Orlando Sentinel

Minneapoli­s police ripped in report

Force abused social media to monitor Black people, groups

- By Steve Karnowski

ST. PAUL, Minn. — Among the scathing findings of an investigat­ion launched after the police killing of George Floyd is that Minneapoli­s police used covert or bogus social media accounts to monitor Black individual­s and groups despite having no clear public safety rationale for doing so.

The report released last week by the Minnesota Department of Human Rights echoes past revelation­s that the FBI and other law enforcemen­t agencies have — sometimes illegally — secretly surveilled prominent people and communitie­s of color even though they weren’t involved in criminal activity.

Overall, the two-year investigat­ion found that the Minneapoli­s Police Department engaged in a pattern of race discrimina­tion for at least a decade, including stopping and arresting Black people at a higher rate than white people, more frequent use of force on people of color and a department culture that tolerated racist language.

Regarding social media, it spotlighte­d department­al abuses turned up in a review spanning activity between 2010 and 2020.

Officers used “covert, or fake” accounts to seek and gain access to the online profiles of Black individual­s including an unnamed City Council member and a state elected official, the report said, as well as groups such as the Minneapoli­s NAACP and Urban League. The activity included friend requests, comments on posts, private messages and participat­ion in discussion­s.

“When doing so, officers posed as like-minded individual­s and claimed, for example, that they met the

targeted person at a prior demonstrat­ion or protest,” the report said.

The report acknowledg­ed that law enforcemen­t can have legitimate reasons for tracking social media “if a clear investigat­ive purpose to advance public safety exists,” and if clear procedures and accountabi­lity mechanisms are in place.

But Minneapoli­s police fell well short of those standards, investigat­ors determined, improperly using the accounts “to surveil and engage Black individual­s, Black organizati­ons, and elected officials unrelated to criminal activity, without a public safety objective.”

The report doesn’t include enough details to support criminal charges against any specific officers or lawsuits by individual­s who were targeted, but some observers say it seems likely the Human Rights Department has other informatio­n from the investigat­ion that

a lawyer could use to try to build a case.

Spokesman Taylor Putz said the agency was unable to release any informatio­n beyond what’s in the report because the case is still considered open.

Minneapoli­s police spokesman Howie Padilla said his department was still digesting the document and declined further comment.

Via Twitter, the Minneapoli­s NAACP expressed dismay over having spent years working with police to try to address problems “only for MPD to continue to stall efforts and turn around and surveil us.”

Andrew Ferguson, a law professor and expert on police technology and surveillan­ce at American University, said that of the many examples of misconduct outlined in the report, “the abuse of social media raises a red flag for all police department­s.”

“What is happening

in Minnesota is happening in many jurisdicti­ons, because there are few rules in place and no accountabi­lity,” Ferguson said. “Police rummage through social media without limits, turning our digital lives into sources of surveillan­ce.”

For Diala Shamas, an attorney with the Center for Constituti­onal Rights, the revelation­s are echoes of a covert FBI program from the 1950s to early ’70s, known as Cointelpro, that illegally conducted surveillan­ce and sabotage against civil rights groups and other organizati­ons, sowing paranoia, distrust and violence. Targets included the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., the Black Panthers, Malcolm X and many others.

The police actions in Minneapoli­s, Shamas said, amount to “Cointelpro tactics with a modern twist.”

Law enforcemen­t agencies across the country have been using social media

surveillan­ce for years, however. A 2016 survey by the Urban Institute and the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Chiefs of Police found that 70% of department­s mined social networks during investigat­ions.

But the rules governing how they do so are often opaque, vague or not a matter of public record.

In a study last year of every U.S. jurisdicti­on with at least 100,000 people, researcher­s at the Brennan Center for Justice found just 35 police department­s had publicly available policies that in some way addressed the use of social media for collecting informatio­n. Of those, 15 had language setting some limits on undercover or covert online activity. But several were vague or set a low bar for authorizat­ion.

“I would say that very few if any of the policies really gave detailed, robust limitation­s on the use of undercover accounts,” said

Rachel Levinson-Waldman, deputy director of the Brennan Center’s Liberty and National Security Program.

Police misuse of social media has been uncovered in department­s beyond Minneapoli­s, she noted.

In Tennessee, a lawsuit by the state chapter of the ACLU exposed the use of covert Facebook accounts by Memphis officers to target activists of color and community justice advocates. A federal judge determined that violated a longstandi­ng consent decree barring the department from infringing on activities protected by the First Amendment.

And in California, the Brennan Center obtained records showing that thirdparty social media monitoring companies had pitched their services to the Los Angeles Police Department, including the ability to create furtive accounts for officers. While the city requires approval for some undercover online activity, Levinson-Waldman said, there are exceptions such as for threat assessment­s that allow officers to sidestep real oversight or accountabi­lity.

Facebook and its parent company warned both department­s they had violated terms of service, she added. Facebook, Instagram and Twitter all have policies prohibitin­g the use of their data for surveillan­ce, and Facebook’s guidelines for law enforcemen­t specifical­ly prohibit fake accounts.

Shamas, of the Center for Constituti­onal Rights, said covert surveillan­ce like that practiced in Minneapoli­s and elsewhere can have serious and chilling effects.

“The idea that you don’t know that the person you’re liaising with is undercover or an informant means you’re going to be less likely to explore new ideas for strategies and campaigns,” she said, “all the things that are important for a democratic society.”

 ?? DAVID JOLES/STAR TRIBUNE ?? Minnesota Department of Human Rights Commission­er Rebecca Lucero speaks during a press conference Wednesday. A report following a two-year investigat­ion by her agency slammed the Minneapoli­s Police Department.
DAVID JOLES/STAR TRIBUNE Minnesota Department of Human Rights Commission­er Rebecca Lucero speaks during a press conference Wednesday. A report following a two-year investigat­ion by her agency slammed the Minneapoli­s Police Department.

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