October 26, 2009

Cyber Stalking: What a Wicked Web We Weave

US Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit: United States v. Fullmer et. al.

We live in very contentious times. The red-state-blue-state divide is political, geographical and cultural. Debate about issues is frequently obscured by the politics of hate, by innuendo and by ad hominum attacks on those who speak out on the issues. Whether you support Rush Limbaugh or Al Gore, Sara Palin or Barack Obama, there seems to be way less common ground than in times past—and way less interest in even finding it.

Everything has become a crisis. Everything has become an issue that cannot be compromised. And everything is magnified and disseminated exponentially, courtesy of the worldwide web. Just a click away, a wonderful and dreadful thing the web: both a fountain of breaking news, information and learning and a cesspool of violence, pornography and hatred all at once.

Perhaps there’s no other tool with the power to destroy lives and reputations so easily. Bloggers can be indifferent to facts. Rumormongers can ruin lives with a well placed post. And anyone with a computer can upload their own demise on line or set in motion events that lead to the demise of others.

Somewhere between on-line beheadings and spam, we find US. v. Fullmer.

The case is about the activities of Stop Huntingdon Animal Cruelty (SHAC) and six individual defendants (referred herein collectively as “SHAC”) who were either employees, principals or in some way associated with SHAC. SHAC was formed in 1999. It has been uncompromisingly opposed to Huntingdon’s research with animals and committed to closing its laboratories. According to SHAC, Huntingdon was a purveyor of animal cruelty in the interest of science and corporate profits. Its abuses of animals were depicted in a surveillance videotape (viewer discretion advised) obtained by someone posing as a Huntingdon lab technician. When aired on British TV, it led to a spate of protests and the birth of SHAC-UK and subsequently, its US counterpart after SHAC’s relentless campaign caused Huntingdon to relocate to the states.

SHAC’s opposition to Huntingdon was not based on the actions of Gandhi or Martin Luther King. It was something new. Something born out of the cyber age. It targeted Huntingdon and companies that dealt with it, from accounting firms, bankers and realtors, to Huntingdon board members, stockholders and employees, including their wives and children. SHAC used its website as a bludgeon. Its take-no-prisoners, scorched-earth approach to its mission was incredibly effective. And frightening. As defendant Gazzola put it, “this is the most successful campaign in the history of the animal rights movement and it’s precisely because we’re pushing the limits and we’re tired of standing around holding signs and yelling at buildings and writing letters and not getting anywhere. We’re gonna do what we have to do in order to be effective and in order to save lives.”

The court’s opinion chronicles a sampling of the SHAC defendants’ activities. Its web postings included the following:

-Coordinating protests;
-Encouraging direct action (both legal and illegal, the illegal kind being both lauded and disavowed simultaneously);
-Instructing economic sabotage (including step-by-step how-to instructions as well as posting times for coordinated electronic assaults on corporate servers and fax machines);
-Listing accomplishments (such as people and places that had been attacked or acquiesced to SHAC’s demands); and
-Promoting vandalism (or at least excusing and appreciating it as a natural overflow of anti-Huntingdon outrage).

In a message to all associated with or employed by Huntingdon, defendant Harper used the backdrop of successful personal and institutional attacks to put Huntingdon and its business partners on notice of SHAC’s reach: “animal abusers …may be safe from the cops, the army, and the FBI…they are not safe from us…If no one else will treat them like the criminal scum that they are, at least we will…It is time to go beyond our fear of reprisals.”

Given the contents of the surveillance video, some might find such hard-edged tactics acceptable. But there was more. There were physical attacks and protests at board members’ homes. There were personal threats to them. To their children. Home addresses were published on the web. Phone numbers were published. Houses were flooded, windows smashed and neighbors intimidated. There was the posting of the “Top 20 Terror Tactics.” There were death threats by email and phone. And there was a state of fear that was nurtured and encouraged by SHAC.

SHAC’s web page, while always disavowing illegal activity, sympathized with its supposed unknown, more violent compatriots, and published instructions about how to avoid detection or arrest for such activity (even a cursory reading of the court’s decision is like a manifesto on modern economic warfare by cyber means—in many ways, it’s as disturbing as the Huntingdon video). Those targeted lived in abject fear for their lives, some to the point of arming themselves, others to the point of surrender, acquiescing to SHAC’s demands rather than resisting them alone.

Defendants were eventually charged and convicted of a variety of offenses, including conspiracy to violate the Animal Enterprise Protection ACT (AEPA protects those who use animals for testing from certain forms of animal-rights activity), conspiracy to commit interstate stalking as well as three substantive counts of stalking.

On appeal, defendants argued, among other things, that the convictions violated their First Amendment right to engage in civil disobedience and to voice their objections to Huntingdon’s activities. The court disagreed. While some postings on SHAC’s website were protected speech, notwithstanding it was “speech that many find offensive and uncomfortable,” other posts which “coordinate electronic civil disobedience and disseminate the personal information of individuals employed by Huntingdon and affiliated companies are more problematic.” Such communication was not protected speech and some “constituted ‘true threats.’”

As the court observed, “viewed in context, the speeches, protests, and web postings were all tools to further their effort” and were not speech protected by the First Amendment. They were crimes. Accordingly, the individual defendants received sentences ranging from one year to six years in prison.

We are left with a number of questions: Are these people heroes in the animal rights movement? Should they be applauded for putting their lives on the line for their beliefs (even belatedly, since on line, they denied personal involvement)? Are they simply zealots who did what was necessary to save animals?

Or are they thugs? Bullies? And political / business terrorists?

Those on the receiving end of their “protests” would vote for the latter category. Many who share SHAC’s views might see them as visionaries. But the question remains: What type of society are we evolving into?

Maybe the ends justify the means when it comes to animals. How about when it comes to global warming? To illegal immigration? To mandatory vaccines for H1N1? To gun control or legalizing marijuana?

Are we inexorably on a road that takes no prisoners in a winner-take-all battle over everything? Or have we already crossed the Rubicon when it comes to civil discussion and the common good?

Sometimes it looks and feels that way. Sometimes it looks and feels like we are willingly letting the common ground beneath our feet slip away, completely indifferent or oblivious to the fact that we are falling into something much more dangerous and intolerant and insidious—all in the interest of advancing THE cause.

Which, of course, says something either about our lack of powers of persuasion or our inability or unwillingness to listen to the other side. Or to lose gracefully. In the market place of ideas that is America, the wheat has always been separated from the chaff, which historically has brought out the best in America, and which hopefully, will continue to do so even as the internet has the potential to bring out the worst.

Still, we should be glad about this uniquely American problem because freedom of speech can only be abused where it exists in the first place.

November 19, 2008

Anthrax Exposure: Inquiring Minds Want to Know Who’s Responsible?

Supreme Court of Florida: US v. Maureen Stevens

Robert Stevens worked for American Media Inc., publishers of the National Enquirer. In 2001, letters containing anthrax were sent to a number of recipients, including American Media in Florida. Mr. Stevens died from inhaling the anthrax. His wife sued the United States (it was their anthrax) and Battelle Memorial Institute, a private facility that produced Bacillus Anthracis for the government.

Both cases ended up in Federal Court. The suit by the widow Stevens alleged that the anthrax that killed her husband could be traced to the US Army Medical Research Institute for Infectious Diseases, that the Feds knew it was “ultra hazardous,” that samples had been missing since 1992 and that there was a failure to provided adequate security for handling and shipping such materials, which were somehow intercepted and ended up in an envelope addressed to American Media’s Florida offices, killing her husband when he unknowingly inhaled its contents. The suit against Batelle made similar claims about lack of security, failure to monitor employees and negligence in the handling and transport of Anthrax causing it to end up in the wrong hands.

Both defendants moved to dismiss claiming they could not be responsible if their Anthrax was stolen and that such intervening criminal acts relieved them from responsibility for the death of Robert Stevens.
The Federal District Court denied defendants’ motions after looking to Florida law to see whether Mrs. Stevens’ anthrax theory of negligence was recognized in the Sunshine State. It concluded that Florida law supported the widow’s claim under the state’s “foreseeable zone of risk” theory. The government moved for reconsideration, which was denied, but it was granted leave to have this question answered by the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals: What duties exist under Florida law to protect members of the public where an organization creates a significant risk by using anthrax or another ultra-hazardous material.” The Eleventh Circuit then sent that question to the Florida High Court to answer.

Obviously this sort of question affects everyone. If the Government wants to make anthrax, well, fine. If it has to get it from a lab, well, where else can it shop for the stuff. But if it’s going to have it delivered by messenger, or FedEx or UPS or its own private couriers, shouldn’t there be some awareness that it could kill unsuspecting and uninvolved people who come in contact with it, and some meaningful precautions to prevent that from happening? And shouldn’t those who make, handle and ship anthrax to wherever anthrax gets shipped, make sure that they have an inventory system that at least rivals Wal-Mart and a security system as advanced as Blockbuster’s. Or do the government and its labs get a pass because their anthrax work is so vital that the best we can hope for is that none of us end up on the wrong mailing list.

Not quite.

You’ll be happy to know that the Florida Supreme Court found that widow Stevens has a right to sue. Whether the anthrax was misplaced, pocketed, or fell off the truck (or out of the Petri dish), the court concluded that the greater the risk of harm to others, the greater the duty to avoid injury to others:

In coping with the heightened duty that comes with this risk, the government and Battelle are required to contemplate a countless variety of situations in which a reasonable laboratory in their position must anticipate and guard against the unauthorized interception and dissemination of the dangerous substance. Given the allegations of negligent security of the ultrahazardous material and the virtual impossibility of potential victims to protect themselves once this substance is at large, this is obviously one of those cases...where the risk of injury is great and the corresponding duty of the lab is heightened. In a very real sense, it is this inability to measure the extent of this risk that merits giving the claimants an opportunity to go forward.

So for Mrs. Stevens, it’s back to the Federal Court with her golden ticket in hand. Now that she has the right to proceed, it remains to be seen if she has the right evidence to prevail.

We should all applaud her persistence since what happened to Robert could have happened to any one of us. If the Government and its labs don’t know how to keep track of their toxins and plagues or properly monitor the scientists and employees who make and transport powdered death, they shouldn’t be allowed to play with it.

One hates to think that the only powder they can be trusted with is Tang.


July 31, 2008

Islam and the West: A Savage Battle

U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California: Michael Savage v. Council on American-Islamic Relations, Inc. et. al.

The Savage Nation is Dr. Michael Savage. The Bronx-born broadcaster has one of the most popular radio talk shows in the country. His brand of libertarianism and conservatism are dished up in flaming doses of Truth-Gone-Wild. Some would call his advocacy the scorched-earth approach; others would say he wields facts like a bludgeon without regard to consequences or sensibilities. Whatever your view, he is no wallflower and no stranger to controversy. He infuriates, elucidates and inundates all at once.

After railing against Islamic extremism, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and certain aspects of the Koran, efforts were made by the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) to boycott his show and have him removed from the air. Moreover, CAIR aired excerpts from Savage Nation broadcasts on its website to rally opposition to his program. Savage would have none of it. He filed suit against CARE for racketeering and for copyright infringement.

Unfortunately for the good doctor, “fair use” allows critics to appropriate portions of his speech to make their point. Such use is not copyright infringement. As for Savage’s racketeering claim—that CAIR is not a civil rights group at all, but a political organization and front for terrorist groups—the court found the pleadings insufficient to support the claim and dismissed with leave for Savage to re-plead and try again.

Has CAIR been unfairly maligned? Has Savage? Has a raw nerve been struck? Or is it Truth that’s taking a beating? When it comes to debates involving terrorism, free speech, talk radio, Islam and the right to criticize, Truth is the first victim. Truth is always the first victim in important debates, whether they’re about abortion, global warming or the war on terror. Thankfully, Truth is also the last thing standing when all is said and done and the fog of battle lifts.

Savage battles over Truth are good for the nation. They draw us into the controversy, make us examine the facts and choose sides by reaching our own conclusions. That’s the privilege and responsibility of citizens who live in a free society. That, and serving jury duty.

And that’s the Truth.


11/17/08 Addendum: CAIR sued Savage for nearly $200,000 in legal fees after this action was dismissed. The court determined that while Savage’s claim was initially defective, the allegations he made about CAIR were not frivolous. So for CAIR, "No soup for you!" And no legal fees.

June 24, 2008

Jihad: Terrorists, Terror Rights & Terror Wrongs

U.S. Supreme Court: Boumediene v. George W. Bush, President of the United States

Habeas Corpus is Latin for “you have the body.” Prisoners in America who think they are being held unjustly can seek to get out of jail by filing a Writ of Habeas Corpus. The Writ compels the authorities detaining the prisoner to show that he or she is being held legally. This is the life blood of our judicial process: just cause and due process. Absent such a showing, the person must be released. The Writ of Habeas Corpus has been a cornerstone of American justice, ensuring that no authorities are above the law or can freely abuse their significant power to imprison individuals. Historically, this right has been accorded all citizens and residents of the United States.

In Boumediene v. George W. Bush (decided June 12, 2008), the US Supreme Court took up the war on terrorism, specifically the issue of enemy combatants held at Guantanamo and whether they have the same right to Habeas Corpus as other Americans. In a 5 – 4 decision, the court ruled that enemy combatants, some of whom have been held captive for over six years, have such a right. The majority concluded that even enemy combatants cannot be held indefinitely in what may be a very long war on terrorism. In a blistering dissent, however, Chief Justice Roberts concluded that the majority was inserting itself into political questions traditionally left to elected officials to resolve, into the execution of American foreign policy, the responsibility for which has always been the province of the executive branch (the president) and was creating procedural rights for our enemies that could put our troops and national security in danger by granting detainees a possible right to demand evidence about the war effort.

These are unique times we live in: Either we are committing political suicide by granting powerful procedural rights to prisoners of war who were enemy combatants committed to the destruction of our way of life before their incarceration, or we are putting our lofty principals to action and trusting that the possible release of an Al Qaeda member or Jihadist is worth the price of extending civil procedural protections to all individuals detained by American authorities, even in time of war. It seems like the Supreme Court is just as divided as the rest of us on how to deal with terrorism in a free and democratic society.

Only the future will tell whether the collective wisdom of the majority decision has strengthened our country and the principals which have made it great, or whether its ruling is out of touch with the harsh realities of these times and has given those committed to our destruction another weapon to use against us. Stay tuned.