The merger of Corporation and State can be seen no clearer than #NoDAPL response. Peaceful protesters treated as terrorists at the behest of Big Oil

in #news7 years ago

OIL POLICE: A private army for the rich.

If you haven't heard yet, The Intercept has obtained a trove of leaked documents, as well as some aquired through FOIA requests, that show the private security firm "TigerSwan", hired by DAPL, was the defacto leader of the law enforcement operations surrounding the protests in North Dakota and beyond. They worked closely with local police, the FBI, DHS, and the National Guard, guiding the strategy, and public relations of the operation.
(TL;DR: see videos at bottom)(All emphasis mine)

More than 100 internal documents leaked to The Intercept by a TigerSwan contractor, as well as a set of over 1,000 documents obtained via public records requests, reveal that TigerSwan spearheaded a multifaceted private security operation characterized by sweeping and invasive surveillance of protesters.

Yes, you read that correctly. A private mercenary group, hired by a private oil company, was essentially in charge of what local, state, and federal law enforcement did and said about the Standing Rock Water Protectors. This is the very definition of fascism.

This story sheds light on the fallacy that the police and military serve and protect the citizens of this nation. The truth is that from their inception, police and soldiers serve only the interest of the uber-wealthy elite and actually exist to keep us plebs from overturning the pyramid. For more on that, Read This.

To Protect and Serve... The Oligarchy
Image credit: Sergio Garrido

For more evidence of the State acting as a branch of corporations, look at the language used to describe protesters:

Internal TigerSwan communications describe the movement as “an ideologically driven insurgency with a strong religious component” and compare the anti-pipeline water protectors to jihadist fighters. One report, dated February 27, 2017, states that since the movement “generally followed the jihadist insurgency model while active, we can expect the individuals who fought for and supported it to follow a post-insurgency model after its collapse.” Drawing comparisons with post-Soviet Afghanistan, the report warns, “While we can expect to see the continued spread of the anti-DAPL diaspora … aggressive intelligence preparation of the battlefield and active coordination between intelligence and security elements are now a proven method of defeating pipeline insurgencies.”

In other words, if you present a threat to a corporation (not the state) you are treated as a violent enemy combatant; a terrorist. Is a private company poisoning you water or air supply? Do you want them to stop? You might be a terrorist.

As policing continues to be militarized and state legislatures around the country pass laws criminalizing protest, the fact that a private security firm retained by a Fortune 500 oil and gas company coordinated its efforts with local, state, and federal law enforcement to undermine the protest movement has profoundly anti-democratic implications.

The merger began almost as soon as TigerSwan was hired, quickly embedding themselves in local law enforcement operations.

The leaked situation reports indicate that during the company’s first weeks working on the pipeline, TigerSwan operatives met with law enforcement in Iowa and North Dakota, including Sheriff Dean Danzeisen of Mercer County, North Dakota, who “agreed to sharing of information.” By September 13, the documents indicate, TigerSwan had placed a liaison inside the law enforcement “joint operation command” in North Dakota. The fusion of public and private intelligence operations targeting water protectors was underway.

Activists on the ground were tracked by a Dakota Access helicopter that provided live video coverage to their observers in police agencies, according to an October 12 email thread that included officers from the FBI, DHS, BIA, state, and local police. In one email, National Security Intelligence Specialist Terry Van Horn of the U.S. attorney’s office acknowledged his direct access to the helicopter video feed, which was tracking protesters’ movements during a demonstration. “Watching a live feed from DAPL Helicopter, pending arrival at site(s),” he wrote. Cecily Fong, a spokesperson for law enforcement throughout the protests, acknowledged that an operations center in Bismarck had access to the feed, stating in an email to The Intercept that “the video was provided as a courtesy so we had eyes on the situation.”
Asked about the intel group, Fong replied, “The Intelligence Group was formed from virtually the beginning. It involved personnel from our [State and Local Intelligence Center], the BIA, FBI, and Justice” consisting of “around 7 people who monitored social media in particular, in this case, because that was the medium most if not all of the protestors were using.”

And this didn't end at the North Dakota border either.

As the water protector movement expanded from North Dakota to other states, so did the surveillance. A report dated March 29, for instance, points to a meeting between TigerSwan and “the Des Moines Field Office of the FBI, with the Omaha and Sioux Falls offices joining by conference call. Also in attendance were representatives of the Joint Terrorism Task Force, Department of Homeland Security, Iowa Department of Emergency Services, Iowa Department of Homeland Security and Iowa Department of Wildlife. Topics covered included the current threat assessment of the pipeline, the layout of current security assets and persons of interest. The FBI seemed were [sic] very receptive to the information presented to them, and follow-up meetings with individuals will be scheduled soon.”

FUSION CENTERS: The surveilance state in your backyard.

In part 2 of The Intercept's report (part 3 coming soon) we learn of a Bush era policy that created facilities for exchanging counter-terrorism intelligence between law enforcement, which is now being used to help an oil company.

In 2007, President George W. Bush signed the 9/11 Commission Act, which allocated $300 million to the Department of Homeland Security for the establishment of fusion centers, originally intended to facilitate sharing of anti-terrorism intelligence among different state, local, and federal law enforcement agencies. According to the DHS website, there are currently 77 fusion centers nationwide, with every state home to at least one.
Brendan McQuade, an assistant professor of sociology at the State University of New York, Cortland, who is working on a book on fusion centers, said the records pertaining to the North Dakota State and Local Intelligence Center’s monitoring and repression of Standing Rock demonstrations offer unique insight into how fusion centers are used for political repression. “We’ve seen hints of this monitoring of the online presence of Black Lives Matter and Occupy protests, but never such explicit evidence of it as in the documents you’ve collected,” he told The Intercept after reviewing a selection of the documents.

Fusion Centers

According to former FBI Special Agent Michael German, who is now with the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University Law School, fusion centers have become part of a broader “surveillance-industrial complex” in which security agencies and the corporate sector merge together in a frenzy of mass information gathering, tracking, and surveillance. Federal support for fusion centers is predicated on increased government access to “non-traditional information sources,” he notes. And one of the goals of fusion centers is to protect the nation’s critical infrastructure, 85 percent of which is owned by private interests.
“The insidious thing is that the role of private-sector entities in fusion centers has grown up without any specific legislation authorizing it,” said German, who co-authored a 2007 report on behalf of the ACLU called “What’s Wrong with Fusion Centers?” “Instead, the development of these techniques and relationships, such as the one involving TigerSwan and North Dakota law enforcement, has occurred within the closed-off world of law enforcement.”

PROPAGANDA: A battle of memes and misinformation.

Beyond bashing the heads of peaceful protesters and spying on organizers, TigerSwan's role also included steering public perception of the situation in favor of ETP and DAPL. Do you remember how all the local news reports out of the area just regurgitated what law enforcement was telling them? Who do you think told law enforcement what to say?

A document dated October 16, obtained via a public records request, lays out the mission of the TigerSwan-led security team working in North Dakota: In addition to protecting the pipeline workers, machinery, and construction material, the company was also expected to “protect the reputation of DAPL.” The public relations mission quickly became a priority for the firm, documents show. As a leaked situation report from early September puts it, success would require “strategic messaging from the client that drives the message that we are the good guys, tell the real story and address the negative messaging with good counter messaging.”
On numerous occasions, TigerSwan agents stressed the need to change the public narrative established by protestors and to swing public support in favor of the pipeline. As accounts of protest repression garnered nationwide support for the NoDAPL movement, the firm’s agents painstakingly collected and analyzed media coverage, warning their client about how certain incidents might be received by the public.

And they didn't stop at trying to limit or control the news of the pipeline, they also just straight-up fabricated stories and lies to make ETP look better. (That's called propaganda)

In a report dated September 7, TigerSwan agents discuss the need for a “Social Engagement Plan.” On September 22, they discuss the development of an information operations campaign run by the company’s North Carolina-based intel team and Robert Rice, who without disclosing his TigerSwan affiliation posed as “Allen Rice” in a series of amateurish videos in which he provided commentary critical of the protests. The videos, posted on the Facebook pages “Defend Iowa” and “Netizens for Progress and Justice,” were removed after The Intercept contacted TigerSwan, Rice, and the pages’ administrators for comment. None responded.

But it gets worse than corny Facebook videos. TigerSwan and various law enforcement also tried to twist and contort events surrounding the severe injuries of protesters, such as Sophia Wilansky, with baseless accusations of protesters building IEDs and other violent activities.

On a freezing night in November, as police sprayed nonviolent Dakota Access Pipeline opponents with water hoses and rubber bullets, representatives of the FBI, the Bureau of Indian Affairs, North Dakota’s U.S. Attorney’s Office, and local law enforcement agencies frantically exchanged emails as they monitored the action in real time.
By 4 a.m. on November 21, approximately 300 water protectors had been injured, some severely. Among them was 21-year-old Sophia Wilansky, who nearly lost her arm after being hit by what multiple sworn witnesses say was a police munition.
The emails exchanged that night highlight law enforcement efforts to control the narrative around the violent incident by spreading propaganda refuting Wilansky’s story, demonstrate the agencies’ heavy reliance on protesters’ social media feeds to monitor activities, and reveal for the first time the involvement of an FBI informant in defining the story police would promote.
Roughly eight hours prior to Sophia Wilansky’s injury, Bismarck police officer Lynn Wanner — who, records indicate, acted as a liaison between intelligence agencies and field officers throughout the anti-DAPL protests — alerted local, state, and federal law enforcement partners that an “FBI inside source”(pg11) was “reporting propane tanks inside the camp rigged to explode.” Wanner’s email about the FBI informant echoes the story the Morton County Sheriff’s Department would later tell journalists about Wilansky’s injury.
“We probably should be ready for a massive media backlash tomorrow although we are in the right. 244 angry voicemails received so far,” wrote Ben Leingang, a North Dakota state official, at about 10 p.m. on November 20. By morning, images of Wilansky’s severely injured arm were circulating online.
TigerSwan fretted about the backlash, too. “Protesters are claiming over 100 injuries associated with the demonstration and will surely contort video of the event into anti-DAPL propaganda,” the security firm noted in its internal report that next morning.
As another day passed, U.S. Attorney’s Office National Security Intelligence Specialist Terry Van Horn sent an email to members of various federal agencies noting the FBI’s claim that “a source from the camp reported people were making IED’s from small Coleman type propane canisters.” Van Horn added that Wilansky “was witnessed throwing an IED while on the bridge, it detonated early and caused the below injuries (see graphic photos).”

But one bogus theory about Wilansky's injury wasn't enough.

Less than an hour later, Van Horn emailed to the thread the text of a Facebook post from the page Netizens for Progress and Justice. “This wasn’t caused by law enforcement, it was caused by dumbass ‘direct action’ protesters that think they are doing the right thing without any consideration for the safety and welfare of honest protesters nearby that are caught up in things,” the post read, going on to describe a theory of the injury that conflicted even with law enforcement’s propane tank theory.

His version of events, presented as fact, and feigning concern for Sophia, was that a chain protestors were using to pull barracades with a truck snapped and whipped the flesh from Wilansky's arm. This despite numerous sworn accounts and Sophia's own statements that it was a concussion (stun) grenade thrown by an officer that in fact blew her arm open. Even Snopes confirmed this. The whole story is absurd and full of attempts to contort the facts to frame the protesters as bad, including suggesting that protesters delayed getting aid to Wilansky because it would 'make a better story', neglecting to mention that the ambulance was delayed by the blockade the police (and TigerSwan) had put up to limit the flow of resources into the camp. There were also reports from those on the ground that officers were holding their grenades for several seconds before throwing them, so they would explode in the air instead of on the ground. In my opinion, this constitutes a war crime. The police also roundly denied using any grenades despite ample evidence to the contrary.

Despite the lies and inaccuracies, the team eagerly sought to spread this propaganda and muddy the waters against the protesters.

“How can we get this story out?” replied Maj. Amber Balken, a public information officer for the National Guard, which was also involved in policing the protests. “This is a must report,” Balken added, suggesting the name of a local conservative blogger. Cecily Fong, a public information officer with the North Dakota Department of Emergency Services, replied by promising to “get with” the blogger to circulate the article.
As The Intercept reported last week, Netizens for Progress and Justice also frequently published content produced on behalf of TigerSwan, including videos critical of pipeline opponents.
Ultimately, police promoted a story about the incident that echoed the claims of the FBI informant. On November 22, the Morton County Sheriff’s Department distributed press releases implying that Wilansky’s injury had been caused by a protester’s IED.
The Intercept reached Lauren Regan, an attorney representing Sophia Wilansky, and read the text of Van Horn’s email to her over the phone. “So much of it is totally factually incorrect,” Regan said.
“There has never been any evidence I have seen or heard of that gave any credibility to the allegation that propane tanks were being rigged as explosive devices,” continued Regan, who is a staff attorney at the Oregon-based Civil Liberties Defense Center. “To me, the timing of that revelation, in light of their having just basically blown a white woman’s arm off, always seemed extremely dubious.”
Sophia Wilansky’s father, Wayne Wilansky, agreed that “there’s not a shred of truth” to Van Horn’s account of Wilansky’s injury. “Obviously, disinformation is a major component of how they dealt with the protests,” he told The Intercept.

protesterviolenceLE.jpg What passes as "Evidence" to a DAPL supporter. Reminds me of a Sealab episode.

In addition to lies about protest activities and tactics, TigerSwan repeatedly tried to smear the protesters characters and personal activities, portraying them as wild and desperate deviants, outside of societal norms.

The internal situation reports from around the time of Wilansky’s injury contain their own examples of disinformation, invasive intelligence-gathering practices, and a fixation on the purported violence of DAPL’s opponents.
Overall, TigerSwan depicted the situation on the ground as volatile, at times painting the anti-pipeline camps as rife with drug use and “sexual deviance,” its inhabitants likely to stir violence. The security company found ways to interpret even the most benign social gatherings as potentially dangerous. One document previewed a casino concert featuring Jackson Browne and Bonnie Rait, fretting that it would draw “numerous outside influencers.” The document predicted, “Depending on the progress of drilling by then, the project could be adversely affected if not counter measured.”
After November 8, TigerSwan noted that “the election of President-elect Trump is likely to have a positive effect for the project overall and cooperation from the Federal level will likely improve after 20 JAN.” At the same time, TigerSwan commented on protesters’ post-election “despair,” writing on November 12 that “the DAPL protesters are inherently desperate and are not looking for a peaceful solution regarding the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL) in turn we can expect this situation to become more volatile than it has ever become before.”

PINKERTONS: History repeats itself.

All of this has happened before (and all of it will happen again). A similar situation unfolded during the industrial revolution. The Pinkertons acted on behalf of factory owners to squash labor unions.

In the late 19th century, Allan Pinkerton’s National Detective Agency offered private detective and security services to public and corporate clients. The “Pinkertons,” as they were known, relied heavily on undercover agents and often acted as agents provocateur, triggering violence as much as they engaged in surveillance and propaganda.
Through their involvement as armed guards during labor conflicts, the Pinkertons “became a shorthand for the abusive power of unchecked capitalism,” Paul O’Hara, a history professor at Xavier University who wrote a book about them, told The Intercept. To workers, the Pinkertons were “hired thugs for capital” and “a symbol of corporate power,” he wrote. Their activities led to two congressional investigations and the Anti-Pinkerton Act of 1893, which barred the federal government from contracting with the Pinkertons and similar groups. But the act largely failed in its intent, and the Pinkertons set the stage for public partnerships with mercenary groups continuing to this day.

Homestead_Strike_-_18th_Regiment_arrives_cph.3b03430.jpg
Homestead Strike: Wikipedia

These loopholes currently give TigerSwan leeway to do what would be unconstitutional if it were done by the police or government. In a nutshell, as I understand it, as long as private security is telling the police/government what to do and not the other way around, they are not breaking the law (God bless the united states of freedom!)

TigerSwan’s status as a private company has enabled it to operate with virtually no transparency or oversight. The North Dakota Private Investigation and Security Board confirmed in an email to The Intercept this week that TigerSwan still has not obtained a license to work as a private security firm in the state despite nine months on the ground. The company’s close collaboration with law enforcement, to which it has regularly fed intelligence, raises serious questions.
“The line between private security and law enforcement at DAPL has been nonexistent,” Bruce Ellison of the National Lawyers Guild, who also works with the Water Protector Legal Collective, told The Intercept. “They have been one in the same.”
To a large degree, unless they were found to be acting at the direction of government, TigerSwan’s agents would likely be held to similar standards as regular citizens, their most likely violations being things like trespassing.
Despite the legal ambiguity, TigerSwan’s actions raise questions. “You have these privatized actors that are performing what are commonly understood to be government functions — whether or not we’ve agreed that these are acceptable government functions,” said Ramzi Kassem, a law professor at the City University of New York School of Law. “Private corporations are taking these actions on a scale that is unheard of before — this isn’t your local private eye investigative service, we’re talking about tactics that the military uses overseas.”

And don't think that TigerSwan is going home just yet. They are just getting started. And with the historical context along with Trump in the WhiteHouse, the future is dark and full of (suspected) terrors.

In recent weeks, the company’s role has expanded to include the surveillance of activist networks marginally related to the pipeline, with TigerSwan agents monitoring “anti-Trump” protests from Chicago to Washington, D.C., as well as warning its client of growing dissent around other pipelines across the country.

And just to make sure you have nightmares, the founder of TigerSwan, Jim Reese, is now being pitched as a potential replacement for FBI director James Comey. Gods help us.


I will try to update this after part 3 is released, but you should probably keep an eye on this story yourself. It's quite long as it is.

You can find the full stories Here and Here. As well as the full collection of documents Here
Some details were also reported on Grist and Reveal

Videos:

Private Mercenary Firm TigerSwan Compares Anti-DAPL Water Protectors to "Jihadist Insurgency" - Democracy Now!


LEAKED: Counter-Terrorism Mercenaries Secretly Used Against Standing Rock Protesters! - Redacted Tonight

Private Security Firm Used Mlitary-Syle Counterterrorism Measures On DAPL Protestors - Jimmy Dore Show

Mercenaries Literally Treated Standing Rock Protesters Like Terrorists - Humanist Report

DAPL BOMBSHELL: FBI Worked With Private Mercenary Group - TYT Politics

Private Security Firm TigerSwan Targets Pipeline Protesters in COINTELPRO-Like Operation - Democracy Now!

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UR_Ninja Unicorn Riot tweeted @ 22 Nov 2016 - 03:45 UTC

Chemical/"less lethal" munitions fired at #NoDAPL water protectors by Morton County Sheriff and supporting agencies… twitter.com/i/web/status/8…

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