A Senate report two years ago
already declared fusion centers, facilities where federal, state,
and local law enforcement agencies were to share information to
fight terrorism, to be so much worthless, expensive crap. The
Senate’s Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations
described the work of fusion centers as “often shoddy, rarely
timely, …occasionally taken from already published sources, and
more often than not unrelated to terrorism.”
Today The New York Times has a
host of documents showing exactly how unrelated they are.
Specifically, they’ve got more than 70 pages of documents from
fusion centers showing how they kept track of the Occupy movement
from 2011 and 2012.
It appears that they kept track of Occupy the same way everybody
else did if they were so inclined—they looked stuff up online about
them and summarized it. The documents are full of links to news
stories and videos posted online. One e-mail sent out to multiple
fusion centers simply explains how to use Google and Twitter to
track publicly listed Occupy activities in various cities.
Some documents do note that the events they’re talking about are
activities protected by the First Amendment and are intended as
information to help authorities to prepare for crowds and traffic.
But there are also “analyst notes” describing the backgrounds of
various speakers at events in Boston, including whether they had
engaged in previous acts of civil disobedience. Further documents
also note coverage of fusion centers themselves and speculation
that they were involved in crackdowns on occupy protesters. This is
passed along via images of tweets linking to coverage.
The reports get really strange over concerns that the Occupy
crowd was going to do something targeting Thanksgiving Black Friday
shopping in 2011. A “Risk Briefing” was sent out detailing
potential threats for malls and retailers. Oddly, one of the
“threats” mentioned is that of activists boycotting the retailers.
That is to say, the fusion centers were putting out warnings about
people not going to malls and stores.
Among the “specific known threats” listed in the briefing were
“free, non-commercial street parties,” “alternative mass green
transport activities,” and a “wildcat general strike” where
participants not only stay away from retailers but also go on a
“green strike” and use no energy or fuel that day. A couple of
pages of the briefing are devoted to detailing an arts and crafts
fair and peaceful flash mob in Seattle, again tagged as “Specific
Known Threats.” Aren’t arts and crafts fairs and flash mobs in
Seattle also known as “Thursdays”?
Feel free to scroll through the documents yourself
here and shake your head in despair at the kind of work we paid
millions for, work that is sometimes assigned in the private sector
to an intern.
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