Loss of Privacy

Keeping you informed on recent losses to privacy and civil rights worldwide.

Browsing Posts in Security Theater

US Representative Francisco Canseco has come forward to state that he was assaulted by the TSA. He’s not happy with the way the TSA performs patdowns.

“The agent was very aggressive in his pat-down, and he was patting me down where no one is supposed to go,” said Canseco.  “It got very uncomfortable so I moved his hand away.  That stopped everything and brought in supervisors and everyone else.”

Unfortunately, Canseco has been living under a bridge with no communication to the outside world. Americans have been complaining for nearly two years over this type of pat-down. They’ve been writing how invasive the pat-downs are and have been begging Congress to eliminate these useless procedures. As usual, it’s not important to Congress until they’re inconvenienced or made uncomfortable.

What Canseco doesn’t seem to understand is that his idea of a simple moving his hand away constitutes assault on a TSA agent. That’s why TSA supervisors and the police were brought in. It is likely that he wasn’t cited or arrested because it was discovered that he is a Congressman. Others have not been so fortunate. Canseco’s “sit down” with the TSA is unlikely to change anything.

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We speak with Jacob Appelbaum, a computer researcher who has faced a stream of interrogations and electronic surveillance since he volunteered with the whistleblowing website, WikiLeaks. He describes being detained more than a dozen times at the airport and interrogated by federal agents who asked about his political views and confiscated his cell phone and laptop. When asked why he cannot talk about what happened after he was questioned, Appelbaum says, “Because we don’t live in a free country. And if I did, I guess I could tell you about it.” A federal judge ordered Twitter to hand over information about Appelbaum’s account. Meanwhile, he continues to work on the Tor Project, an anonymity network that ensures every person has the right to browse the internet without restriction and the right to speak freely.

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The Academy Award-nominated filmmaker Laura Poitras discusses how she has been repeatedly detained and questioned by federal agents whenever she enters the United States. Poitras said the interrogations began after she began working on her documentary, “My Country, My Country,” about post-invasion Iraq. Her most recent film, “The Oath,” was about Yemen and Guantánamo and follows the lives of two past associates of Osama bin Laden. She estimates she has been detained approximately 40 times and has had her laptop, cell phone and personal belongings repeatedly searched. Tonight she is leading a surveillance teach-in at the Whitney Museum in New York City with our other guests, computer security researcher and government target Jacob Appelbaum and National Security Agency whistleblower William Binney. Poiras is currently at work on a film about post-9/11 America.

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Fed up with the treatment he receives from the TSA in Portland, John Brennan stripped nude at the security checkpoint in protest.

“I’m just traveling for business,” Brennan said. “My body shouldn’t be illegal.”

TSA agents and police said they asked Brennan numerous times to put his clothes back on, but he refused, according to a spokesman.

“They wanted me to put my clothes on. Feeling I was within my rights as an Oregon citizen, I refused,” he said.

“As an Oregon resident, I know my nakedness is a protected speech,” Brennan said. “And I knew it would get their attention.”

Prior to stripping off his clothes, Brennan said he walked through a metal detector and was patted down. Security workers then put the gloves used to pat him down through a machine, he said.

“I actually had to ask what was going on. I was not informed what was going on. When I did ask, they said ‘You tested positive for nitrates,’” Brennan said.

This is what happens when people who fly frequently have been harassed over and over by the TSA with violations of their civil liberties.

A similar incident happened recently in Denver. In Denver, however, it was a woman who stripped naked and she was not arrested.

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We have already seen the TSA encroaching further in from our borders. They are already on the highways in Tennessee with their VIPR patrols. Several other cities have utilized the TSA at their train stations, light-rail stations, greyhound bus stations and city bus stations, as well as subway stations. Now, Houston is conducting exercises with the help of the TSA to be on its city buses.

The move to monitor and curtail crime on buses and trains is just one component of a much larger initiative called BusSafe – a national pilot program created by a peer advisory group of mass transit police chiefs and security directors, and one which METRO’s Police Department is adopting to enhance safety on the system.

It should be noted that Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee is the one who introduced the BUS SAFE legislation into the House of Representatives and is on the House Homeland Security Committee. It’s just a coincidence that her home city is being used as a testing area for this project.

MPD, Houston Police Department officers and Harris County Precinct 7 Deputy Constables will take part in a synchronized, counter-terrorism exercise on Friday, April 13, focusing on bus routes, bus stops and shelters, and Transit Centers in high traffic areas. The participating agencies will: ride buses, perform random bag checks, and conduct K-9 sweeps, as well as place uniformed and plainclothes officers at Transit Centers and rail platforms to detect, prevent and address latent criminal activity or behavior.

Performing random bag checks is a violation of the fourth amendment. With a city as large as Houston, you cannot simply tell people they must walk if they don’t like the violation of their rights. Citizens in Houston need to stand up to this encroachment on civil liberties.

While local law enforcement agencies focus on overall safety measures noted above, representatives with the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) will also be on hand, lending their counter-terrorism expertise and support during the exercise.

“We have one of the safest transit systems in the world in Houston,” said METRO Police Chief Victor Rodriguez. “One way we are able to keep it that way is through the use of deterrents such as uniformed and plainclothes officers patrolling our system and aggressively addressing suspicious and criminal activity.”

If their transit system is one of the safest in the world, why do they need the TSA on hand? If using uniformed and plainclothes officers have made the bus system one of the safest in the world, then why do they need TSA representatives there?

Houston Free Thinker, Phillip Levine was present at the press conference at the Wheeler Station off 4500 Main and witnessed DHS, and Metro Police question passengers who were exiting buses about their destinations and their reasons for riding the bus. “When I arrived at Wheeler I got off the stage and instantly noticed the massive police presence. The police presence consisted of DHS, metro police, HPD, TSA, and Harris county police officers. They were going on to buses searching and stopping people for questions. Apparently Shelia jackson Lee was there pushing for more security like what I was viewing. I asked the TSA agent if there was gonna be a bigger presence of metro or TSA. He said both,” Levine said in an email.

After seeing the exponential increase in police presence everywhere, it’s getting more and more difficult to defend the idea that the United States is not turning into a police state.

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