Showing posts with label Oregon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Oregon. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Stand With Pax

May 4, 2012 - http://freepax.org/

On the morning of May 3rd over a dozen members of the Portland Police
Department stormed a North Portland house and tore it apart on a warrant
to indict our friend Bryan Michael Wiedeman (widely known as Pax) on 72
felony charges for “conspiracy to commit criminal mischief” and “criminal
mischief” as apparently part of a two year grand jury investigation. The
preposterousness of these charges (64 were dropped within a couple days),
is clearly intended to terrorize and silence radical communities
throughout the pacific northwest. But we’re going to show them how strong
our solidarity is.

As of his arraignment May 14th, Pax is currently facing ten felony charges
and out on $4k bail. Next court date: July 2, at 1:30PM. Further updates,
public announcement listserv, resources, calender and a direct donations
jar to follow shortly. We have tshirts for preorder. Updates can also be
found on his facebook support page.

Saturday, April 14, 2012

Rashid Kevin Johnson's details

Greetings everyone -

I finally got the re-assignment details for Kevin (Rashid) Johnson. Perhaps this is old to many of you, but for those who were not apprised of the Virginia (Inter-State Compact) arrangement to ship Rashid out to Oregon, as I was not until only last week, he is at the (O.S.P.) Oregon State Penitentiary in Salem as I thought he might be; but along with 36 other potential states available in their (Virginia's) "compact" program - anything could happen one could imagine.

I've just written a postcard to check in with him, and y'all can do the same when
you can at:

Kevin Johnson,
ODOC#19370490,
Oregon State Penitentiary,
2600 State Street,
Salem, OR. 97310

BTW: He still retains the VDOC #1007485, so when contacting Richmond;
keep that in mind.

Note: I tried to check the (ICOTS) Interstate Compact Public Web Portal for more information on conditions with contract prisoner's freedom of movement etc. but the program isn't giving anything using either state's DOC#'s. Have to presume that what Terry Glenn at the VDOC's Interstate Compact department told me is correct - he struggled for an inordinate amount of time over the phone going through e-mails while I was on the line - so now I am feeling dubious - until further notice.

Anyone can feel free to followup on me to confirm at:
Terry Glenn - (804) 674-3131 (ext. 1531) in Richmond or;

Karen Potts (his counterpart in Oregon) -
(503) 378-6188 in Salem.

She referred me to Glenn for details, but he wasn't forthright what his custody conditions are; just crap like depends how he adjusts - or to that affect.

(See attachments)

Twitch,
Central Texas ABC


Oregon State Penitentiary

Professional Visit Guidelines

Professional visits (i.e., attorney, state and/or local agencies, other public or government agencies, psychological evaluations, etc.) with inmates must be scheduled in advance by contacting the Superintendent’s Office at (503) 378-2445.

When scheduling an appointment, please have the following information available:

· Inmate’s name and SID number

· Provide the names of all persons attending the visit (i.e., attorney, investigator, law clerk, etc.) All visitors will require a background check as noted below.

· Date and time you wish to visit during visiting hours.

General Population Visiting Hours: 7 days a week 7:15 a.m. to 10:15 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. to 3:45 p.m.

IMU/DSU Visiting Hours 7 days a week 7:30 a.m., 8:40 a.m., 11:20 a.m.,

12:30 p.m., 1:40 p.m.

Notify staff when scheduling an appointment if you need to bring electronic equipment or materials in for your visit. Computers, tape recorders, testing materials, etc. may only be permitted with approval of the facility superintendent or designee. You may be asked to put your request in writing explaining the need for the item(s).

If you are a first time professional visitor, the following information is needed to conduct a background check prior to your first visit. Background checks will be updated periodically. Please provide the following information for all professional visitors attending a visit:

· Full legal name

· Date of birth

· States lived in in the last five years

· Organization work for, i.e., law office, state agency, etc. (you may be asked employment verification prior to a visit)

Professional visitors will need to present credentials/identification when checking in for a visit (i.e., bar card, driver’s license, agency ID, and letter of introduction from employer, etc.). An attorney would need to present their bar card and valid picture ID (driver’s license). A DHS worker would need to present their agency ID card and driver’s license. Law clerks would need to present their driver’s license and letter of introduction from their employer. Letters of introduction may be required at the time of scheduling for law clerks.

Attorneys and representatives from other criminal justice, state or local agencies may be permitted to bring necessary documents or paperwork into the visiting room/area for exchange with the inmate with prior approval of visiting staff. No more then a ¼” of paper is allowed to be exchanged with an inmate during a legal visit. All articles will be searched for contraband. No other items are permitted to be exchanged with an inmate. For example, no pens, no envelopes, no CDs, no books, etc. can be exchanged with an inmate.

Please note that no blue denim or inmate like attire is allowed to be worn by visitors. This includes blue dress shirts, t-shirts, etc. Inmates wear blue denim and light blue chambray shirts and dark navy blue t-shirts. For the safety and security of everyone it is recommended that blue not be worn. Please keep all metal to a minimum as the metal detector is sensitive. Underwire undergarments, steel supports in shoes, a large number of metal buttons on an outfit, etc. will set off the metal detector. If your clothing is determined to resemble inmate like attire or you cannot pass the metal detector, you will not be allowed access into the facility.

Professional visitors are expected to follow the same rules as general visitors as outlined in the Rule on Visiting (Inmate). This rule can be located on our web page at http://arcweb.sos.state.or.us/rules/OARS_200/OAR_291/291_127.html.

Legal telephone calls may be scheduled when a professional visit is not possible. Contact Transitional Services clerical support at (503) 378-4013 to schedule a legal call. If the inmate is in special housing, your call will be referred to that housing unit for scheduling. Please be prepared with the following information when you call to schedule:

· Name and SID # of inmate

· Date and time for call (have a alternate date available as well)

· Expected duration of call

Please keep in mind that we have a total of two telephones available for legal calls for over 2000 inmates. Inmates can contact their attorney’s office using the inmate telephone system. Inmate calls to attorneys whose telephone numbers appear on the legal call list will not be monitored or recorded by the department. The legal call list includes the official telephone numbers of all attorneys registered with and provided to the Oregon State Bar Association. Numbers not registered as the official number for an attorney’s office and called on the inmate telephone system are subject to monitoring.

Legal telephone calls are for legal purposes. Personal business/discussions are not considered legal in nature. Call forwarding, three-way or conference calls are prohibited. A complete copy of the Rule on Telephone (Inmate) may be obtained from our web page at: http://arcweb.sos.state.or.us/rules/OARS_200/OAR_291/291_130.html.

When sending legal mail to an inmate, only paper documents are authorized. Legal mail received directly from the original source shall be authorized up to three inches thick. To qualify for special processing, legal mail must have affixed to the addressee side of the envelope the words “LEGAL MAIL.” The words “LEGAL MAIL” should be set apart from both the return address and the mailing address and should be of sufficient size to permit easy recognition by staff. Inmates are not authorized to receive CDs in the mail. CDs found in legal mail will be forwarded to the Legal Librarian for processing. Special arrangements can be made with the Superintendent’s Office to drop off large amounts of legal material for an inmate. The materials will be searched for contraband prior to being given to the inmate. Please ensure the inmate’s name and SID # are clearly labeled on the materials. The Rule on Mail (Inmate) does not apply when dropping off large amounts of materials. Staff will use the utmost discretion when searching the materials for contraband. A complete copy of the Rule on Mail (Inmate) may be obtained from our web page at: http://arcweb.sos.state.or.us/rules/OARS_200/OAR_291/291_131.html.

If you have any questions regarding professional visits/telephone calls/legal mail, please contact the Penitentiary’s Executive Assistant at (503) 378-2678.

This information is intended as a quick reference and does not cover every aspect of the rules. To be completely familiar with Department of Corrections’ rules you should review the rules in their entirety.

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

How the FBI Monitored Crusty Punks, ‘Anarchist Hangouts,’ and an Organic Farmers’ Market Under the Guise of Combating Terrorism

The FBI conducted a three-year investigation, dubbed "Seizing Thunder," into a animal-rights and environmental "terrorists" in the Pacific Northwest that devolved into widespread—and seemingly pointless—surveillance of activists for no apparent reason aside from the fact that they were anarchists, or protested the war in Iraq, or were "militant feminists." Here's the file.

I first came across the name "Seizing Thunder" several years ago while rifling through the FBI's investigative files on the Animal Liberation Front. The ALF records obliquely referenced the evocatively named investigation, which I requested via the Freedom of Information Act just for kicks. Last month—after three years—the FBI returned nearly 500 pages (it held back 784).

It turns out that Seizing Thunder, which was based out of the bureau's Portland field office, was one of several investigations into animal rights and environmental activists nationwide that the FBI eventually merged into Operation Backfire, a wide-ranging probe of ALF and the Earth Liberation Front. Backfire concluded in 2006 with the indictments of 11 activists for arson and other "acts of domestic terrorism," including a notorious 1998 destruction of a $12 million ski lodge in Vail, Colo. The Portland portion seemed to focus primarily on gathering general intelligence on activists who used tree-sitting and other monkey-wrench tactics to fight old-growth logging in the Pacific Northwest.

How the FBI Monitored Crusty Punks, 'Anarchist Hangouts,' and an Organic Farmers' Market Under the Guise of Combating TerrorismClick to expand

What makes Seizing Thunder interesting, however, is how easily the agents slipped beyond investigating actual federal crimes and devoted considerable resources to tracking political activists with no apparent criminal intent.

Seizing Thunder was opened in 2002 to target members of the "Animal Liberation front (ALF), Earth Liberation Front (ELF) and an anarchist group called the Red Cloud Thunder, all whose members are inter-related and they openly claimed several major arsons," according to the files. The investigation involved physical and video surveillance, warrants for phone taps, and cooperation with local police departments in Portland and Eugene, Ore. But the feds quickly dropped the pretense of tracking organized groups and quickly began surveilling people simply for identifying themselves—or for being identified by informants—as anarchists. The memos read like artifacts from the Red Scare:

  • July 19, 2002: "On [redacted], the source observed a [redacted] Oregon license plate...parked at [redacted], a known anarchist hangout."
  • August 8, 2002: "The source observed the following vehicles in the vicinity of [redacted], a major hangout for the anarchist and [redacted]"
  • September 19, 2002: "On [redacted] the source observed [redacted] vehicle, Oregon license plate [redacted] parked at [redacted] one of the hangout for anarchist...."
  • October 18, 2002: "On [redacted] the source was questioned as to the [redacted] anarchist travelling to [redacted]."

"The anarchists were dressed in black"

What sort of federal crimes were all these anarchists getting up to, aside from the thought variety? The records, which document the FBI's extensive cooperation and intelligence-sharing with local police departments in Eugene and Oregon, show that agents collected intelligence about an anarchist march that was being planned to protest U.S. policy in the Middle East:

On [redacted] at approximately 2:30 p.m., the source visited [redacted]. The source did not observe any anarchists. The source walked [redacted] to view their bulletin board. Most of the ads on the bulletin board were for individuals looking for roommates.

On [redacted] the source attended [redacted]. The source visited [redacted] where the source met two unknown anarchists at [redacted]. The anarchists were dressed in black and were in their early 20s.... The source stated the anarchists are planning a protest to "Reclaim the Streets" on April 20, 2002, in Portland, Ore.

Here's how the Associated Press covered that crucible of terror and violence:

About 700 people marched through downtown Saturday in a peaceful protest against U.S. support of Israel in the Middle East crisis. There were no arrests and no altercations, police said.

The Pinky Swear Riot

Another FBI source passed along a warning of a similar anarchist plot to gather on the streets of Eugene just two days later to protest the International Monetary Fund. The feds quickly passed along the warning to the Eugene police department, thereby averting a bloody riot, by the FBI's lights:

[Redacted] identified [redacted] a mass protest/riot planned by the Eugene anarchist where on 4/22/02 they attempted to "take over the street" and cause havoc during the rush hour. The Eugene Police Department was immediately notified and they called in numerous officers for this unexpected protest/riot. EPD was prepared for this problem and prevented a major riot. EPD expressed their appreciation for this information as it may have resulted in maJor damages of businesses and property, similar to that of a riot in June 1999 where $150,000 of property destruction occurred.

I can't find any record of any news organization covering this narrowly averted riot. A flier for the riot included in the file reads: "2 p.m.: Teach-in on the G8.... 4 p.m.: RECLAIM-THE-STREETS! Come and party in the street! Live bands: Pinky Swear (Portland/Punk) and Elevated Elements (Seattle / Hip Hop)."

Chasing Subarus

Another high point of the file shows agents conducting surveillance on the Grower's Market, a "not-for-profit food-buying club for buying organic and natural foods" in Eugene, and then literally tailing two random Subaru Legacys (naturally!) to a political rally. As the redacted memo recounting the excursion makes clear, the agents had no idea who they were following, or why.

The interviewing agents conducted a physical surveillance in the vicinity of The Grower's Market located at 454 Willamette Street in Eugene, Oregon. This surveillance was conducted as a result of [redacted]. During the surveillance the following observations were made:

0930: Surveillance instituted in the vicinity of The Grower's Market....
1100: A gray Subaru Legacy bearing Oregon license plate [redacted] with unknown individuals left the area of the Grower's Market followed by unknown passengers in a red Subaru Legacy bearing Ohio license plate [redacted], a purple Geo Metro bearing an Oregon special license plate [redacted]. These vehicles were followed south on Interstate-5.

What caper were these Subaru-driving terrorists getting up to? Well, after meeting up with a "private bus," also with unknown individuals on board, they drove to Roseburg, Oregon:

1406: The bus and three vehicles were observed parked on the west side of Main Street, south of Oak Street, in a free parking area. The occupants of the vehicles were observed to be carrying protest signs and musical instruments and walking north on Main Street toward the South Umpqua National Bank.
1409: The occupants of the bus and three vehicles were observed protesting outside the South Umpqua National Bank located at Main and Washington streets in Roseburg, Oregon. Officers from Roseburg Police Department and the Douglas County Sheriff's Office were observed monitoring/video taping the incident.
1417: Surveillance discontinued.

"The Anarchists and homeless groups have united"

The Seizing Thunder agents weren't just worried about enviro-anarchy—they also warned of a dreaded anarchist-homeless alliance that threatened to build a "homeless camp." From a November 2002 memo:

Source advised that the Anarchists and homeless groups have united in the effort to establish a "homeless camp." Source stated that the homeless community has accepted the assistance of the Anarchists in the area of publicity and community outreach.

And don't forget the menace posed by punk rock as performed by anarchists. This memo shows that the bureau's Los Angeles office kept tabs on an the Alternative Gathering Collective, "an anarchist group in Los Angeles that organizes anarchist punk music concerts, many of which are fundraisers for animal liberation and environmental extremist groups and causes."

Review of [redacted] found that the AGC sponsored a benefit show for the Long Beach Food Not Bombs (FNB) on 2/5/2005. The concert was held at the Homeland Cultural Center, 1321 Anaheim St., Long Beach CA with the bands Sin Remedio, Ciril, Degrading Humanity, Life in Exile, Lechuza, Civil Disgust, S.O.U.P., and One Side Society.

Finally, an October 2002 memo warns agents that Lady Anarchists can be a whole mess of trouble:

Source advised that the females of the anarchist's movement are in leadership positions in Eugene, Oregon. These females are described as being very feminist and militant.

Other hilarious moments involve agents snooping on nature hikes, investigating the serious federal crime of keying cars, and unwittingly letting a warrant for a phone tap expire.

A History of Political Surveillance

Sadly, it shouldn't come as a surprise to anybody paying attention that the FBI spent much of the 2000s following people simply because they harbored forbidden political beliefs. Last year, Austin, Texas activist Scott Crow decided to see if the FBI was keeping tabs on him, so he FOIAed his file. He got back an astonishing 440 pages of surveillance records and other documents, according to the New York Times. Crow, an anarchist, has never been charged with a federal crime.

In 2010, the FBI's inspector general issued a report finding that the bureau had overstepped its bounds in investigating political and advocacy groups. The bureau's Pittsburgh office, the report said, had conducted surveillance on an anti-war rally as a "make-work" assignment for a bored agent and then "provided inaccurate and misleading information to Congress and the public" about the incident. It also found that "in several cases" of surveillance aimed at Greenpeace, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, and other groups, the FBI's stated bases for the investigations were "factually weak" and demonstrated "little indication of any possible federal crime as opposed to a local crime."

A 2003 inspector general audit of the bureau's intelligence gathering and sharing capabilities took note of the increasing emphasis on domestic counterterrorism investigations aimed at "criminal activities associated with animal rights, environmental, and anti-abortion extremists, as well as by certain social protestors" as opposed to, you know, al Qaeda. The report diplomatically suggested that the FBI's counterterror resources should be reserved for combating actual terrorism: "To the extent that the FBI seeks to maximize its counterterrorism resources to deal with radical Islamic fundamentalist terrorism, WMD, and domestic groups or individuals that may seek mass casualties, we believe that FBI management should consider the benefit of transferring responsibility for criminal activity by social activists to the FBI's Criminal Investigative Division."

The bureau obviously didn't listen. It should be noted that the 11 people eventually indicted in Operation Backfire actually had committed serious crimes worthy of federal investigations. Though the documents are heavily redacted, it appears from context that at the very least one of them—Chelsea Dawn Gerlach, who participated in the Vail arson—was a target of Seizing Thunder.

I asked the FBI who, if anyone, was eventually charged based on information developed via Seizing Thunder, and what federal crimes the bureau suspected unidentified Subaru drivers, militant feminists, and frequenters of "anarchist hangouts" of committing. A spokeswoman did not immediately respond.

You can read the full file below. (document on original website)

[Image by Jim Cooke, source images via AP and roboppy/flickr]

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

LIFE IS NOT CLEAR-CUT

An Oscar-nominated documentary tied to Eugene explores ‘eco-terrorism’ without easy heroes or villains

Before “The Artist” or “Hugo” or “The Descendents” or whatever wins best picture at the 84th Academy Awards tonight in Hollywood, before Brad Pitt or George Clooney or the “French George Clooney” (Jean Dujardin) takes home the best-actor prize, and Meryl Streep finally — maybe? — gets her second best-actress nod, watch for Eugene’s Oscar clip.

It may or may not come; instead of tree-climbing activists being pepper-sprayed downtown, or images of burned-out SUVs at a former Franklin Boulevard Chevrolet dealership, the blip of footage shown might be from New York City or Vail, Colo., or maybe even Glendale, Ore.

But rest assured, our town will have some rare representation during the film industry’s biggest night of the year.

That’s because one of the five nominees for best documentary feature is “If a Tree Falls: A Story of the Earth Liberation Front,” an 85-minute film with an epicenter that is largely Eugene.

The extraordinary work of co-directors Marshall Curry and Sam Cullman began one day in 2005 when Elizabeth Martin, Curry’s wife, came home from work with a tale that neither she nor her husband could believe: Four federal agents had entered her Brooklyn office that afternoon and arrested Daniel McGowan, one of her employees, on eco-terrorism charges.

Curry, who at the time was working on his second documentary film — his first, 2005’s “Street Fight,” was also nominated for an Oscar — was astonished. He had met the mild-mannered McGowan, a business major in college who grew up in Queens the son of a New York City police officer, and “terrorist” was not the first thing that came to mind.

Curry had to know more. But he would have to wait more than a month to meet with McGowan in person, because McGowan was immediately flown across the country and placed in the Lane County Jail to await an appearance in front of U.S. Magistrate Thomas Coffin on federal charges of conspiracy arson, using a firebomb and 13 arsons in connection with the 2001 fires set at Superior Lumber Co. in Glendale and Jefferson Poplar Farm in Clatskanie.

“If a Tree Falls,” which won the documentary editing award at last year’s Sundance Film Festival, is the story of a Eugene-based cell of the Earth Liberation Front — a radical eco-defense coalition born in the early 1990s in the United Kingdom and hell-bent on taking the profit motive out of environmental destruction by causing economic damage to business through the use of property damage — as told through McGowan’s personal story.

Defining terrorism

McGowan moved to Eugene in 2000, where he briefly worked at the Earth First! Journal, shortly after taking part in the 1999 World Trade Organization protests in Seattle. He had gotten a job at a Manhattan public relations firm after college but, as he says in the film, his life began to change after he joined an environmental center and saw films of oil spills and mountain tops left bald by old-growth logging.

It was in Eugene that McGowan forged relationships with the co-conspirators who would parade through the Wayne L. Morse United States Courthouse in the spring and summer of 2007, on their way to federal prison terms.

Their arrests came four years after the local cell had disbanded in 2001 and were part of a nationwide sweep, called “Operation Backfire,” of suspects in what local federal prosecutor Kirk Engdahl, now retired, describes in the film as “the largest domestic terrorism case in the history of the United States.”

The arrests of 14 members of the cell were made possible after one member, Jake Ferguson of Eugene, agreed to wear a hidden tape recorder and capture incriminating words made by the others, including McGowan.

Before McGowan’s arrival here, the group had already burned down the Oakridge Ranger Station in 1996 and set fire to a Vail, Colo., ski resort in 1998 that caused $24 million in damage, among other arsons across five states. And the year after he moved to town, ELF members set fire to 35 vehicles at the former Joe Romania Chevrolet Truck Center on Franklin Boulevard, causing $1 million in damage.

But much of the film looks at what constitutes terrorism in a post-Sept. 11 world; whether arson and other property crimes in which no one is killed deserve the terrorist label.

“There was a personal element that was very interesting to me,” the 42-year-old Curry said during a phone interview last week from his Brooklyn home, referring to his fascination with McGowan’s plight. “But I also thought the larger issue of how we define terrorism was interesting and would elevate the film beyond just a human interest story.”

Some — film reviewers, bloggers and others — have questioned whether the documentary maybe leans on the side of being too sympathetic toward McGowan. New York Times film critic Stephen Holden, in reviewing the film upon its release last June, said it was “cautiously sympathetic” toward him.

Writing in The Daily Telegragh of London earlier this month, environmental reporter Louise Gray asks: “Is it right to brand this man a terrorist? This documentary did not answer the question, what it did do is raise a whole lot more and in the best way, to make you have a long, hard think.”

Writing on his New York Times blog, “Dot Earth,” before the film had made the final cut and been nominated for an Oscar, former Times’ environmental reporter Andrew Revkin said a nomination would be “a vote for fearless exploration of complexity in a world drawn to oversimplified depictions of events and problems, heroes and villains. It would be much simpler to make a film that was either deeply sympathetic or scathing considering the subject.”

A messy world

For anyone who thinks it’s too sympathetic toward McGowan or other so-called eco-terrorists, Curry says the film spends a lot of time “exploring the mistakes these people made,” and he hopes the message that comes across is that of a “cautionary tale” for both activists and government.

The film’s aim, Curry says on its website, www.ifatreefalls.com, was not to answer questions, but “to start conversations and debates ... There are some audiences (that) have been uncomfortable with the ambiguity. They want movies to have good guys and bad guys, but I think the world is messier.”

In a follow-up e-mail, after his phone interview with The Register-Guard, Curry wrote: “Almost everyone who has seen it — wherever they stand politically — has said they see it as accurate, fair and complex. The movie tries to understand the human element behind the ELF arsons — to examine ELF members, the victims of the arsons, and the members of law enforcement as three dimensional people rather than cartoonish caricatures. There may be some people who don’t want to understand their opponents — who would like to keep things tidy, with Hollywood villains and Hollywood heroes — and this probably isn’t the movie for them. I think this is a film for people who like to chew their own food. It tries to explain and understand people without excusing their actions or hiding their flaws.”

People on both sides of the story have praised the film.

“The film remained fair and faithful to all the subjects of the film and clearly demonstrated the complexity of the issues,” Engdall, the assistant U.S. attorney who prosecuted McGowan, says on the film’s website. “I believe viewing the film would prompt law enforcement personnel and those who exercise civil disobedience to think beyond moments of confrontation and that the film will engender a greater awareness and a better understanding between police and protesters.”

At his June 4, 2007, sentencing in Eugene in front of U.S. District Judge Ann Aiken, McGowan said that as a New Yorker, he was “deeply offended” by having the terrorism label applied to him.

Labels aside, Aiken had no sympathy for McGowan that day: “You are not a poster child for environmental or other causes,” the judge told him, according to The Register-Guard’s coverage. “You are an arsonist. You are not a political prisoner, getting prosecuted for true activism. You committed arson. You created danger for other people and intended to intimidate and frighten others.”

McGowan was sentenced to seven years in federal prison and was initially housed at a special unit for terrorists in Marion, Ill. He has since been moved to another prison in Terre Haute, Ind., and is eligible for release next year.

‘Once-in-a-lifetime gig’

There are plenty of local faces in the film, including activist video­grapher Tim Lewis, who gets plenty of screen time in interviews and who says he provided six minutes of footage used in the film, from the logging protests at Warner Creek east of Oakridge in 1996, to the disturbing June 1, 1997, footage of Eugene police pepper spraying tree-sitters in downtown Eugene; Eugene police detective Greg Harvey and former Eugene police Capt. Chuck Tilby, who worked the case; and Eugene civil rights attorney Lauren Regan who helped represent McGowan in court.

Lewis — who is in Los Angeles today hoping to meet up with Curry and Cullman after the ceremony — argues in the film that the tactics of law enforcement had a lot to do with radicalizing ELF members.

“I figure this is a once-in-a-lifetime gig,” Lewis said of staying in the same hotel as Curry and Cullman, who will attend tonight’s ceremony with their wives and some other editors and producers of the film. Lewis does not have a seat at the awards, but he does have his telescope with him, he said, in the hopes of looking out the seventh floor window of the Hotel Sofitel on Beverly Boulevard, to catch a glimpse of stars walking the red carpet. Lewis also believes the film was genuinely balanced. “I think that Marshall really sort of hit it fairly.”

Harvey and Tilby also give the film high praise.

“I thought they did a marvelous job. I thought they came away with a terrific product,” said Tilby, who recently left the Eugene Police Department to help the University of Oregon’s Department of Public Safety convert to a police force. “I think what showed is a human element we often don’t see,” Tilby said of the film. “I really thought they were objective and showed the realities of both camps.”

Getting both sides to open up was perhaps the biggest challenge in making the film, Curry said. The filmmakers were able to win McGowan’s trust early on, filming him during his house arrest at his sister’s apartment in New York, but they had to wait until McGowan and the others were sentenced in 2007 before anyone on the law enforcement side would speak with them.

Harvey said he initially feared the story would be one-sided, but once he saw the film, “I thought it was a really well-done job. I was really glad that somebody was out there trying to get the story done. It’s a big story in America.”

‘I’ll think of something’

Curry knows the odds of winning tonight are certainly better than six years ago when “Street Fight,” the story of Newark, N.J., Mayor Cory Booker’s 2002 campaign against Sharpe James, was up against one of the best-known and highest-grossing documentaries in recent years, “March of the Penguins.” But the competition this year, as always, is stiff.

“It’s a tough one to pick this year,” he said. “It’s a great year for documentaries, so anytime you’re in that five, it’s a surprise.”

This is certainly not the first film largely shot or set in Oregon to be nominated for an Oscar. After all, 1975 best-picture winner “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest,” filmed at the Oregon State Hospital in Salem, is one of the few films to ever sweep the four major Oscars — picture, director, actor, actress, as well as winning best adapted screenplay.

And the famous “chicken salad sandwich” scene with Jack Nicholson in 1970 best-picture nominee “Five Easy Pieces” was filmed at the Interstate 5 Denny’s on Glenwood Drive in Eugene.

Although he’s an East Coaster, Curry said he plans to represent Eugene and Oregon proudly tonight — win or lose.

As of last week, however, he had not prepared a speech. “I’ll think of something (to say), yes,” he said. “But I don’t want to jinx it.”

“This is a film for people who like to chew their own food.”

— MARSHALL CURRY, DIRECTOR OF “IF A TREE FALLS”

Sunday, February 12, 2012

Eugene verdict clarifies legal protections for protesters who turn video cameras on police


Sunday, January 29, 2012 Bryan Denson, The Oregonian

State law permits protesters to record police in public places. But courts
have made few rulings on what officers can do with the recording devices
they seize from people during arrests.

The rules of engagement became clearer in Eugene's U.S. District Court
last week, when a civil jury determined that a city police sergeant
violated an environmental activist's constitutional protections against
illegal search and seizure during a 2009 leafletting campaign outside a
bank.

The eight-person panel determined that Sgt. Bill Solesbee arrested
environmentalist Josh Schlossberg without probable cause and used
excessive force. But it was Solesbee's next act that sent legal minds
across Oregon into hyperdrive: He seized the environmentalist's video
camera without a warrant.

That's the electronic equivalent of police walking off with several file
cabinets of private papers without benefit of a judge's signature, said
Lauren Regan, Schlossberg's lawyer.

U.S. Magistrate Judge Thomas Coffin ruled in a pretrial hearing in the
Eugene case that Solesbee violated Schlossberg's Fourth Amendment rights
by searching the contents of his camera without a warrant. That ruling
marked the first time that a federal court in Oregon weighed in on
warrantless seizures of digital devices.

"Across the country right now, legal scholars and lawyers are just eating
it up," Regan said of the ruling, "because it's actually a solid statement
of the right to privacy in the age of technology."

Outdated laws

The American Civil Liberties Union has pressed Congress in recent years to
give more protections to people from searches and seizures of their cell
phones, laptops and other digital devices, said David Fidanque, the ACLU's
executive director in Oregon. The last time Congress updated electronic
privacy protections was 1986.

Oregon's law on intercepting communications was enacted in 1973, decades
before the digital age. Fidanque said the statute gives little protection
when, say, a teacher confiscates a student's cell phone and begins rifling
through text messages and photos, although he thinks the Constitution does
offer protections.

"The decision in the Eugene case strengthens the federal constitutional
protections in a lot of other situations as well," he said. "Ideally we
would like Congress to act -- and state legislatures to act -- to
eliminate any confusion."

The Eugene case began on March 13, 2009, when Schlossberg and another
activist set up a table outside an Umpqua Bank in downtown Eugene. There
they began handing leaflets to passersby.

The leaflets reported that the bank's chairman of the board, Allyn Ford,
owned Roseburg Forest Products and that the company sprayed toxic
herbicides on its forestlands. The papers alleged that the herbicides
drifted onto residential property miles away, contaminating the land and
health of unwitting families.

Before setting up the leafletting station, Schlossberg had met with two
lawyers, including Regan, director of the Civil Liberties Defense Center
in Eugene. Regan advised him not to block the sidewalk or the bank's entry
and, if questioned by police, to videotape the exchange.

Schlossberg was approached by one police officer, who warned him they had
gotten complaints about the leafletting. But after a polite chat, she told
him, "You're fine."

Then came Sgt. Solesbee, who told the environmentalist he had to move
along. Schlossberg told the sergeant that his lawyer had advised him that
he was engaged in lawful activity. Then he watched Solesbee walk into the
bank. Schlossberg began packing up his things to leave.

Solesbee told Schlossberg he needed a permit to set up a table in front of
the bank and accused him of blocking pedestrian traffic. Then he asked,
"Are you taping me?"

As the two men argued over whether Schlossberg had notified him he was
shooting video, the sergeant pointed at the camera and said, "Gimme that.
That's evidence."

Schlossberg's lawyer said the sergeant then charged the activist, roughly
grabbed for his camera and wrenched his arm behind his back. Schlossberg
was thrown to the ground, where his head struck the pavement, and felt the
sergeant's knee on his neck, Regan said.

Solesbee seized Schlossberg's camera and arrested him. He was jailed for
five hours on charges of resisting arrest and intercepting communications.
Prosecutors later dismissed the charges.

New police policy

Schlossberg complained about his treatment to the Eugene Police
Department. His accusations were investigated by the department's internal
affairs section and reviewed by an independent police auditor before
reaching the desk of Chief Pete Kerns, who in late 2009 determined
Solesbee hadn't violated department policy.

"I think all of his actions were within policy," Kerns said this week.

The chief said court rulings between the time of Schlossberg's arrest and
today changed his department's policy. Now, he said, Eugene police are
discouraged from arresting people for the same offense.

"The state of the law concerning that particular crime has changed," he said.

The Eugene jury last Monday awarded Schlossberg $4,083 for injuries
suffered as a result of Solesbee's excessive force and $1,500 for pain and
suffering. The city also will pay about $200,000 for Schlossberg's legal
fees, Regan said.

Kerns said the city was still deciding whether to appeal the verdict.

The damages were small, Regan said, but the jury's determinations were big
because they held Solesbee accountable for his actions and protected
Schlossberg's right to tape the encounter. She remains baffled by the
police department's position on the incident.

"Not only did a federal judge just spank them on the issue of this illegal
search and seizure," she said, "Solesbee to this day still believes he's
right."

Thursday, August 11, 2011

George Jackson 40 Year Commemoration

Recognizing 40 Years of Resistance:

Join Us...

In commemorating the life of George Jackson.

George Jackson is the father of the modern day prison movement. Prison organizer, Black Panther, writer and co-founder of the Black Guerilla Family, George's life and struggle remain an inspiration across the US and beyond. This August marks the 40th anniversary of his murder by prison guards at San Quentin.


Speakers are:

Kent Ford:
Local Portlander and ex-Black Panther Party Member.
Mark Cook:
An ex-member of the George Jckson Brigade, the Black Panther Party and an active member of Seattle Jericho.
Eddie Collins:
Local Portlander and ex-Black Panther Party Member.

Saturday, August 27th
4 to 6pm
In Other Words Bookstore
14 NE Killingsworth

Thursday, July 07, 2011

Anarchist Prisoner Brian McCarvill

Dear former Oregon State Prisoners and friends of Anarchist Oregon Prisoner Brian McCarvill, who has a letter requesting support he wanted me to share with the
Anarchist and Prison-Support Communities.

Brian had a very steady and reliable Law Library Clerk job he was good at
and enjoyed by assisting others pursuing appeals or complaints etc. But, ran afoul of the Law Library Officer/Manager last year because of a disagreement with another prisoner clerk who wouldn't make copies the Officer allowed Brian to have made. He hastily spoke in anger by saying that the Library Officer and clerk were acting inappropriately by her discussing the altercation with the prisoner copy clerk in whispered hushed tones out of his earshot, that then got him a case and lost him that job; and soured any immediate future jobs.

So, that's where he's at, and isn't one to normally beg, so please read the letter
and do what you can to help him out.

Two July, 2011

Brian McCarvill, 11037967, (2A13B)
Snake River Correctional Institution (SRCI),
777 Stanton Blvd.,
Ontario, Oregon 97914

Fellow Travelers:

This is an urgent plea for monetary assistance.
Five, Ten, Fifteen dollars, anything that can be spared.
I have fallen on dark days in the prison system. Over my
last 16 years of incarceration it has been rare that
I have ever asked for monetary assistance. I have lost
my prison "employment" as a legal assistant as of October
2010. I have been denied prison "employment"
since then and am now completely destitute. I cannot
now purchase even the smallest of necessities such as
envelopes and hygiene products. It is with a heavy
heart that I ask for monies that could otherwise be used
elsewhere in the struggle against leviathan.

I am also interested in hearing from you, write me care of the above address.

Money can be placed on my prison account by going
to: (inmatedeposits.com) or 1-800-966-8755; use my name and number above.

Persons interested in using ODOC's e-mail format, there's a 24-hour turnaround he
thinks for messages, and you can get details at: (inmatemail.com) Use the same info as above. Brian believes there is an $8.00 set up fee with about $1.50 annual maintenance; but check that detail too.

That's all he's got for the moment, hope y'all can help him out.


Twitch - Entropy,
Central Texas ABC

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Former ELF member gets 5 years in heroin case

A convicted arsonist who avoided federal prison five years ago by helping officials lock up fellow Earth Liberation Front activists is headed to state prison for selling heroin.

Jacob Jere­miah “Jake” Ferguson, 38, was sentenced Monday to nearly five years in prison after pleading guilty to manufacturing, possessing and selling heroin; possessing cocaine; and neglecting and endangering his 4-year-old daughter in the process.

County prosecutor JoAnn Miller told Lane County Circuit Judge Charles Zennaché that the latter charges reflect Ferguson’s allowing the girl to stay in his south Eugene residence while drugs were being manufactured and dealt there.

Miller said police found within the child’s “easy access” a toolbox with pull-out drawers “loaded with syringes.”

Ferguson’s attorney, Robert Hutchings, told Zennaché that a long-standing drug addiction is his client’s downfall.

“At one point he was very cooperative with the federal government in bringing down a number of very serious arsonists,” Hutchings said.

Hutchings said that Ferguson did well for a time on a methadone program, but he returned to heroin after losing his job and insurance to pay for the methadone, an alternative drug that staves off withdrawal without delivering a high.

Detectives found nearly 2 ounces of heroin in the home, Miller said.

Ferguson faces possible federal prison time arising from the drug charges, as well. Avoiding criminal conduct was a condition of his probation under a 2007 plea deal that spared him prison time for his role in a politically motivated series of arsons by a local ELF band known as “The Family.” Their targets included a meat-packing company and a car dealership in Eugene; a U.S. Forest Service ranger station in Oakridge; and Superior Lumber Co. in Glendale.

Ferguson is depicted as a leader of the group in a documentary about the group, “If a Tree Falls,” that opened across the country last weekend.

He was scheduled to go back before U.S. District Judge Ann Aiken this week, but a probation revocation has been postponed until July 14.

In his court appearance Monday, Ferguson appeared heavier than the wiry activist depicted in documentary footage from a decade ago. A cherry-sized growth protruded from the top right side of his head, above one of the points of a large pentagram tattoo encircling his head.

He declined comment when Zen­naché asked if he had anything to say.

Friday, May 06, 2011

Paranoid Or Under Surveillance? Youth, Muslims Prime Targets of Anti-Gang, Anti-Terror Efforts

Some see a growing convergence between law enforcement's potential use of the RICO Act, the JTTF and the demographics of our local community

Lisa Loving Of The Skanner News

Sen. Ron Wyden last week called for increasing use of the RICO law to stop gang activity in the Portland metro area.
Law enforcement and elected officials say drastic federal budget cuts could shut down gang resistance and outreach programs and that increased use of RICO laws against gang members are in order.
Meanwhile, Portland City Commissioners last week voted unanimously to rejoin the Joint Terrorism Task Force.
There is a sense in the community that these two developments are linked and that young Black males – including Muslim converts and anyone with any ties to gang activity – are set to be even more surveilled, spied on and entrapped by the FBI and Portland Police in the near future.
Community activist and Fire Frashour Campaign member Rahsaan Muhammad says there is a growing convergence between law enforcement's potential use of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO), the JTTF and the demographics of our local community.

Fire Frashour Campaign member Rahsaan Muhammad testified last year at a Gang Task Force Symposium held in Northeast Portland.
“If you check, statistically, religious conversions or acceptance in America, the number one religion that young Black males are leaving is Christianity, and the number one religion that they are joining is Islam,” Muhammad said. “So one of the greatest fears is that young Black males join Islam in all its different forms, creating a growing number of young men who will not be willing to go along with America’s wars against Islamic countries.”
It may sound like a conspiracy theory to some, but there’s no question that virtually every Oregon resident charged and convicted of terror-related crimes so far – and there are a surprising number -- has been either Black, or Muslim, or both. And certainly most of the 727 people currently listed on the Portland Police gang list are people of color.

Police Broke Oregon Law By Targeting Activists Not Criminals
RICO laws, as well as the Patriot Act, both involve significant degrees of surveillance, and wide swaths of secrecy in government operations.
“There was a big wave when a lot of that RICO stuff first came out in the mid to late ‘90s, where the police did a whole sweep in Old Town-Chinatown with a bunch of young Black men, one of which was my cousin,” Muhammad said. “They were all secretly indicted for drug charges and then given some stiff sentences with regards to that.”
Muhammad’s comments reflect conversations going on in coffee shops and clubs all over the metro area: young African and African American people increasingly see themselves as being the scapegoats not just of local ‘get tough on crime’ efforts, but also federal terrorism units.
Members of the older generation – while not always willing to talk on the record – say the trend harks back to previous decades, when local officials collected intelligence on the Black Panthers and other community organizing groups.
As the Portland Tribune reported in 2002, retired Portland Police terrorism expert Winfield Falk was found to have stolen and stashed 851 surveillance files dated from 1965 through the early 1980s that had been destined for shredding after it was confirmed that the city’s information gathering was illegal.
The files were compiled on members of the Black Panthers, Peoples Food Co-Op, and local elected officials, among many others.
Former Tribune reporter Ben Jacklet wrote, in the series of articles titled ‘The Secret Watchers,’ that law enforcement says that doesn’t happen anymore.
“But the spy files provide a cautionary tale in today’s post-Sept. 11 world. They show how intelligence gatherers can be seduced by their own political convictions. They show how watching one group leads to watching another, and then another. And they show how easy it is for secret files to take on a life of their own.”
The article continued:
“’People think surveillance will only be used against the bad people, but it never works like that,’ says Ron Herndon, a longtime activist in Portland’s Black community who was spied on for years. ‘When you give law enforcement the unfettered authority to snoop into people’s lives in the name of national security, it will be abused.’”
Read the article here
Muhammad notes that former Portland Police Officer Ron Frashour, who pulled the trigger that killed Aaron Campbell, is up for a new hearing next month in which he may be awarded his job back – one of many small factors that community members say shows police officers are not held accountable for wrongdoing.

Preventing Violent Crime Requires Programs for Kids
Sen. Ron Wyden last week said it is important for local citizens to get behind gang prevention programs that stand to be cut in the federal budget.
“The last stop that we made last night in the community, I believe it was at the market at the corner of 18th and Dekum, and a fellow came up and he was wearing colors, and there wasn’t much question in my mind that he was a gang member,” Wyden said. “And he said, Senator, if you’re serious about getting at this you’ve got to reach the kids. You’ve got to reach the kids that are four, five, six, seven.
“He basically said because by the time they’re 10, you’re playing catch-up ball,” Wyden continued. “So in this community we’re going to have to marshall all our resources, federal, state, and local, to deal with this.”
One that’s on the chopping block is the Gang Resistance Education and Training Program, a model community policing institution that sends police officers into schools to work with young people and build positive relationships one-on-one.
GREAT also sponsors family events and parenting classes between law enforcement and immigrant Hispanic and Somali families in the Cully neighborhood.
The program’s national funding is being slashed from $25 million a few years ago to $10 million in next year’s federal budget.
Meanwhile, alleged Christmas bomber Mohamed Mohamud, who was born in Somalia, is scheduled for a ‘status and scheduling hearing’ May 23, after Judge Garr King in January rejected prosecutors’ efforts to schedule the teen’s terrorism trial for February of 2012.
Mohamud’s attorneys are expected to argue the former Oregon State University student was entrapped by FBI agents. He has pled not guilty in the case.
The City of Portland’s vote on the JTTF came after almost a decade of non-participation on the grounds that Oregon law forbids intelligence gathering on individuals not suspected of a crime.
The vote last week came after dozens of rewrites of the proposed guidelines for participation.
“The strong link – they had to have that young brother supposedly plotting to blow up the Christmas tree, and that was really at the heart of the talk that really in my opinion swayed some in the city of Portland to go this route,” Muhammad said.
The New York Times poked gentle fun of the final agreement as being “very Portland” for adding “inclusivity” language and being so filled with euphemisms that attorney Brandon Mayfield couldn’t understand it.
Mayfield is a Muslim lawyer who briefly represented the Portland Seven during their terrorism trial. His life was interrupted in 2004 when a lone FBI agent in Portland wrongfully determined his fingerprints were found at the scene of a bombing in Madrid.
After an odyssey of surveillance of his family, intimidation, jail, and then a long legal process, Mayfield was exonerated and won a $2 million settlement from the federal government.