PEN-L
mailing list archive
[ Other Periods
| Other mailing lists
| Search
]
Date:
[ Previous
| Next
]
Thread:
[ Previous
| Next
]
Index:
[ Author
| Date
| Thread
]
News From The 'Cruz' - Police Agents Spy On 'Last Night' Organizers
- To: PEN-L@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Subject: News From The 'Cruz' - Police Agents Spy On 'Last Night' Organizers
- From: Leigh Meyers <leighcmeyers@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 12 Jan 2006 12:27:08 -0500
- Domainkey-signature: a=rsa-sha1; q=dns; c=nofws; s=beta; d=gmail.com; h=received:message-id:from:to:subject:date:mime-version:content-type:content-transfer-encoding:x-priority:x-msmail-priority:x-mailer:x-mimeole; b=YofoRewecyXxkXd+WB/aL5N54XNAG9HV+a3jH4SqHM/n2zEomYdj0aKgg9nUC64C0BTRtjUBKxVhWUZmw46IqYP7Xi18RQr09ynZSxzYRg5gNdy8eYstbrVVpwhgOUANo4fflMd2K31cRpvocg2k6woqboNGGjm8kN3mpsH2+oM=
"I have yet to hear one councilman say this was unacceptable,"
said Conable, a massage therapist and longtime activist.
FYI, Sherry Conable, one of the speakers in this 3:30 minute mp3,
is the local coordinator for WILPF, real radical... It's like spying
on the Quakers. 'Last Nght' was organized after the city pulled
the plug on the... 10 year[?] run of 'First Night', a family oriented
New Years Eve event held in downtown Santa Cruz, due to
"Lack of funds".
Courtesy KMUD Radio, Garberville California, and the Free Speech
Radio News Network: http://snipurl.com/lhv4
.
.
The Santa Cruz Sentinel (The Senile)
January 11, 2006
City residents, ACLU demand answers about police surveillance
By Cathy Smith
sentinel staff writer
http://www.santacruzsentinel.com/cgi-bin/p/psafe/psafe.cgi?http://www.santacruzsentinel.com/archive/2006/January/11/local/stories/01local.htm
SANTA CRUZ - A crowd of outraged residents poured into the City Council chamber Tuesday to demand more information about undercover police surveillance of planning meetings for a grassroots New Year's Eve parade.
The police chief and American Civil Liberties Union also have joined the search for answers as to why two police officers hid their identities at three planning sessions for the "Last Night" parade.
The parade went off without a hitch. But police, who have acknowledged their presence, said they attended the meetings to ensure public safety, not to spy.
An internal investigation has been launched, Chief Howard Skerry said Tuesday. The city's police auditor, Palo Alto attorney Robert Aaronson, said Tuesday the department is examining the use of such surveillance.
About 70 people rallied outside City Hall on Tuesday.
"I was shocked to hear what happened," former mayor Celia Scott said before the council meeting. "I didn't know that could happen in our community."
Protestors asked council members and police to reveal what information officers had gathered.
Parade planner Wes Modes, a Felton artist and carpenter who also goes by the name "Rico Thunder," said he wants assurance residents will not be spied on again.
The issue was not on the council agenda, but at least two members expressed concern.
Councilman Mike Rotkin said he will ask the city's Public Safety Committee to discuss the issue after the department's internal review.
Councilman Tim Fitzmaurice had questions about police policy.
The planning meetings were advertised on the Web and held in private homes. Organizers say the plainclothes officers posed as interested citizens, and gave false information to hide their identities.
Attorney Mark Schlosberg of the ACLU said Tuesday he plans to file a Public Records Act request to probe a possible violation of privacy rights.
The state Constitution guarantees the right to privacy from "unwarranted government intrusion ... in the absence of a reasonable suspicion of a crime," he said.
"And from a common-sense and practical respect for the community standpoint, it doesn't make sense," he said. "If they want to have a cooperative approach and foster good relations, they should talk to them and be honest and up-front."
Tuesday, several activists spoke to the council and held signs with phrases such as "Who would Jesus, Ghandi or MLK Jr. spy on?" and "Thou shalt not spy."
Rally organizer Sherry Conable said she was "outraged" by the officers' conduct. And she was "almost as outraged by the response from the City Council."
"I have yet to hear one councilman say this was unacceptable," said Conable, a massage therapist and longtime activist.
Chief Skerry said personnel regulations prevent him from discussing the issue.
Skerry said he was unsure how long the investigation would take. He estimated 18 to 22 internal investigations are conducted annually.
Police auditor Aaronson, who replaced the citizens' police review board, said the investigation may or may not focus on individual officers. Any disciplinary action would be confidential.
"I think pretty universally everyone agrees this is something that merits an investigation, and my assumption is that part of what is to be looked at is whether or not the decisions ... were appropriate," he said.
Few departments in the state have definitive surveillance policies, he said. It's often a "judgment call," he said.
The Last Night Web site characterized the event as "a parade of ordinary folks, freaks, clowns ... moms, dads, kids and music."
"Last Night was pretty low-key as far as activism," Modes said. "But I want to know what motivated police concern to infiltrate, and there are other people in town ... who want concrete assurances they haven't been spied on."
Staff writer Shanna McCord contributed to this report.
Contact Cathy Smith at csmith@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
#33#
- Thread context:
- china/high-tech again,
michael perelman Thu 12 Jan 2006, 23:30 GMT
- Ronald Reagan was right! redux...........,
Charles Brown Thu 12 Jan 2006, 17:34 GMT
- News From The 'Cruz' - Police Agents Spy On 'Last Night' Organizers,
Leigh Meyers Thu 12 Jan 2006, 17:27 GMT
- anti-semitism charges re Chavez,
michael a. lebowitz Thu 12 Jan 2006, 15:50 GMT
- The Death of Mr. Lazarescu,
Louis Proyect Thu 12 Jan 2006, 15:46 GMT
- GE crops,
Autoplectic Thu 12 Jan 2006, 14:12 GMT
[ Other Periods
| Other mailing lists
| Search
]