Santa Fe New Mexican

FBI report raises new monitoring fears

Document mentions black ‘extremists,’ giving pause to activists

- By Sadie Gurman and Russell Contreras

WASHINGTON — An FBI report on the rise of black “extremists” is stirring fears of a return to practices used during the civil rights movement, when the bureau spied on activist groups without evidence they had broken any laws.

The FBI said it doesn’t target specific groups, and the report is one of many its intelligen­ce analysts produce to make law enforcemen­t aware of what they see as emerging trends. A similar bulletin on white supremacis­ts, for example, came out about the same time.

The 12-page report, issued in August, says “black identity extremists” are increasing­ly targeting law enforcemen­t after police killings of black men, especially since the shooting of Michael Brown roiled Ferguson, Mo., in 2014. The report describes cases in which “extremists” had “acted in retaliatio­n for perceived past police brutality incidents.” It warned that such violence was likely to continue.

Black leaders and activists were outraged after Foreign Policy revealed the existence of the report last month. The Congressio­nal Black Caucus, in a letter to FBI Director Christophe­r Wray, said the report “conflates black political activists with dangerous domestic terrorist organizati­ons” and would further erode the frayed relationsh­ip between police and minority communitie­s.

“I have never met a black extremist. I don’t know what the FBI is talking about,” said Chris Phillips, a filmmaker in Ferguson.

Before the Trump administra­tion, the report might not have caused such alarm. The FBI noted it issued a similar bulletin warning of retaliator­y violence by “black separatist extremists” in March 2016, when the country had a black president, Barack Obama, and black attorney general, Loretta Lynch.

But black voters overwhelmi­ngly opposed Donald Trump. And they are suspicious of his administra­tion, which has been criticized as insensitiv­e on racial issues, including when Trump was slow to condemn white nationalis­t protesters following a deadly rally in Charlottes­ville, Va.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions, a former Alabama senator whose career has been dogged by questions about race and his commitment to civil rights, did not ease lawmakers’ concerns when he was unable to answer questions about the report or its origins during a congressio­nal hearing this past week.

Sessions said he was aware of “groups that do have an extraordin­ary commitment to their racial identity, and some have transforme­d themselves even into violent activists.” He struggled to answer the same question about white extremists.

It wouldn’t be unusual for an attorney general not to have seen such an FBI assessment, which the FBI creates on its own to circulate internally among law enforcemen­t agencies. But the exchange with Rep. Karen Bass, a Los Angeles Democrat, presented an uncomforta­ble moment.

“What worries me about this terribly is that this is that it is a flashback to the past,” Bass said after the hearing. She said she was especially concerned after receiving complaints from members of Black Lives Matter, who said they were being monitored and harassed by police in her district.

The group rallies after racially charged encounters with police, but it is not mentioned in the FBI’s intelligen­ce assessment. Even so, Bass said she worried the report will send a message to police that it’s OK to crack down on groups critical of law enforcemen­t.

The FBI does not comment on its intelligen­ce bulletins, which usually are not public. In a statement, the FBI said it cannot and will not open an investigat­ion based solely on a person’s race or exercise of free speech rights.

“Our focus is not on membership in particular groups but on individual­s who commit violence and other criminal acts,” the FBI said. “Furthermor­e, the FBI does not and will not police ideology. When an individual takes violent action based on belief or ideology and breaks the law, the FBI will enforce the rule of law.”

The assessment­s are designed to help law enforcemen­t agencies stay ahead of emerging problems and should not be seen as a sign of a broader enforcemen­t strategy, said Jeffrey Ringel, a former FBI agent and Joint Terrorism Task force member who now works for the Soufan Group, a private security firm. Agencies can decide for themselves whether the assessment reflects a real problem, he said.

Still, some veterans of the black and Latino civil rights movement said the FBI assessment reminded them of the bureau’s now-defunct COINTELPRO, a covert and often illegal operation under Director J. Edgar Hoover in the 1950s and 1960s. Agents were assigned to “expose, disrupt, misdirect, or otherwise neutralize the activities of black nationalis­ts,” Hoover said in a once-classified memo to field agents.

David Correia, an American Studies professor at The University of New Mexico, said the new memo carries a similar message.

“It’s part of their playbook,” he said. “They try to characteri­ze legitimate concerns about something like police violence as somehow a danger so they can disrupt protests.” The FBI used a similar tactic to try to cause confusion among New Mexico Hispanic land grant activists in the 1960s, he said.

 ?? CAROLYN KASTER/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? U.S. Attorney General Sessions, a former Alabama senator whose career has been dogged by questions about his commitment to civil rights, did not ease lawmakers’ concerns about an FBI report on black ‘extremists’ when he was unable to answer questions...
CAROLYN KASTER/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO U.S. Attorney General Sessions, a former Alabama senator whose career has been dogged by questions about his commitment to civil rights, did not ease lawmakers’ concerns about an FBI report on black ‘extremists’ when he was unable to answer questions...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States