges be dropped against Carlos Montes!

"Hello, my name is _________ and I am calling from __________. I want
District Attorney Steve Cooley to drop all charges against Carlos
Montes now. Carlos Montes is being framed by the FBI because of his
political activism for peace, justice, and equality. Drop the charges now!"

Contact us and let us know how your calls went:
info@stopFBI.net


What else you can do:
1. Circulate the Call In Day information to your lists, community,
union, groups, friends, and family.

2. All Out for the Trial!
If you are in, or can make it to, the Los Angeles area please attend
all or part of the trial. It will go on for several days. To check on
the status of court days, go to www.stopfbi.
Rally outside the Los Angeles courthouse and pack the courtroom
Tuesday, May 15, 2012, at 8:00 AM.
Criminal Courts Building, 13th floor, Department 100
210 West Temple Avenue, Los Angeles, CA

3. Sign the NEW petition for Carlos at
http://www.stopfbi.net/petition/national
4. Donate money to the defense of
Carlos Montes - trials are expensive, and circulate this
fund raising letter
********************************************************************
Background:
Carlos Montes is a long-time Chicano activist and a co-founder of the
Brown Berets in Los Angeles. Today Carlos Montes is a leader in the
anti-war & immigrant rights movements. He plays an important role in
the movement against Arizona's SB1070 and other anti-immigrant laws
in the U.S. Montes is the target of government repression and the
FBI's dirty tricks due to his activism. When the FBI raided several
Midwest homes and served subpoenas on September 24, 2010, Carlos
Montes' name was listed on the FBI search warrant for the Anti-War
Committee office in Minneapolis - the organizing center to protest
the 2008 Republican National Convention, where Carlos participated.

Eight months later, on May 17, 2011, the LA Sheriffs broke down
Carlos' door, arrested him, and ransacked his home. They took
political documents, a computer, cell phones and activist meeting
notes having nothing to do with the charges. The FBI attempted to
question Montes while he was handcuffed in a squad car, regarding the
case of the 23 Midwest anti-war and solidarity activists.

It is clear the FBI initiated the raid against Carlos, attempting to
frame him. Carlos Montes' trial starts on May 15, 2012 where he faces
four felony charges with the possibility of 12 years in prison due to
his political organizing. Carlos Montes case is part and parcel of
the FBI raids and political repression centered in the Midwest.

We need you to take action against this repression! Los Angeles
District Attorney Steve Cooley needs to hear from you and others who
care about justice and what is right.

Legal background:
Carlos Montes is facing multiple felony charges because the FBI
claims he is a felon in violation of firearm codes. The FBI claim
stems from a 1969 student strike for Black, Chicano, and Women's
studies at East L.A. College, where police beat and arrested
demonstrators. Carlos was arrested on his way home from the protest,
accused of assaulting a sheriff's deputy (with an empty soda can).
This charge was sentenced as a misdemeanor according to a recent
court document. District Attorney Steve Cooley, under the guidance of
the FBI, is basing his case on this 42-year-old misdemeanor,
disguising it as a bogus felony. Without a past felony, all of the
charges Montes is facing, relating to his legally purchased firearms,
would be dismissed. Both sides agree that no prison time whatsoever
was served in the 1969 incident. The legal process is being driven by
something other than the facts of the case. It is political repression.

Friday, May 04, 2012

National Call-in Day to Los Angeles District Attorney Drop the Charges Against Carlos Montes!

Stop the FBI frame up!
Call off the trial now!

Call L.A. District Attorney Steve Cooley at
213-974-3512

Sample text:
 "Hello, my name is _________ and I am calling from __________. I want
District Attorney Steve Cooley to drop all charges against Carlos
Montes. He is being framed by the FBI because of his political
activism for peace, justice, and equality. Drop the charges now!"

Be firm and insist that your message get to D.A. Cooley.
Contact us and let us know how your calls went: info@stopFBI.net
http://www.stopfbi.net/

More info:
 Carlos Montes is a long-time Chicano activist and a co-founder of the
Brown Berets in Los Angeles. Today Carlos Montes is a leader in the
anti-war & immigrant rights movements. He plays an important role in
the movement against Arizona's SB1070 and other anti-immigrant laws
in the U.S. Montes is the target of government repression and the
FBI's dirty tricks due to his activism. When the FBI raided several
Midwest homes and served subpoenas on September 24, 2010, Carlos
Montes' name was listed on the FBI search warrant for the Anti-War
Committee office in Minneapolis - the organizing center to protest
the 2008 Republican National Convention, where Carlos participated.

Eight months later, on May 17, 2011, the LA Sheriffs broke down
Carlos' door, arrested him, and ransacked his home. They took
political documents, a computer, cell phones and activist meeting
notes having nothing to do with the charges. The FBI attempted to
question Montes while he was handcuffed in a squad car, regarding the
case of the 23 Midwest anti-war and solidarity activists.

It is clear the FBI initiated the raid against Carlos, attempting to
frame him. Carlos Montes' trial starts on May 15, 2012 where he faces
four felony charges with the possibility of 12 years in prison due to
his political organizing. Carlos Montes case is part and parcel of
the FBI raids and political repression centered in the Midwest.

We need you to take action against this repression! Los Angeles
District Attorney Steve Cooley needs to hear from you and others who
care about justice and what is right.

Legal background: Carlos Montes is facing multiple felony charges because the FBI
claims he is a felon in violation of firearm codes. The FBI claim
stems from a 1969 student strike for Black, Chicano, and Women's
studies at East L.A. College, where police beat and arrested
demonstrators. Carlos was arrested on his way home from the protest,
accused of assaulting a sheriff's deputy (with an empty soda can).
This charge was sentenced as a misdemeanor according to a recent
court document. District Attorney Steve Cooley, under the guidance of
the FBI, is basing his case on this 42-year-old misdemeanor,
disguising it as a bogus felony. Without a past felony, all of the
charges Montes is facing, relating to his legally purchased firearms,
would be dismissed. Both sides agree that no prison time whatsoever
was served in the 1969 incident. The legal process is being driven by
something other than the facts of the case. It is political repression.

What else you can do:
1. Circulate the Call In Day information to your lists, community,
union, groups, friends, and family.

2. Organize a local protest at your Federal Building or elsewhere on
the opening day of Carlos Montes trial - Tuesday, May 15.

3. All Out for the Trial!
If you are in, or can make it to, the Los Angeles area please attend
all or part of the trial. It will go on for several days.
Rally outside the Los Angeles courthouse and pack the courtroom
Tuesday, May 15, 2012, at 8:00 AM.
Criminal Courts Building, 13th floor, Department 100
210 West Temple Avenue, Los Angeles, CA

4.Donate money to the defense of Carlos Montes - trials are expensive.
and circulate this fund raising letter

5. Sign the petition at
http://www.stopfbi.net/petition/national

Saturday, April 28, 2012

Court Hearing and Call-in Day Thursday, April 26 Stop the FBI Frame-up of Carlos Montes

Today, please call:
-- President Obama at 202-456-1111
-- Attorney General Eric Holder at 202-514-2001
Demand: "Drop the charges now! Stop the FBI Frame-up of Carlos Montes!"

Contact us and let us know how your calls went: info@stopFBI.net

The FBI and LA sheriffs want to frame Carlos Montes. At his next 
court hearing on Thursday, April 26 in Los Angeles, Carlos' attorney 
will argue a legal motion to drop the charges on the grounds of 
"discriminatory enforcement of the law." This means they are only 
prosecuting Carlos because of his solidarity and anti-war work. Also 
on Thursday, a trial date may be set!

At the last court hearing, one old document from the California 
Department of Justice showed that the old charges from 1969 against 
Carlos Montes were sentenced as a misdemeanor.

We will also continue to pursue via discovery how the FBI is driving 
the persecution of Carlos Montes, because of his decades of 
organizing against war and his solidarity work with the struggle of 
the Palestinian and Colombian people and his ongoing work in the 
Chicano/a community, promoting public education and fighting for 
immigrant rights.

The prosecution of Carlos Montes by the LA County District Attorney 
continues, despite evidence that should cause it to be thrown out of court.


If you are in the Los Angeles area...

Join us at the Court!
Thursday, April 26, 2012
8:00 a.m.
Criminal Courts Bldg.
211 West Temple St, Los Angeles
Dept. 123 on the 13th floor
For more info go to 
stopfbila.net

----------

Background
Chicano leader and long-time anti-war activist Carlos Montes is the 
target of a FBI frame up. The FBI and Los Angeles Sheriffs broke down 
Carlos' door, ransacked his home, and took his notes and papers, May 
17, 2011. Carlos Montes refused to answer the FBI agent's questions. 
The raid on Carlos is linked to the FBI repression of 23 anti-war 
activists who organized the mass protests outside the 2008 Republican 
National Convention in St. Paul, Minnesota. Along with many others, 
Carlos Montes name appeared on the FBI search warrant for the 
Anti-War Committee office in Minneapolis on September 24, 2010.

Now Carlos Montes is facing multiple felony charges, because the FBI 
claims he is a felon in violation of firearm codes. The FBI claim 
stems from a 1969 student strike for Black, Chicano, and Women's 
studies at East L.A. College, where police beat and arrested 
demonstrators. Carlos was arrested on his way home from the protest; 
accused of assaulting a sheriff's deputy (with an empty soda can). 
This charge was sentenced as a misdemeanor according to a recent 
court document. The prosecution is basing their case on this 
42-year-old misdemeanor, disguising it as a bogus felony. Without a 
past felony, all of the charges Montes is now facing relating to his 
legally purchased firearms would be dismissed. Both sides agree that 
no prison time whatsoever was served in the 1969 incident. The legal 
process is being driven by something other than the facts of the 
case. It is political repression.

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Call for local protests March 2: "No FBI frame-up of Carlos Montes!"



Friday, March 2, 2012:
Montes Court Hearing to Uncover FBI Lies

Call to Organize Local Protests
at Federal Buildings or FBI Offices

Protest the FBI Frame-up of Carlos Montes!
Drop the Charges Now!


Organize a solidarity
protest on March 2!

Demand, “Drop the Charges!
No FBI Frame-up of Carlos Montes!”

Send your event announcement to info@StopFBI.net for posting.


The FBI is relentlessly persecuting Carlos Montes. At his next court hearing on March 2 in Los Angeles, Carlos Montes’ lawyer will make discovery motions on how FBI special agent Matt Weber worked with L.A. Sheriff Detective Don Lord and the Joint Terrorism Task Force in this frame-up attempt. Last May, the Los Angeles Sheriffs smashed down Carlos’ door at 5 a.m., waving automatic weapons, ransacking his home, and carting away his life’s work of notes and papers. A FBI agent attempted to question Carlos about the Freedom Road Socialist Organization while he was handcuffed in the back of a police cruiser.

Chicano leader and long-time activist Carlos Montes is one of 24 anti-war and international solidarity activists hit by FBI and grand jury repression since Sept. 24, 2010. Like others caught up in this witch hunt, Montes of Los Angeles was one of the organizers of the massive protests at the 2008 Republican National Convention (RNC) in St. Paul, Minnesota. When the FBI raided the Minnesota Anti-War Committee (AWC) office, Carlos Montes’ name appeared on the warrant for investigation. An undercover law enforcement officer “Karen Sullivan” lied about her identity and spied on the AWC, including Carlos Montes, for two years.

Repression of the ‘60s Is Back
Carlos Montes is well known as a co-founder of the Brown Berets and for leading the immigrant rights mega-marches in L.A. The FBI is trying to railroad Carlos for his political organizing.

Montes' defense is challenging the state’s claim that he has a felony record from his 1969 arrest for leading a student strike that demanded Chicano, Black and Women’s Studies at an East Los Angeles college. Also, the legal record does not support the claim of a past felony, thereby ruling out the District Attorney going ahead with this case. Nevertheless, the government is alleging it was a crime for Montes to buy several guns at a local sporting goods store over a ten-year period, because of the (nonexistent) felony record. The FBI are relentless in their frame-up.

The prosecution is basing their evidence on this 42-year-old incident, where, during the 1969 student strike and rally, the L.A. County Sheriff’s Department invaded the East Los Angeles college campus, beating and arresting student protesters. In the aftermath of the turmoil, Montes was arrested while driving home with a fellow activist and family. He was charged with assaulting a Sheriff’s Deputy. Just like today, the Sheriffs targeted Montes because of his politics - he was a leader of the La Vida Nueva on campus and the Brown Berets in the community.

Support Grows! Solidarity Will Bring Victory!
Support for Montes and the other activists under attack by the FBI and U.S. Federal grand jury is growing. Recently, Montes received a letter of support from the 350,000-member California Teachers Association and the 40,000 members at LAUSD United Teachers of Los Angeles and the UAW local at UCLA.


Facing up to 18 years of prison time, Carlos Montes is preparing to go on trial. Here is what you can do:

1. Organize a solidarity protest and demand, “Drop the Charges! No FBI Frame-Up of Carlos Montes!” on March 2, 2012. Send your announcement to info@StopFBI.net for posting.
2. Pass a resolution in solidarity with Carlos Montes or write a letter.
3. Sign the petition at http://www.stopfbi.net/petition/national
4. Sign the Pledge at http://www.stopfbi.net/get-involved/pledge-of-resistance
5. Donate to the Legal Defense http://www.stopfbi.net/donate

Saturday, February 04, 2012

Judge refuses to dismiss charges against Carlos Montes

Outrageous court decision - trial looms ahead
January 29, 2012 Fight Back! News
Carlos Montes (on right) before Jan. 24 court appearance.
Carlos Montes (on right) before Jan. 24 court appearance. (Fight Back! News/Staff)

Los Angeles, CA - “In the interests of justice this case should be dismissed,” said attorney Jorge Gonzales, lawyer for veteran Chicano leader Carlos Montes, in Los Angeles Superior Court, Jan. 24. Minutes later, though, Judge Lomeli sided with the prosecution, refusing to dismiss the six trumped up felony charges against Montes, on the grounds of insufficient evidence, setting the stage for a trial later this year. The court room was filled with supporters of Montes who wanted to see the charges dropped.

"This proves what we believed all along," said Eric Gardner, a member of the LA Committee to Stop FBI Repression, “The government is going to use all means at its disposal to try and get Carlos - and other anti-war and solidarity activists around the country - behind bars."

Before Montes’ court appearance, activists gathered outside the court building demanding that the charges, which carry up to 18 years in prison, be dismissed. The protesters ranged from long time political activists to street vendors from Central America who Montes is working with to fight police harassment and racist discrimination.

The prosecution has told the press that they want Montes to spend at least five years in jail.

Speaking in front of the court house, Mick Kelly, a spokesperson the Committee to Stop FBI Repression, whose Minneapolis home was also raided by the FBI stated, “On May 17, 2011, the L.A. Sheriff Department - acting at the behest of the FBI - raided Montes’s home. The pretext was phony violations of the firearm code. These alleged violations have no basis in reality whatsoever. At issue in this case are the civil liberties of all us who are standing up against war and injustice.”

The May 17 raid, by the Los Angeles Sheriff's Department and members of the FBI, took place at 5:00 a.m. The L.A. County Sheriff’s SWAT team and Emergency Operations Bureau agents armed with automatic weapons broke down the door to Montes' home while he slept. They seized computers, cell phones, current and historical political documents and left Montes' home in shambles. Montes could have been killed.

Kelly continued, “Carlos Montes is one of the 24 anti-war and international solidarity activists who have been hit by FBI and grand jury repression since Sept. 24, 2010. Like many of the others who have been caught up in this witch hunt, Montes was one of the organizers of the massive protests at the 2008 Republican National Convention. And like the others, he has spoken out tirelessly against U.S intervention abroad and oppression here at home.

“Carlos Montes is a hero who has devoted his entire life to making this world a better place. In the 1960s he was a founder and leader of the Brown Berets, the historic East L.A. walkouts and the Chicano Moratorium. He is an important leader in the movement for immigrant rights and has worked to defend public education. Montes is an example of a community leader who serves the people and builds the people’s struggle for justice,” stated Kelly.

Outrageous decision

Montes' defense challenged the state’s claim that he has a felony record from his 1969 arrest for leading a student strike demanding Chicano Studies and Black Studies at East L.A. College. This is important. That the legal record does not support the claim of a past felony should rule out the District Attorney going ahead with this case. The government is alleging that it was a crime for Montes to buy several guns at a local sporting goods store, because of the nonexistent felony record.

The prosecution is basing their evidence on a 42 year old incident, where during this student strike and rally, the L.A. County Sheriff’s Department invaded the East L.A. college campus, beating and arresting student protesters. During the turmoil, Montes was arrested and charged with assaulting a sheriff’s deputy.

"This case is not about old records," says Charla Schlueter of the LA Committee to Stop FBI Repression, "The FBI is dredging up a case over four decades old because of Carlos' involvement in the anti-war, immigrant rights and international solidarity movements today. They don't like that he is part of a movement that challenges U.S. imperialism."

Next court appearance

The next court date is Feb. 8. Montes says his legal team will continue the discovery process on the sheriffs to get ready for trial.

“The government knows its case against Carlos Montes is weak,” said Mick Kelly. “So they have made up a lie that Montes admitted to a felony record while he was being held in squad car after the raid on his home.” The point of the discovery motion is to get to the bottom of this false allegation.

See the L.A. Committee’s web site at http://www.stopfbila.net/index.html for further details on time and location for an emergency meeting to defend Carlos Montes in Los Angeles on Saturday, Feb. 11.

Montes states that he is looking forward to a jury trial and that he is confident that a jury of his peers will find him not guilty.

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Report on Carlos Montes court day hearing of January 25, 20012

www.stopfbila.net

Today there was an extremely serious development in Carlos' case. LA
County Superior Court Judge Lomeli denied the motion to dismiss the 6
felony charges, setting the stage for trial later this year.
Prosecutors have stated in the press that Carlos may face about five
years in prison. The fight is on!

Today we had a good turnout of support with people who packed the
courtroom. Carlos and his attorney had presented a motion to drop the
charges on the grounds of insufficient evidence. Specifically
challenging the state's claim that Carlos has a felony conviction
from his 1969 persecution for leading a student strike demanding
Chicano/a Studies and Black Studies at ELA College. During the
student strike of Chicano and Black students, the LA County Sheriff's
Department invaded the college campus during a rally. The Sheriffs
confronted students beating and arresting some. Carlos was arrested
and charged with assaulting a Sheriff's Deputy. The legal record does
not support the DA contention that Carlos has a felony conviction.
The DA and court continue to move forward with this unjust
prosecution based on a 42 year old case. This is really about Carlos'
deep and long involvement in the antiwar, migrants' rights and
solidarity movements that challenge US empire. Carlos needs your support!

The state via the DA and Judicial system wants to put Carlos in jail
for his political activism. We need to continue to build on the
support Carlos has and get ready for a full trial, where Carlos
believes that a jury of his peers will find him not guilty, but we
have to fight!

The next court date is February 8, were Carlos and team will continue
the discovery process on the Sheriffs to get ready for trial! Please
see our web site for further details on time and location for an
emergency meeting in Los Angeles, on Saturday, February 11, 2012.

Committee to Stop FBI Repression

www.stopfbila.net
(626) 532-7164

Sunday, January 22, 2012

Support Carlos as he goes to court on January 24th

Jan. 18, 2012 Committee to Stop FBI Repression

Event Information
Date:
Tue, 2012-01-24 (All day)
Location:
Criminal Courts Bldg.
211 W Temple St. (corner with Broadway) Dept. 123 on the 13th floor.
Los Angeles, CA 90012
United States

Carlos Montes appears in court
Tuesday, January 24.

Join the national call-in day to

  • President Obama at 202-456-1111

  • Attorney General Holder at 202-514-2001

Demand: “Dismiss the charges against Carlos Montes. There is no evidence!

Contact us and let us know how your calls went: info@stopFBI.net

Chicano antiwar activist Carlos Montes’ next court hearing is Tuesday, January 24. Attorney Jorge Gonzalez will present and argue a legal motion to dismiss all charges on the grounds of insufficient evidence. This hearing will deal with the FBI-instigated Sheriffs raid, arrest, and prosecution of Carlos. Carlos Montes has declared himself “not guilty” on 6 felony charges, dealing with an alleged 42-year old arrest and firearms code violations. Montes’ arrest is part of the FBI attack on 23 other antiwar and solidarity activists.


If you are in the L.A. area...

Join us and Occupy the Court!
Tuesday, January 24 at 8:00 a.m.

Criminal Courts Bldg., 211 W Temple St.
Los Angeles, CA
Dept. 123 on the 13th floor.


Carlos Montes will appear in court on January 24, where his legal team will present and argue a legal motion to dismiss all charges on the grounds of insufficient evidence. The current felony charges stem from a Chicano student protest Carlos led over 40 years ago. Students were demanding Chicano and Black Studies at East Los Angeles Community College. Back in 1968, the LA County Sheriffs entered the college campus to put down the student strike. The current District Attorney is alleging Carlos was arrested and convicted for assaulting a Sheriff deputy in 1968 during the police attack on protesters. The six current charges stem from Carlos buying 3 guns at the local sporting goods store, which the District Attorney alleges is a violation.


Montes, along with 23 anti-war and international solidarity activists targeted by the FBI, organized the protests at the 2008 Republican National Convention. Prior to this, Carlos traveled to Colombia and denounced the U.S. dirty war there known as “Plan Colombia”. Carlos met Colombian union activists, artists, and people targeted by death squads of the Colombian military. At Fort Benning, Georgia - also known as the School of the Americas, the U.S. government trains the Colombian military in death squad tactics. We cannot allow the FBI and the U.S. government to stop international solidarity work with the Palestinian and Colombian people!

The FBI instigated the Sheriff's swat team to raid and arrest Carlos Montes on May 17, 2011. At 5 a.m., heavily armed police bashed in his front door and ransacked his home. Please join us in solidarity with Carlos Montes.


Support Actions:

After a hugely successful conference on November 5 in Chicago, 150 activists and organizers committed to organizing solidarity with Carlos Montes. So across the country, activists and defenders of human rights are mobilizing to support Carlos Montes.

Please take the following steps to the support Carlos Montes and the 23 Midwest activists facing FBI repression:
Sign the national petition supporting Carlos Montes
Sign the
Pledge to Resist FBI and Grand Jury Repression
Join a
local support committee of the CSFR or organize one in your town
Donate to the legal defense fund

Encourage your organization, religous group, elected official or union to write a Solidarity Statement for Carlos Montes and the rest of the 24.

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Monday, December 26, 2011

One year after FBI subpoena, civil liberties protections in US frighteningly eroded even further

A year ago yesterday, I got the dreaded house call from the FBI. I was at home working when two agents rang my buzzer and asked to speak with me.

I had been expecting such a visit; on 24 September 2010 the FBI raided the homes of prominent anti-war and international solidarity organizers I have worked with over the years in Chicago, as well as the homes of activists in the Twin Cities and the office of the Anti War Committee there. In the weeks that followed, more Palestine solidarity organizers and Palestinian Americans in Chicago were delivered subpoenas to appear before a federal grand jury in Chicago as part of an investigation into violations of the laws banning material support for foreign terrorist organizations.

I declined to speak with the two agents who visited me; they then gave me a subpoena to appear before a federal grand jury on 25 January 2011. I spent last Christmas and New Year convinced that I would soon be in federal prison for civil contempt of court. Even though it meant we risked being jailed, all 23 of us who have been subpoenaed as part of this grand jury fishing expedition have refused to testify. We have asserted that our first amendment rights guaranteed by the US Constitution, protecting free speech and freedom of association, are being trampled on.

A first amendment issue

The grand jury — essentially a secret court in which you’re not allowed to have a lawyer, and there is not even a judge presiding over the proceedings — has been long abused as a tool of inquisition into domestic political movements. Indeed, no specific crime has been identified related to our case.

The FBI’s operations manual for the September raids, discovered last April to have been accidentally left amongst a raided activist’s files, make it clear that they wanted to question activists about associational information — who activists know and work with in the US, Colombia and Palestine, and how activists organize and what they believe. They wanted people to name everyone they know who has ever traveled to the Middle East or South America.

It is also obvious the FBI put up the LA County Sheriff to raid the home of veteran Chicano liberation activist Carlos Montes last May; he faces trumped-up technical firearms violation charges and serious prison time. The FBI was on hand during the raid to question Montes about his political associations (an organizer of the 2008 Republican National Convention protests, he was named in the search warrant used to raid the Anti War Committee office) and took material from his home related to his long history of political organizing. They even took a kuffiyeh — the traditional checkered Palestinian scarf — only one example of many demonstrating how federal agents so arbitrarily confiscated property from activists’ homes.

And while the threat of indictments looms, I am not spending Christmas and new year’s in federal prison for civil contempt of court. This is, I believe, thanks to the vocal protest that countless people around the US and around the world have made in support of the 24 of us and in support of civil liberties. This is a huge victory. But at the same time, civil liberties and constitutional protections have further eroded even in the last year. More protest must be shown before the situation gets even worse.

A bad time for civil liberties

Even The New York Times has excoriated the Obama administration over its civil liberties record after its justice department went even further than Bush’s to expand the FBI’s powers to investigate US citizens, “even when there is no firm basis for suspecting any wrongdoing.” In an editorial entitled “Backward at the FBI,” the Times takes the FBI’s new operations manual to task, as revised guidelines “will give agents significant new powers to search law enforcement and private databases, go through household trash or deploy surveillance teams, with even fewer checks against abuse.”

The Times adds:

They also expand the special rules covering “undisclosed participation” in an organization by an FBI agent or informant. The current rules are not public, and, as things stand they still won’t be. But we do know the changes allow an agent or informant to surreptitiously attend up to five meetings of a group before the rules for undisclosed participation — whatever they are — kick in.

[…]

The FBI’s recent history includes the abuse of national security letters to gather information about law-abiding citizens without court orders, and inappropriate investigations of antiwar and environmental activists. That is hardly a foundation for further loosening the rules for conducting investigations or watering down internal record-keeping and oversight.

After that editorial was published in June, things only got worse. The United States government sanctioned and carried out the assassination of one of its citizens on foreign soil despite the fact that he posed no immediate danger to public safety. Vince Warren, executive director of the Center for Constitutional Rights, stated after the Anwar al-Awlaki was killed by a US drone in Yemen:

The targeted assassination program that started under President Bush and expanded under the Obama Administration essentially grants the executive the power to kill any US citizen deemed a threat, without any judicial oversight, or any of the rights afforded by our Constitution. If we allow such gross overreaches of power to continue, we are setting the stage for increasing erosions of civil liberties and the rule of law.

Other stains on civil liberties this year included the persecution and conviction of the the Irvine 11 — a group of students (all of the Muslim, all of them young men) who were subjected to a criminal trial for briefly and nonviolently disrupting the speech of Israeli ambassador Michael Oren.

Tens of chapters of Students for Justice in Palestine said it best in a statement following the convictions:

We unequivocally condemn these charges, which unfairly single out and criminalize Muslim students who chose to exercise their First Amendment right to speak out against Israel’s human rights abuses. Had the speaker not been Israeli, had the issue not been Palestine, had the students not been Muslim, these charges never would have been pursued. Rather, these charges reflect a climate of Islamophobia and an irrational exceptionalism for Israel when it comes to free speech. The charges chill the free exchange of ideas and students’ right to protest at universities nationwide.

Guantanamo comes to the US

But perhaps the scariest development in the war on civil liberties this year is the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) for 2012, which if enacted would allow the indefinite detention of US citizens without trial, not unlike Israel’s use of administrative detention. Indeed, as Human Rights Watch summarizes, “In addition to codifying indefinite detention without charge in US law, the bill would require that the military, rather than federal, state, or local law enforcement, handle certain terrorism cases.”

RT: #NDAA codifies into law military’s power to indefinitely detain any American citizen w/o charges, evidence, or trial. Obama must veto.
Dec 02 via webFavoriteRetweetReply

The bill has been already passed by Congress, and now Obama has dropped his threats to veto the bill. Constitutional law attorney Glenn Greenwald described the potential ramifications of the legislation on Democracy Now!:

it will be the first time that the United States Congress has codified the power of indefinite detention into the law since the McCarthy era of the 1950s. The 1950 Congress passed a bill saying that communists and subversives could be imprisoned without a trial, without full due process, based on the allegation that they presented a national threat, an emergency, a threat to the national security of the United States. President Truman, knowing that the bill would—the veto would be overridden, nonetheless vetoed it and said that it made a mockery of the Bill of Rights. That law was repealed in 1971 with the Non-Detention Act, that said you cannot hold people in prison without charging them with a crime. The war on terror has eroded that principle, under both the Bush and Obama administrations, but Congress is now, with the Democrats in control of the Senate and a Democratic president, is about to enact into law the first bill that will say that the military and the United States government do have this power. It’s muddled whether it applies to US citizens on U.S. soil, but it’s clearly indefinite detention, and there’s a very strong case to make that it includes US citizens, as well, which, as we know, the Obama administration already claims anyway, and that’s what makes it so dangerous.

Not only is the Obama administration not closing Guantanamo, but it is paving the way for more Guantanamo-style indefinite detention of US citizens in a military court system.

Of course, there are already so-called “litte Guantanamos” around the US — “Communications Management Units,” or secret prisons populated almost exclusively with Arab and Muslim detainees so as to segregate them from the general prison population.

Following the dismissing of an appeal for the Holy Land Foundation Case, Noor Elashi described on Counterpunch last week how her father — one of five men persecuted and convicted in the US because of the their humanitarian work in support of Palestinians living under US-funded Israeli occupation — has ended up in one of these facilities, and how his “significantly diminished phone calls and visitations are scheduled in advance and live-monitored from Washington DC.”

Will this become the bleak reality for not just Palestinian political prisoners in the US, but also those who stand in solidarity with the Palestinian people? It’s a serious question as the US government moves to further criminalize solidarity with the Palestinian people — as they have criminalized almost all of Palestinian society itself by placing all the major Palestinian political parties (except that which collaborates with the US and Israel) on the State Department’s Foreign Terrorist Organization list.

The US State Department has threatened more than once to use the material support laws against organizers of the US Boat to Gaza. And if passed, a bill introduced in Congress in October would require the State Department to investigate US Boat to Gaza organizers for “terrorist” ties, as Ali Abunimah reported last month.

Gotta stay united and develop friendships with your fellow activists. Never know who will be your cellmate. #NDAA
Dec 16 via webFavoriteRetweetReply

Homeland Security Police are here at civil rights rally. #indefinite#detentionhttp://t.co/MtKGSB61
Dec 15 via Twitter for BlackBerry®FavoriteRetweetReply

Who’s a “domestic terrorist”?

The proposed legislation to allow the US military to indefinitely detain without trial “domestic terrorism” suspects who are US citizens is especially scary considering that political activists are increasingly being treated as terrorists — whether it be animal welfare activists investigating factory farms or activists who organized in protest of the 2008 Republican National Convention. And now the Chicago Police Department is creating a counterterrorism unit for the May 2012 NATO and G8 summits in Chicago, at the same time that the city refuses to meet with or issue protest permits to antiwar activists mobilizing large demonstrations against the meetings.

Political repression in the US

Prosecuting Palestine solidarity activists for support of terrorism and going after environmentalists and animal rights organizers is not about protecting public safety. It’s about crushing dissent.

The laws banning material support to foreign terrorist organizations has been expanded so broadly in recent years that the US government defines as “material support” immaterial things like political speech, and travel to places like Colombia and Palestine are now grounds for a judge to approve a search warrant on someone’s home — things thought to be protected by the first amendment.

And Glenn Greenwald, the aforementioned constitutional law attorney, had this to say about the use of para-militarized forces to crush Occupy Wall Street protests around the US:

A country cannot radically reduce quality-of-life expectations, devote itself to the interests of its super-rich, and all but eliminate its middle class without triggering sustained citizen fury.

The reason the U.S. has para-militarized its police forces is precisely to control this type of domestic unrest, and it’s simply impossible to imagine its not being deployed in full against a growing protest movement aimed at grossly and corruptly unequal resource distribution. As Madeleine Albright said when arguing for U.S. military intervention in the Balkans: “What’s the point of having this superb military you’re always talking about if we can’t use it?” That’s obviously how governors, big-city Mayors and Police Chiefs feel about the stockpiles of assault rifles, SWAT gear, hi-tech helicopters, and the coming-soon drone technology lavished on them in the wake of the post/9-11 Security State explosion, to say nothing of the enormous federal law enforcement apparatus that, more than anything else, resembles a standing army which is increasingly directed inward.

Most of this militarization has been justified by invoking Scary Foreign Threats — primarily the Terrorist — but its prime purpose is domestic. As civil libertarians endlessly point out, the primary reason to oppose new expansions of government power is because it always — always — vastly expands beyond its original realm.

Reasons to be hopeful

It’s easy to get depressed about the increasingly repressive conditions in the US. But there are reasons to be hopeful.

I’m inspired and humbled by the courage shown by campus solidarity activists in the wake of the Irvine 11 convictions. Students are showing that they have not been intimidated into silence and are continuing to challenge Israeli government spokespersons and their propagandists.

The potential for true change was made brilliantly clear this year when huge numbers of people come out into the streets for a common goal — whether it be protecting workers’ rights in Wisconsin, calling for the downfall of the regimes in Tunisia and Egypt or for economic justice on Wall Street. Or when young Palestinians born refugees in Syria and Lebanon attempted to march back to their homeland, unafraid of Israel’s landmines and machine guns.

Because of collective action’s power to change, this is precisely why it is being so severely repressed in the US right now. We must stay strong, keep our chins up and keep fighting for a better future.

One year after FBI subpoena, civil liberties protections in US frighteningly eroded even further

A year ago yesterday, I got the dreaded house call from the FBI. I was at home working when two agents rang my buzzer and asked to speak with me.

I had been expecting such a visit; on 24 September 2010 the FBI raided the homes of prominent anti-war and international solidarity organizers I have worked with over the years in Chicago, as well as the homes of activists in the Twin Cities and the office of the Anti War Committee there. In the weeks that followed, more Palestine solidarity organizers and Palestinian Americans in Chicago were delivered subpoenas to appear before a federal grand jury in Chicago as part of an investigation into violations of the laws banning material support for foreign terrorist organizations.

I declined to speak with the two agents who visited me; they then gave me a subpoena to appear before a federal grand jury on 25 January 2011. I spent last Christmas and New Year convinced that I would soon be in federal prison for civil contempt of court. Even though it meant we risked being jailed, all 23 of us who have been subpoenaed as part of this grand jury fishing expedition have refused to testify. We have asserted that our first amendment rights guaranteed by the US Constitution, protecting free speech and freedom of association, are being trampled on.

A first amendment issue

The grand jury — essentially a secret court in which you’re not allowed to have a lawyer, and there is not even a judge presiding over the proceedings — has been long abused as a tool of inquisition into domestic political movements. Indeed, no specific crime has been identified related to our case.

The FBI’s operations manual for the September raids, discovered last April to have been accidentally left amongst a raided activist’s files, make it clear that they wanted to question activists about associational information — who activists know and work with in the US, Colombia and Palestine, and how activists organize and what they believe. They wanted people to name everyone they know who has ever traveled to the Middle East or South America.

It is also obvious the FBI put up the LA County Sheriff to raid the home of veteran Chicano liberation activist Carlos Montes last May; he faces trumped-up technical firearms violation charges and serious prison time. The FBI was on hand during the raid to question Montes about his political associations (an organizer of the 2008 Republican National Convention protests, he was named in the search warrant used to raid the Anti War Committee office) and took material from his home related to his long history of political organizing. They even took a kuffiyeh — the traditional checkered Palestinian scarf — only one example of many demonstrating how federal agents so arbitrarily confiscated property from activists’ homes.

And while the threat of indictments looms, I am not spending Christmas and new year’s in federal prison for civil contempt of court. This is, I believe, thanks to the vocal protest that countless people around the US and around the world have made in support of the 24 of us and in support of civil liberties. This is a huge victory. But at the same time, civil liberties and constitutional protections have further eroded even in the last year. More protest must be shown before the situation gets even worse.

A bad time for civil liberties

Even The New York Times has excoriated the Obama administration over its civil liberties record after its justice department went even further than Bush’s to expand the FBI’s powers to investigate US citizens, “even when there is no firm basis for suspecting any wrongdoing.” In an editorial entitled “Backward at the FBI,” the Times takes the FBI’s new operations manual to task, as revised guidelines “will give agents significant new powers to search law enforcement and private databases, go through household trash or deploy surveillance teams, with even fewer checks against abuse.”

The Times adds:

They also expand the special rules covering “undisclosed participation” in an organization by an FBI agent or informant. The current rules are not public, and, as things stand they still won’t be. But we do know the changes allow an agent or informant to surreptitiously attend up to five meetings of a group before the rules for undisclosed participation — whatever they are — kick in.

[…]

The FBI’s recent history includes the abuse of national security letters to gather information about law-abiding citizens without court orders, and inappropriate investigations of antiwar and environmental activists. That is hardly a foundation for further loosening the rules for conducting investigations or watering down internal record-keeping and oversight.

After that editorial was published in June, things only got worse. The United States government sanctioned and carried out the assassination of one of its citizens on foreign soil despite the fact that he posed no immediate danger to public safety. Vince Warren, executive director of the Center for Constitutional Rights, stated after the Anwar al-Awlaki was killed by a US drone in Yemen:

The targeted assassination program that started under President Bush and expanded under the Obama Administration essentially grants the executive the power to kill any US citizen deemed a threat, without any judicial oversight, or any of the rights afforded by our Constitution. If we allow such gross overreaches of power to continue, we are setting the stage for increasing erosions of civil liberties and the rule of law.

Other stains on civil liberties this year included the persecution and conviction of the the Irvine 11 — a group of students (all of the Muslim, all of them young men) who were subjected to a criminal trial for briefly and nonviolently disrupting the speech of Israeli ambassador Michael Oren.

Tens of chapters of Students for Justice in Palestine said it best in a statement following the convictions:

We unequivocally condemn these charges, which unfairly single out and criminalize Muslim students who chose to exercise their First Amendment right to speak out against Israel’s human rights abuses. Had the speaker not been Israeli, had the issue not been Palestine, had the students not been Muslim, these charges never would have been pursued. Rather, these charges reflect a climate of Islamophobia and an irrational exceptionalism for Israel when it comes to free speech. The charges chill the free exchange of ideas and students’ right to protest at universities nationwide.

Guantanamo comes to the US

But perhaps the scariest development in the war on civil liberties this year is the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) for 2012, which if enacted would allow the indefinite detention of US citizens without trial, not unlike Israel’s use of administrative detention. Indeed, as Human Rights Watch summarizes, “In addition to codifying indefinite detention without charge in US law, the bill would require that the military, rather than federal, state, or local law enforcement, handle certain terrorism cases.”

RT: #NDAA codifies into law military’s power to indefinitely detain any American citizen w/o charges, evidence, or trial. Obama must veto.
Dec 02 via webFavoriteRetweetReply

The bill has been already passed by Congress, and now Obama has dropped his threats to veto the bill. Constitutional law attorney Glenn Greenwald described the potential ramifications of the legislation on Democracy Now!:

it will be the first time that the United States Congress has codified the power of indefinite detention into the law since the McCarthy era of the 1950s. The 1950 Congress passed a bill saying that communists and subversives could be imprisoned without a trial, without full due process, based on the allegation that they presented a national threat, an emergency, a threat to the national security of the United States. President Truman, knowing that the bill would—the veto would be overridden, nonetheless vetoed it and said that it made a mockery of the Bill of Rights. That law was repealed in 1971 with the Non-Detention Act, that said you cannot hold people in prison without charging them with a crime. The war on terror has eroded that principle, under both the Bush and Obama administrations, but Congress is now, with the Democrats in control of the Senate and a Democratic president, is about to enact into law the first bill that will say that the military and the United States government do have this power. It’s muddled whether it applies to US citizens on U.S. soil, but it’s clearly indefinite detention, and there’s a very strong case to make that it includes US citizens, as well, which, as we know, the Obama administration already claims anyway, and that’s what makes it so dangerous.

Not only is the Obama administration not closing Guantanamo, but it is paving the way for more Guantanamo-style indefinite detention of US citizens in a military court system.

Of course, there are already so-called “litte Guantanamos” around the US — “Communications Management Units,” or secret prisons populated almost exclusively with Arab and Muslim detainees so as to segregate them from the general prison population.

Following the dismissing of an appeal for the Holy Land Foundation Case, Noor Elashi described on Counterpunch last week how her father — one of five men persecuted and convicted in the US because of the their humanitarian work in support of Palestinians living under US-funded Israeli occupation — has ended up in one of these facilities, and how his “significantly diminished phone calls and visitations are scheduled in advance and live-monitored from Washington DC.”

Will this become the bleak reality for not just Palestinian political prisoners in the US, but also those who stand in solidarity with the Palestinian people? It’s a serious question as the US government moves to further criminalize solidarity with the Palestinian people — as they have criminalized almost all of Palestinian society itself by placing all the major Palestinian political parties (except that which collaborates with the US and Israel) on the State Department’s Foreign Terrorist Organization list.

The US State Department has threatened more than once to use the material support laws against organizers of the US Boat to Gaza. And if passed, a bill introduced in Congress in October would require the State Department to investigate US Boat to Gaza organizers for “terrorist” ties, as Ali Abunimah reported last month.

Gotta stay united and develop friendships with your fellow activists. Never know who will be your cellmate. #NDAA
Dec 16 via webFavoriteRetweetReply

Homeland Security Police are here at civil rights rally. #indefinite#detentionhttp://t.co/MtKGSB61
Dec 15 via Twitter for BlackBerry®FavoriteRetweetReply

Who’s a “domestic terrorist”?

The proposed legislation to allow the US military to indefinitely detain without trial “domestic terrorism” suspects who are US citizens is especially scary considering that political activists are increasingly being treated as terrorists — whether it be animal welfare activists investigating factory farms or activists who organized in protest of the 2008 Republican National Convention. And now the Chicago Police Department is creating a counterterrorism unit for the May 2012 NATO and G8 summits in Chicago, at the same time that the city refuses to meet with or issue protest permits to antiwar activists mobilizing large demonstrations against the meetings.

Political repression in the US

Prosecuting Palestine solidarity activists for support of terrorism and going after environmentalists and animal rights organizers is not about protecting public safety. It’s about crushing dissent.

The laws banning material support to foreign terrorist organizations has been expanded so broadly in recent years that the US government defines as “material support” immaterial things like political speech, and travel to places like Colombia and Palestine are now grounds for a judge to approve a search warrant on someone’s home — things thought to be protected by the first amendment.

And Glenn Greenwald, the aforementioned constitutional law attorney, had this to say about the use of para-militarized forces to crush Occupy Wall Street protests around the US:

A country cannot radically reduce quality-of-life expectations, devote itself to the interests of its super-rich, and all but eliminate its middle class without triggering sustained citizen fury.

The reason the U.S. has para-militarized its police forces is precisely to control this type of domestic unrest, and it’s simply impossible to imagine its not being deployed in full against a growing protest movement aimed at grossly and corruptly unequal resource distribution. As Madeleine Albright said when arguing for U.S. military intervention in the Balkans: “What’s the point of having this superb military you’re always talking about if we can’t use it?” That’s obviously how governors, big-city Mayors and Police Chiefs feel about the stockpiles of assault rifles, SWAT gear, hi-tech helicopters, and the coming-soon drone technology lavished on them in the wake of the post/9-11 Security State explosion, to say nothing of the enormous federal law enforcement apparatus that, more than anything else, resembles a standing army which is increasingly directed inward.

Most of this militarization has been justified by invoking Scary Foreign Threats — primarily the Terrorist — but its prime purpose is domestic. As civil libertarians endlessly point out, the primary reason to oppose new expansions of government power is because it always — always — vastly expands beyond its original realm.

Reasons to be hopeful

It’s easy to get depressed about the increasingly repressive conditions in the US. But there are reasons to be hopeful.

I’m inspired and humbled by the courage shown by campus solidarity activists in the wake of the Irvine 11 convictions. Students are showing that they have not been intimidated into silence and are continuing to challenge Israeli government spokespersons and their propagandists.

The potential for true change was made brilliantly clear this year when huge numbers of people come out into the streets for a common goal — whether it be protecting workers’ rights in Wisconsin, calling for the downfall of the regimes in Tunisia and Egypt or for economic justice on Wall Street. Or when young Palestinians born refugees in Syria and Lebanon attempted to march back to their homeland, unafraid of Israel’s landmines and machine guns.

Because of collective action’s power to change, this is precisely why it is being so severely repressed in the US right now. We must stay strong, keep our chins up and keep fighting for a better future.

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Carlos Montes Court Appearance: Activists say “Drop the Charges!”

By Charla Schlueter |Fight Back! News
November 14, 2011
Activists rally outside the courthouse in support of Carlos Montes.
Activists rally outside the courthouse in support of Carlos Montes. (Fight Back! News/Staff)
Supporters of Carlos Montes outside the courtroom.
Supporters of Carlos Montes outside the courtroom.

Los Angeles, CA – Activists gathered outside the Los Angeles courthouse Monday morning, chanting “FBI don’t scare me, we’ve got solidarity,” as they rallied in support of veteran Chicano activist Carlos Montes. Over 40 supporters packed the courtroom as Montes’ case began the ‘discovery’ phase. “We are demanding the communications, documents, and information that shows the collaboration of the FBI and LA County Sheriffs,” said Montes outside the hearing.

During this phase of the legal proceedings Jorge Gonzalez, Montes’ attorney, is working to establish that the FBI was behind every step of the attack on Montes.

The LA Sheriff’s department has confirmed that the May 17 raid on Montes’ home was initiated by the FBI. After Montes was arrested, he was questioned by plainclothes FBI agents – not about prior arrests or gun purchases (the stated pretext for the raid), but about his political activism and his relationship with the Freedom Road Socialist Organization. Montes maintains that he was targeted for his opposition to U.S. military aggression and his activism in solidarity with the people of Colombia and Palestine.

“I just can’t believe that the FBI think they can get away with crap like this,” said Joshua Taylor, a participant in Occupy LA. “These charges are clearly bogus, they’re an attack on the movement as a whole.” Taylor has been at Occupy LA for 22 days now, and says he came out to support Montes because “it could be any of us, we have to stand together.”

The discovery phase of Montes’ case will continue on December 14, at the Los Angeles Superior Court on Temple Street, Department 123 on the 13th floor.

Speaking in front of the courthouse, Mick Kelly, of the Committee to Stop FBI Repression, stated, “What is happening inside this courthouse is wrong. The U.S. government wants to put Carlos Montes in jail for his anti-war and international solidarity activism. We cannot allow this to happen.”

Montes is part of a larger group of 24 activists around the country who have been hit by FBI repression and a federal grand jury investigation looking into “material support for terrorism.” Many of those activists, including Montes, were involved in organizing the massive protests at the 2008 Republican National Convention.

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Drop the Charges Against Carlos Montes!

Join the national call-in day on November 14 to

-- President Obama at 202-456-1111 and
-- Attorney General Holder at 202-514-2001

Demand: Drop the charges against Carlos Montes."

Contact us and let us know how your calls went: info@stopFBI.net

If you are in the L.A. area...
Join us and Occupy the Court!
Downtown Courthouse on Temple St
Los Angeles, CA
Monday, November 14th - 8:00 AM
13th Floor, Department 123


After a hugely successful conference on November
5 in Chicago, 150 activists and organizers
committed to organizing solidarity with Carlos
Montes. So across the country, activists and
defenders of human rights are mobilizing to
support Carlos Montes as he appears for a
Preliminary Hearing at the LA County Superior Courthouse Dept. on Monday.

On May 17, under the direction of the FBI, LA
Sheriffs brandishing automatic weapons broke down
Montes door at 5:00am and ransacked his home,
seizing meeting notes and writings covering over
40 years of activism in the Chicano, immigrant
rights, labor and anti-war movements. Carlos
Montes is charged with 6 felony counts for
weapons possession, threatening 18 years in
prison - essentially a life sentence.Carlos
Montes is directly connected to the Midwest 23
through working to organize the mass protest at
the 2008 Republican National Convention. Montes
name appeared on the FBI search warrant for the
Anti-War

Committee office in Minneapolis one year ago on
September 24 during the raids. While under
arrest, the FBI attempted to question Carlos
about his political activism and the
Freedom

Road Socialist Organization. We demand all
charges be dropped and the political repression end now.

Please take the following steps to the support
Carlos Montes and the 23 Midwest activists facing FBI repression:

Sign the national petition supporting Carlos Montes

Sign the Pledge to Resist FBI and Grand Jury Repression

Join a local support committee of the CSFR or organize one in your town

Donate to the legal defense fund