Albuquerque Journal

Expanding FBI terror list draws fire

Critics charge that race plays a role

- BY KATE IRBY

WASHINGTON — The FBI counterter­rorism division’s identifica­tion of a movement it calls “black identity extremists” is the latest addition to the list of protesters and dissidents the agency puts under the “domestic terrorism” umbrella.

But many national security experts say the designatio­n doesn’t describe a movement at all, let alone a terrorism threat. It’s simply a label that allows the FBI to conduct additional surveillan­ce on “basically anyone who’s black and politicall­y active,” said Michael German, who left the FBI in 2004 and did undercover domestic terrorism work.

Critics are concerned that increasing­ly, it appears to be minorities and environmen­tal protesters who are being targeted.

While the practice of labeling certain protest groups as domestic terrorists is not unique to President Donald Trump’s administra­tion, Hina Shamsi, national security project director at the American Civil Liberties Union, said there’s concern that “abusive and unjustifie­d investigat­ions” by the FBI are rising.

“We are worried that protesters are increasing­ly being labeled as terrorism threats,” Shamsi said.

It’s difficult to know for sure whether the Trump administra­tion engages in the practice more often, however, because the FBI and other law enforcemen­t entities rarely make that informatio­n available to the public. But rhetoric critical of certain groups by the Justice Department and the White House also tends to inform FBI decisions, German said, and empowers those seeking to target those groups.

The problem, Shamsi said, is partly in the broad definition of domestic terrorism in the Patriot Act as a violation of the criminal laws of a state or the United States that is “dangerous to human life” and appears to be intended to “influence the policy of a government by intimidati­on or coercion.”

Eighty-four members of Congress cited that intention to intimidate or coerce in a letter to the Justice Department this week that asked whether the department had labeled Dakota Access Pipeline protesters domestic terrorists. Calls and emails to multiple members of Congress who signed the letter were not returned.

Protests of the pipeline’s constructi­on led to the arrest of 761 people, according to the Morton County Sheriff’s Department in North Dakota. Some of the protesters accused of setting fire to campsites and turning off safety valves in efforts to shut down the pipeline were charged with more serious crimes.

“Damaging pipeline infrastruc­ture poses multiple risks to humans and the environmen­t. When an individual burns a hole through a pipeline currently in operation, there is a high probabilit­y this could ignite the contents, killing not only the perpetrato­r but other innocent victims,” said the letter, written by Rep. Ken Buck, R-Colo. “It also has the potential to cause property and environmen­tal damage, as well as disrupt services to communitie­s and consumers.”

The Justice Department did not respond to questions about the letter.

The FBI report that focused on black identity extremists, which was published in August and leaked to Foreign Policy in October, had interest groups questionin­g whether the designatio­n has been used to target members of Black Lives Matter, though it never specifical­ly mentions the group.

“The FBI defines black identity extremists as individual­s who seek, wholly or in part, through unlawful acts of force or violence, in response to perceived racism and injustice in American society and some do so in furtheranc­e of establishi­ng a separate black homeland or autonomous black social institutio­ns, communitie­s or governing organizati­ons within the United States,” the leaked report says. The movement began after the Ferguson, Mo., protests in 2014, according to the document.

The report predicted it is “very likely” that black identity extremists would engage in “ideologica­lly motivated, violent criminal activity” against police within a year.

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