News (Media Awareness Project) - us: Under Consent Decree, FBI Still Violates Order - Win At All Costs |
Title: | us: Under Consent Decree, FBI Still Violates Order - Win At All Costs |
Published On: | 1998-12-07 |
Source: | Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (PA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-06 18:31:06 |
UNDER CONSENT DECREE, FBI STILL VIOLATES ORDER
For years, the FBI put the names of several Chicago residents on its list
of suspected terrorists, long after a judge had ordered the agency to stop.
These so-called terrorists supported a group called the Committee in
Solidarity with the People of El Salvador, which opposed U.S. policy in
that country.
Last year, after more than 15 years of litigation, the FBI finally admitted
it had been in error when it continued to spy on members and supporters of
this "subversive" group. Under a consent decree, the agency pledged to give
FBI agents training on how to conduct investigations without violating the
First Amendment rights of individuals.
The case began when a group of Chicagoans discovered that between 1983 and
1985 the FBI had spied on them because of their affiliation -- even though
a 1981 court decree had ordered the agency to stop.
Lawsuits were filed in 1988 and in 1991, and U.S. District Judge Ann C.
Williams ruled that members of the organization had been subjected to
wide-ranging violations of the 1981 consent decree.
As part of a systematic covert investigation into the lives and activities
of the organizations supporters, agents had analyzed phone, utility and
banking records, none of which produced any evidence of wrongdoing. Even
so, the FBI had continued to list several of its targets on the federal
registry of suspected terrorists.
"Its a great day; after all this time, our names are finally going to be
deleted from the FBIs terrorist files," said Phyllis Hasbrouck, a former
Chicago leader of the group.
"Americans ought to be able to criticize their governments policies
without being branded terrorists."
Checked-by: Richard Lake
For years, the FBI put the names of several Chicago residents on its list
of suspected terrorists, long after a judge had ordered the agency to stop.
These so-called terrorists supported a group called the Committee in
Solidarity with the People of El Salvador, which opposed U.S. policy in
that country.
Last year, after more than 15 years of litigation, the FBI finally admitted
it had been in error when it continued to spy on members and supporters of
this "subversive" group. Under a consent decree, the agency pledged to give
FBI agents training on how to conduct investigations without violating the
First Amendment rights of individuals.
The case began when a group of Chicagoans discovered that between 1983 and
1985 the FBI had spied on them because of their affiliation -- even though
a 1981 court decree had ordered the agency to stop.
Lawsuits were filed in 1988 and in 1991, and U.S. District Judge Ann C.
Williams ruled that members of the organization had been subjected to
wide-ranging violations of the 1981 consent decree.
As part of a systematic covert investigation into the lives and activities
of the organizations supporters, agents had analyzed phone, utility and
banking records, none of which produced any evidence of wrongdoing. Even
so, the FBI had continued to list several of its targets on the federal
registry of suspected terrorists.
"Its a great day; after all this time, our names are finally going to be
deleted from the FBIs terrorist files," said Phyllis Hasbrouck, a former
Chicago leader of the group.
"Americans ought to be able to criticize their governments policies
without being branded terrorists."
Checked-by: Richard Lake
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