New Grand Jury in the Midwest: Another “Eco-terrorist” Witch Hunt?

by Will Potter on August 24, 2007

in Terrorism Court Cases

Green Scare MN Grand JuryIn a country where so many people get most of their news from The Daily Show, and 1 in 4 people read ZERO books last year, I can only imagine how many people get most of their information about the legal system from Law & Order. In Law & Order episodes, grand juries (if they’re mentioned at all) help the good guys investigate the bad guys who did bad things and must be brought to justice.

Grand juries aren’t so benign. True, in Law & Order, and in real life, they help bring indictments against bad guys. But they can also be used to push a political agenda. They can intimidate, harass, and imprison political activists. They’ve been used against suspected communists, against antiwar activists , against Black Panthers, against independent journalists like Josh Wolf, and they’ve been used frequently against the environmental and animal rights movements (recently in the case of Jeff Hogg, and activists in California).

When you walk into a grand jury, you check your rights at the door. You have to answer questions about your political beliefs and political associations. You don’t have the right to remain silent. If you refuse to cooperate and “name names,” you can be sent to jail. (Here’s more information on grand juries from the American Bar Association.)

So when a new grand jury subpoenas activists, it should raise red flags for not just other activists, but civil liberties advocates and criminal justice watchdog groups.

That’s why I wanted to highlight this for everyone, even though details are limited right now. What I know is that this week two people were subpoenaed to testify before a grand jury in Minneapolis, MN on September 6. Based on their personal accounts, it looks like the grand jury is investigated so-called “eco-terrorism,” and could relate to the Operation Backfire cases.

Both individuals–Tony Wong, in Seattle, and Brandon Elder, in Chicago–say they were told by law enforcement that someone named Ian Wallace has been cooperating with them for several months.

Wong says that Erik Swanson of the Joint Terrorism Task Force and University of Minnesota Police

…showed me a couple color copy photos of some type of vehicle or machine. The photos were dark and unclear and I couldn’t really tell what exactly he was trying to show me or why. Then Officer Swanson told me that I knew what he was showing me and if I cooperate it’ll be better for me.

Swanson also told Wong that law enforcement had been working with Kevin Tubbs and Stan Meyerhoff. Tubbs and Meyerhoff are two of the defendants who cooperated with law enforcement, and offered information on other activists in the Operation Backfire cases.

“The entire time they never actually told me what they were investigating or why I was being called to testify,” Wong said.

Elder, from Chicago, said two FBI agents told him the grand jury was investigating “acts of arson and vandalism that happened a several years ago in Minnesota state… They told me that Ian claims that I (and another person) planned these actions and traveled to Minnesota to take part in them.”

I think this is a good opportunity to plug a few resources:

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