After the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, John
Ashcroft, who was then attorney general, loosened restrictions on the
F.B.I.'s investigative powers, giving the bureau greater ability to
visit and monitor Web sites, mosques and other public entities in
developing terrorism leads. The bureau has used that authority to
investigate not only groups with suspected ties to foreign terrorists,
but also protest groups suspected of having links to violent or
disruptive activities.
But the documents, coming after the Bush
administration's confirmation that President Bush had authorized some
spying without warrants in fighting terrorism, prompted charges from
civil rights advocates that the government had improperly blurred the
line between terrorism and acts of civil disobedience and lawful
protest.
One F.B.I. document indicates that agents in
Indianapolis planned to conduct surveillance as part of a "Vegan
Community Project." Another document talks of the Catholic Workers
group's "semi-communistic ideology." A third indicates the bureau's
interest in determining the location of a protest over llama fur planned
by People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals.
The documents, provided to The New York Times
over the past week, came as part of a series of Freedom of Information
Act lawsuits brought by the American Civil Liberties Union. For more
than a year, the A.C.L.U. has been seeking access to information in
F.B.I. files on about 150 protest and social groups that it says may
have been improperly monitored.
The F.B.I. had previously turned over a small
number of documents on antiwar groups, showing the agency's interest in
investigating possible anarchist or violent links in connection with
antiwar protests and demonstrations in advance of the 2004 political
conventions. And earlier this month, the A.C.L.U.'s Colorado chapter
released similar documents involving, among other things, people
protesting logging practices at a lumber industry gathering in 2002.
The latest batch of documents, parts of which the
A.C.L.U. plans to release publicly on Tuesday, totals more than 2,300
pages and centers on references in internal files to a handful of
groups, including PETA, the environmental group Greenpeace and the
Catholic Workers group, which promotes antipoverty efforts and social
causes.
Many of the investigative documents turned over
by the bureau are heavily edited, making it difficult or impossible to
determine the full context of the references and why the F.B.I. may have
been discussing events like a PETA protest. F.B.I. officials say many of
the references may be much more benign than they seem to civil rights
advocates, adding that the documents offer an incomplete and sometimes
misleading snapshot of the bureau's activities.
"Just being referenced in an F.B.I. file is not
tantamount to being the subject of an investigation," said John Miller,
a spokesman for the bureau.
"The F.B.I. does not target individuals or
organizations for investigation based on their political beliefs," Mr.
Miller said. "Everything we do is carefully promulgated by federal law,
Justice Department guidelines and the F.B.I.'s own rules."
A.C.L.U officials said the latest batch of
documents released by the F.B.I. indicated the agency's interest in a
broader array of activist and protest groups than they had previously
thought. In light of other recent disclosures about domestic
surveillance activities by the National Security Agency and military
intelligence units, the A.C.L.U. said the documents reflected a pattern
of overreaching by the Bush administration.
"It's clear that this administration has engaged
every possible agency, from the Pentagon to N.S.A. to the F.B.I., to
engage in spying on Americans," said Ann Beeson, associate legal
director for the A.C.L.U.
"You look at these documents," Ms. Beeson said,
"and you think, wow, we have really returned to the days of J. Edgar
Hoover, when you see in F.B.I. files that they're talking about a group
like the Catholic Workers league as having a communist ideology."
The documents indicate that in some cases, the
F.B.I. has used employees, interns and other confidential informants
within groups like PETA and Greenpeace to develop leads on potential
criminal activity and has downloaded material from the groups' Web
sites, in addition to monitoring their protests.
In the case of Greenpeace, which is known for
highly publicized acts of civil disobedience like the boarding of cargo
ships to unfurl protest banners, the files indicate that the F.B.I.
investigated possible financial ties between its members and militant
groups like the Earth Liberation Front and the Animal Liberation Front.
These networks, which have no declared leaders
and are only loosely organized, have been described by the F.B.I. in
Congressional testimony as "extremist special interest groups" whose
cells engage in violent or other illegal acts, making them "a serious
domestic terrorist threat."
In testimony last year, John E. Lewis, deputy
assistant director of the counterterrorism division, said the F.B.I.
estimated that in the past 10 years such groups had engaged in more than
1,000 criminal acts causing more than $100 million in damage.
When the F.B.I. investigates evidence of possible
violence or criminal disruptions at protests and other events, those
investigations are routinely handled by agents within the bureau's
counterterrorism division.
But the groups mentioned in the newly disclosed
F.B.I. files questioned both the propriety of characterizing such
investigations as related to "terrorism" and the necessity of diverting
counterterrorism personnel from more pressing investigations.
"The fact that we're even mentioned in the F.B.I.
files in connection with terrorism is really troubling," said Tom
Wetterer, general counsel for Greenpeace. "There's no property damage or
physical injury caused in our activities, and under any definition of
terrorism, we'd take issue with that."
Jeff Kerr, general counsel for PETA, rejected the
suggestion in some F.B.I. files that the animal rights group had
financial ties to militant groups, and said he, too, was troubled by his
group's inclusion in the files.
"It's shocking and it's outrageous," Mr. Kerr
said. "And to me, it's an abuse of power by the F.B.I. when groups like
Greenpeace and PETA are basically being punished for their social
activism."