Chicago Sun-Times

CPD MONITORED RAINBOW/PUSH, BLACK PROTEST GROUPS

Follow-up to a Watchdogs special report

- BY MICKDUMKE Staff Reporter Email: mdumke@suntimes.com Twitter: @mickeyd197­1

Last fall, as a grand jury investigat­ed the shooting death of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, the Chicago Police Department began monitoring African-American groups and activists in Chicago, records obtained by the Chicago Sun-Times show.

The police tracked protesters’ posts on social media and kept a log of demonstrat­ions around Chicago, some with no connection to Ferguson.

That log included ameeting of the Rev. Jesse Jackson’s Rainbow/PUSH Coalition, a protest calling for raising theminimum wage and a “Fur Free” march on Michigan Avenue.

The investigat­ion began amid nationwide protests over Ferguson and police tactics. Last Nov. 5, demonstrat­ors in Chicago marched outside police headquarte­rs for justice in the death of Rekia Boyd, killed when an off-duty detective fired five shots during a dispute with a group outside hisWest Side home in 2012.

On Nov. 6, the police say an informant told them protesters planned another demonstrat­ion if the Ferguson grand jury “comes down as favorable to police,” according to an internal police report. The infor- mant reportedly was “extremely worried” that “less peaceful” groups would take over the event.

Police lawyers authorized the investigat­ion the next day. A worksheet laying out the scope of the inquiry named four groups it said had attended violent Ferguson protests: the Black Panther Party; the Black Rebels, a self-described “urban militia”; the Revolution Club, which had protested police tactics; and Anonymous, a collection of antisurvei­llance activists who’ve hacked government and corporate websites.

On Nov. 24, the Ferguson grand jury announced it wouldn’t indict police officer DarrenWils­on in Brown’s death, and hundreds of protesters marched downtown, briefly closing Lake Shore Drive.

The police expanded the investigat­ion to include more than three dozen organizati­ons and social media groups, including: We Charge Genocide, which had organized the protest outside police headquarte­rs; Occupy Chicago, which undercover officers infiltrate­d in 2011 and 2012; and Boyd relatives and supporters.

Authoritie­s compiled a log of more than 40 protests, marches

“THERE IS NO BASIS FOR HAVING RAINBOW/ PUSH ON SUCH A LIST. SPYING ON OUR ORGANIZATI­ON IS INSULTING AND UNNECESSAR­Y.”

THE REV. JESSE JACKSON

and vigils in the weeks following the grand jury decision in Ferguson— including Jackson’s Nov. 29 weekly meeting at Rainbow PUSH headquarte­rs on the South Side.

“There is no basis for having Rainbow/PUSH on such a list,” said Jackson, who said the operation called to mind the department’s infamous Red Squad, which infiltrate­d civil rights groups in the 1960s and 1970s. “Spying on our organizati­on is insulting and unnecessar­y.”

The chief spokesman for the police noted that some protests in Ferguson had turned violent and that protests in Chicago often interrupte­d traffic.

“We have lawyers working side by side with police officers making sure people’s rights are protected,” spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said.

The post-Ferguson operation lasted two months and was closed last January, according to Guglielmi. Last month, though, the department refused to disclose details of the inquiry, saying it was still “pending.”

Guglielmi wouldn’t say whether the police are currently conducting surveillan­ce on any protesters. “We don’t talk about open investigat­ions,” he said.

The Sun-Times reported last month that in recent years the police department has routinely spied on and infiltrate­d groups including labor unions, the Occupy movement and anti-NATO Summit demonstrat­ors. In each case, the department’s chief attorney authorized using undercover officers to watch or infiltrate the demonstrat­ors, according to police records.

The worksheet authorizin­g the intelligen­ce-gathering into AfricanAme­rican groups that began last November doesn’t say anything regarding the use of undercover cops.

“I do not believe that activity was happening in that investigat­ion,” Guglielmi said.

The department collected the informatio­n at the city’s Crime Prevention Informatio­n Center, where the police gather and analyze intelligen­ce alongside agents from the FBI and the federal Department of Homeland Security.

Department lawyers allowed police at the center to conduct what they call “open-source” intelligen­cegatherin­g, scraping online data.

Guglielmi said the police were gathering publicly available informatio­n.

“We’re not the NSA,” he said. “We’re not the CIA.”

The police records don’t show whether federal authoritie­s— who’d participat­ed in investigat­ions of protest groups before the 2012 NATO Summit in Chicago— were involved in the investigat­ion last November.

“All the documentat­ion I’ve reviewed, the only individual­s who participat­ed in this were the CPD,” said Guglielmi.

Special Agent Joan Hyde, an FBI spokeswoma­n, said: “The FBI works collaborat­ively with our law enforcemen­t partners at all levels developing intelligen­ce to further our efforts to combat violent crime and protect our communitie­s fromthreat­s.”

Adam Schwartz, an American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois lawyer, said the police should investigat­e protesters only given “a reasonable suspicion of a crime. If you don’t have that, you shouldn’t be using any of these investigat­ive techniques.”

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 ?? | ROBERT COHEN/GETTY IMAGES ?? The Rev. Jesse Jackson touches the vault containing Michael Brown’s casket during Brown’s funeral in August 2014. Brown’s shooting death at the hands of a white police officer sparked days of violent protests.
| ROBERT COHEN/GETTY IMAGES The Rev. Jesse Jackson touches the vault containing Michael Brown’s casket during Brown’s funeral in August 2014. Brown’s shooting death at the hands of a white police officer sparked days of violent protests.
 ??  ?? SPY COPS
Follow-up to aWatchdogs special report
SPY COPS Follow-up to aWatchdogs special report

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