‘Anarchist’ looked like someone’s mom
Thu, 4 Dec 2008
‘Anarchist’ looked like someone’s mom:
—By Randy Furst, Star Tribune, November 30, 2008
On Aug. 31, 2007, Marilyn Hedstrom, who appeared to be in her early
50s, walked into a run-down store-front where anarchists hung out on
E. Lake Street in Minneapolis.
She introduced herself as Norma Jean.
Asked by a man at the Jack Pine Center why she was there, she said
she had issues with President Bush and the Iraq war. “I told him I
was interested in helping the cause and interested in participating
in the protesting,” she later wrote in reports reviewed by the Star
Tribune.
What she did not tell him is that she was a deputy sheriff for the
Ramsey County Sheriff’s Office. Along with two other undercover
sheriff’s operatives and an FBI informer, she had been assigned to
infiltrate the RNC Welcoming Committee, which was planning street
blockades at the 2008 Republican National Convention.
She went “dumpster diving” at the group’s instructions to find food
for the anarchists to eat. She cooked meals for some meetings, ran
errands, coordinated committee discussions and represented the
organization at some gatherings of the protest movement. She became
friends of some of the activists. And she, ironically, even helped on
security for the anarchists, who worried that the cops were
infiltrating them.
For a year Deputy Hedstrom led a double life as Norma Jean Johnson,
filing her recollections, often daily, with the Special
Investigations Unit, as did the other operatives. The covert
operation was not without drama. When one informant was accused of
being a cop, he broke into tears, convincing his accusers that they
were mistaken, according to a report.
“Their function was critical to the success of the investigation,”
said Ramsey County Sheriff Robert Fletcher. “These are difficult
roles. You need to be a good actor.”
Recalling demonstrations that paralyzed Seattle in 1999 during World
Trade Organization meetings, local and federal authorities have been
more aggressive in the past decade in gearing up for major protests,
especially those where anarchists may intervene. There were big
investigations before the 2004 Republican National Convention in New
York City.
Eight members of the RNC Welcoming Committee were arrested and are
awaiting trial on charges of conspiracy to commit second-degree riot.
They are accused of plotting to shut down the convention by
blockading roads. They’re also accused of planning criminal damage to
property, including use of incendiary devices.
Fletcher said many allegations are based on reports from the
undercover personnel.
Robert Kolstad, attorney for one of the eight, said much of the
evidence is based on hyperbolic comments made by Welcoming Committee
members that had little to do with their intentions. “Despite the
rhetoric, there was never reasonable expectation by anyone to shut
down the convention,” he said.
Members of the RNC Eight have announced plans to hold a news
conference Tuesday to criticize Ramsey County Attorney Susan
Gaertner, whose office is prosecuting the case.
The Star Tribune reviewed 1,000 pages of reports by the three who
spied for the sheriff. The reports were obtained by a source with
access to the documents. The newspaper has not seen most of the
reports from an FBI informer who Fletcher says provided “the best
information.” Fletcher, who did not provide the newspaper with any
reports by the undercover operatives, also declined to allow
interviews with the three from his office.
Following department procedures, he said his office surveyed public
documents and the Internet in August 2007, concluding that the
Welcoming Committee might be planning criminal activity. He then
authorized a “limited investigation” allowing his operatives to
attend public meetings.
Watch, but don’t suggest
Based on what they and the FBI informer found, a full investigation
was launched, allowing undercover agents to attend private meetings
and participate in the group so long as they did not suggest criminal
activities, he said.
The sheriff’s investigation cost about $300,000, Fletcher said. He’s
asking the city of St. Paul to reimburse his office from $50 million
in federal funds for convention security.
Hedstrom, a narcotics officer, was partnered with Rachel Nieting, a
guard in the county jail. Nieting, in her 20s, posed as Amanda,
Hedstrom’s niece. A third operative, Chris Dugger, was a confidential
paid informant who has since become a jail guard and has taken tests
to become a deputy.
Agent was like a mom
Nieting, now a deputy, halted her undercover work after a few months.
Fletcher said she “didn’t have the level of acceptance that Marilyn
had.” Hedstrom told an anarchist that Amanda dropped out after
finding a new boyfriend.
Most of the anarchists were decades younger than Hedstrom, but
Fletcher said that posed no problem. “We’re not always looking for a
person that seems to fit perfectly,” he said. “Someone that is not an
obvious fit … is least likely to be suspected.” Also, he said,
pairing Hedstrom and Nieting increased their safety.
Hedstrom settled into her covert role.
“Norma Jean looked like somebody’s mom,” recalls Meredith Aby, a
member of the Anti-War Committee, a group that occasionally met with
the anarchists. “She was treated by the Welcoming Committee as if she
were one of their own.”
Betsy Raasch-Gilman, 56, who helped raise money with Hedstrom on the
Welcoming Committee, said they sometimes discussed family and
grandchildren. “To this day, I don’t know how much was put-on and how
much was real,” she said. Raasch-Gilman learned that Hedstrom was
undercover after court documents were filed. “I wonder how she lives
with her conscience,” she said of Hedstrom. “She knows the truth of
the matter. We were not conspiring to riot.”
Nathanael Secor, one of the RNC Eight, said “a level of comradeship”
developed between activists and the operatives and it was
disappointing to learn they were spies. Still, he says, “We had the
feeling we were under surveillance from the beginning. It did not
come as a complete shock.”
Cop was almost outed
While Hedstrom blended in, Dugger gave off different vibes and was
often under a cloud of suspicion. In his late 20s, he was “kind of
muscular,” had tattoos and looked like a biker, says Katrina Plotz, a
member of the Anti-War Committee.
At one meeting of various groups, “somebody made a joke that based on
looks, he’s the one who looks like a cop,” Plotz said. “He kind of
smiled and didn’t say anything.”
At a meeting where Hedstrom was the facilitator, a kind of
chairperson, an anarchist expressed concern that he was a cop, a
report said. Dugger “became emotional and told them how bad he felt,
he wiped his eyes and blew his nose.” He denied he was an informer.
The memo said two anarchists told him they “don’t think he is a cop.
They said a cop would have just walked away and never returned and
wouldn’t cry.”
Dugger even got into the act. By August he was urging an anarchist to
suspect another anarchist of being an informer.
In the reports, the anarchists talk with bravado, with occasional
references to breaking windows and damaging vehicles. They told each
other it was not violence, since they had no plans to injure people.
Many meetings involved no talk of property damage, or even protests.
They dealt with tasks like finding places to stay. The local
anarchist core was small, and the reports offer a glimpse into
strains —and even gripes — among them.
Nieting wrote that she and Hedstrom were the only two women to join
Karen Redleaf at a “women’s Welcoming Committee” meeting. Redleaf, a
committee member, talked about how disconnected she felt and was only
coming to Sunday meetings because Norma Jean was there.
Redleaf, who has not been charged, declined to comment, but Peter
Erlinder, her attorney, said she did not know Hedstrom and Nieting
were undercover operatives.
The agents described how subgroups planned a decentralized disruption
of St. Paul, choosing sectors for blockades and confrontation. There
are references to a committee called the “action faction,” where
there were more discussions about blockades. Fletcher said his
operatives did not get inside the faction but the FBI informer did.
There were references to using “chains and locks for locking up
downtown business doors.”
Former Minneapolis Police Chief Tony Bouza praised the covert
investigation. “It was a classic case of an effective police
operation against a criminal conspiracy. ... They targeted the right
groups,” said Bouza, author of “Police Intelligence,” a book on
undercover police work.
But David Cunningham, a professor at Brandeis University in
Massachusetts, says that while authorities may have had probable
cause to infiltrate anarchist groups, he is concerned about a
potential chill on civil liberties.
Cunningham, author of “There’s Something Happening Here,” a history
of covert FBI activities in the 1960s and ’70s, said there needs to
be more oversight of undercover work from Congress. He also believes
local law enforcement agencies should be required to obtain court
approval for undercover operations.
Staff writer Pat Pheifer contributed to this report.
rfurst@startribune.com • 612-673-7382
No comments:
Post a Comment