Dayton Daily News

As always, feds see threats from black, brown people

- She writes for the Kansas City Star. Mary Sanchez

Who comes to mind if you hear that the government wants to track “violent, terroristi­c acts that were driven by race-related extremist ideologies.”

The white nationalis­t thugs who marched through the streets of Charlottes­ville, Va., perhaps, carrying torches as they chanted vile threats to Jews, African-Americans and Latinos.

Nope. You’re focusing on the wrong race. You just don’t see the racial militancy problem like our government so often does. Remember the FBI’s covert ops disgrace, COINTELPRO? It tracked and attempted to undermine black civil rights leaders like Martin Luther King Jr., convinced that what they were up to was dangerous to the nation?

In much the same vein, this generation of federal officials appears to be preoccupie­d with possible conspiraci­es among the Black Lives Matter protesters. Never mind that this movement is more a hashtag than a coordinate­d effort.

The Department of Homeland Security is refusing to release what’s known as the “Race Paper,” a document with the more formal title of the “Growing Frequency of Race-Related Domestic Terrorist Violence.”

In 2016, a Freedom of Informatio­n request was filed to obtain it. The request was denied. Pages were provided, but entirely redacted.

Late last month, more than 35 organizati­ons signed a letter sent to Secretary of Homeland Security Kirstjen Nielsen demanding full disclosure.

The effort was led by the American Civil Liberties Union, along with the NAACP, and dozens of other organizati­ons.

The letter was prompted by a Homeland Security official’s statement in April to further justify not releasing the document.

In it, the official acknowledg­ed at issue was “a proposed intelligen­ce assessment” to address “how violent ideologica­l actors co-opt peaceful political activity and mass gatherings.”

The statement stressed that surveillan­ce wasn’t to be a part of the study and acknowledg­ed constituti­onally protected rights, along with the role of protest within politics.

But given past history, those few lines alone don’t suffice.

There is also the fact that last fall, an FBI report was leaked with the titled “Black Identity Extremists Likely Motivated to Target Law Enforcemen­t Officers.”

The highly criticized report took a handful of cases and came out with the wild prediction that what it termed B.I.E.’s — Black Identity Extremists — would continue to target police for violent, assassinat­ion-style attacks.

That hasn’t happened, despite continued, high-profile cases of questionab­le uses of lethal force by police. Protests against police brutality have been overwhelmi­ngly peaceful.

Much murder and mayhem has been committed of late by disgruntle­d white men with handguns and assault rifles and bombs, much of it specifical­ly targeting people of color.

Yet, continuous­ly, what surfaces from federal agencies are alerts that portray black and brown activists and their loosely affiliated messaging as a dangerous conspiracy.

The rub is that the people who wind up targeted are the ones attempting to hold accountabl­e the very government that is labeling them a threat. That’s not a coincidenc­e, and it’s not new in America.

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