FBI and
Police Are Knocking on Activists’ Doors Ahead of
Republican National Convention
By Alice Speri
June 24,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "The
Intercept"
- Law
enforcement agencies,
including the FBI, have been knocking on the doors
of activists and community organizers in Cleveland,
Ohio, asking about their plans for the Republican
National Convention in July.
As the city
gears up to welcome an estimated 50,000 visitors,
and an unknown number of protesters, some of the
preparations and restrictions put in place by
officials have angered civil rights activists. But
the latest string of unannounced home visits by
local and federal police marks a significant
escalation in officials’ efforts to stifle protest,
they say.
“The
purpose of these door knocks is simple: to
intimidate the target and others in efforts to
discourage people from engaging in lawful First
Amendment activities,” Jocelyn Rosnick, a
coordinator with the Ohio chapter of the National
Lawyers Guild, wrote in a statement denouncing the
home visits.
More than a
dozen people in the Cleveland area have reported
being visited this week by local police, the FBI,
Department of Homeland Security, and Secret Service.
Michael
Nelson, an attorney and the president of the
Cleveland chapter of the NAACP, said that police
officers visited the parents of one of his clients,
a young woman who was among 71 people arrested in
May 2015 following the acquittal of a police officer
in the deaths of two unarmed people.
When the
parents asked whether their daughter was in trouble
and why they wanted to speak with her, the officers
replied that they wanted to ask “about any
information she might have about anybody engaging in
violence, planning violence for the RNC.” Nelson and
others have asked for a meeting with the agencies
involved in the door knocks.
“Maybe we
need to have a discussion about the Constitution,”
he told The Intercept. “Last time we heard
of anything like this was when Dr. King and J. Edgar
Hoover were around.”
The FBI confirmed that visits have
taken place. “In preparation for the upcoming RNC,
the FBI, along with our federal, state, and local
partners, has been working collaboratively with
members of the community,” a spokesperson for the
FBI’s Cleveland field office told The Intercept.
“As part of this preparation, law enforcement is
reaching out to individuals known in the community
who may have information that could help ensure a
safe and secure environment during the RNC.” Cleveland’s
police department did not respond to requests for
comment.
Maggie
Rice, an organizer with Food Not Bombs, said that
members of her group were visited by police but felt
too “rattled” to speak to a reporter. The group is
not planning to stage protests but has applied for
permits to be in the RNC event zone in order to feed
both protesters and Cleveland residents dealing with
disruptions to public transportation and services
like Meals on Wheels.
“A lot of
Cleveland’s most vulnerable residents will be at
risk,” Rice said. “The idea that the FBI would be
coming in, knocking on our doors and asking
questions of people that they know are not involved
in organizing any protests and that are basically a
humanitarian organization is completely unacceptable
and very disturbing.”
“One FBI
agent and one plainclothes Cleveland police officer,
both white men, showed up and started asking
questions about other Food Not Bombs members and our
activities,” Rice said. “I personally believe that
this is an attempt to intimidate because they know
we play a vital role in helping people stay out
longer and have their voices heard.”
In other
visits, officers asked about people’s previous
addresses, political and social affiliation, and
convention plans, according to the NLG. “We are
concerned these visits will chill the free speech
activities of individuals wishing to lawfully
protest,” said Rosnick. “And that individuals who
are not planning to be involved in the RNC are being
harassed due to their associations.”
The group
is holding free legal training sessions for local
activists and residents and has been monitoring law
enforcement preparations ahead of the convention. To
Cleveland organizers, the recent door knocks are
just a reminder that they are being watched.
“Cleveland
is no stranger to FBI interference and FBI
entrapment,” said Rice. “I’d say most Cleveland
activists and support organizations like ours are
aware that every room we’re in probably has an FBI
agent in it. And we act accordingly.” |