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Police Infiltration Based on info from Baltimore group

by Peter Grimes

11 September 2000 23:21 UTC





Action Alerts for July 30 - www.unity2000.com

>From Sunday's (9/10/00) Philadelphia Inquirer.  This article is based on PCAN 
research that I provided to the Inquirer's Craig McCoy at last week's news 
conference.    -MM
===========================
Rumors had troopers seeing Reds during the GOP convention 

State police based their suspicions of protesters on information supplied by 
a right-wing group.

By Craig R. McCoy and Linda K. Harris 
INQUIRER STAFF WRITERS 

The cold war is long over but Pennsylvania State Police were still on the 
lookout for communists and Soviet sympathizers among the demonstrators 
protesting last month's Republican National Convention in Philadelphia.

In state police affidavits justifying a raid on a West Philadelphia warehouse 
used by convention protesters, troopers alleged that communists were behind 
the demonstrations.

"Funds allegedly originate with Communist and leftist parties and from 
sympathetic trade unions," the state police declared in the affidavits. 
"Other funds reportedly come from the former Soviet-allied World Federation 
of Trade Unions."

The language left critics, including demonstrators and civil-liberties 
lawyers, both a little amused and a lot indignant. They said it seemed like 
something out of a musty red-baiting periodical of the 1950s - Red Channels 
and the like.

The allegations - passed to state police by a private group funded by 
conservative multimillionaire Richard Mellon Scaife - did not belong in 
government affidavits seeking judicial approval for a search warrant that led 
to 75 arrests, they said.

"It's McCarthyite. It's tarring people," said David Kairys, a law professor 
at Temple University. "It's reminiscent of the worst of the '50s."

The allegations of communist money made up only a small part of the 23-page 
affidavits in support of search warrants for three vehicles and the 
warehouse, at 4100 Haverford Ave. The affidavits, made public Wednesday after 
having been sealed for more than a month, relied most heavily on the direct 
observations of undercover troopers who infiltrated the warehouse.

Known as "the puppet warehouse," police called it a center of illegal 
activity; activists said it was a workshop in which they made more than 100 
puppets and a large satirical float, "Corpzilla."

The documents were the first public acknowledgement that police had 
infiltrated groups planning to protest during last month's Republican 
National Convention.

Without elaboration, the affidavits stated that the allegations of communist 
funding had come from the little-known Maldon Institute.

Asked last week about the Maldon Institute, Jack Lewis, a state police 
spokesman, seemed a little unsure.

"Our people said they believed this institute is based in the United 
Kingdom," he said.

The Maldon Institute - named after an obscure battle in England in the 10th 
century - is based in Baltimore and has a mailing address in Washington, D.C.

Lewis added: "I'm told by our intelligence people that the Maldon Institute 
is a private organization that provides intelligence information to police 
departments. 

"We have found in the past that the Maldon Institute generally presents 
reliable information."

Lewis said that state police and other police departments "routinely receive 
information from the Maldon Institute at no cost, via e-mail. The department 
did not solicit this information."

Asked whether state police had attended Maldon Institute conferences, Lewis 
responded: "State police personnel have had contact in the U.S. with 
representatives of the institute."

According to public records, the institute is funded, at least in part, by 
Scaife, the Pittsburgh political philanthropist best known for his financial 
support of several private investigations of President Clinton in recent 
years.

Financial forms for Scaife's Carthage Foundation show it provided Maldon with 
$250,000 in 1998.

Institute documents show that board members have included D. James Kennedy, a 
Florida televangelist who is cofounder of the Rev. Jerry Falwell's Moral 
Majority; and Robert Moss, a journalist and novelist who in the 1980s wrote 
that the KGB used Western media to manipulate public opinion.

The institute's officials did not return repeated telephone calls seeking 
comment Friday.

In an interview last week, Chip Berlet, who studies conservative and 
far-right groups, said a key figure within the 15-year-old institute has been 
John H. Rees, a British-born contributor to the John Birch Society and 
publisher of a newsletter devoted to intelligence-gathering and distributed 
to police.

In the 1970s, Rees published the Information Digest, which gave details 
gathered after he infiltrated left-leaning groups under a false name, the 
Baltimore Sun reported in 1988.

Just this year, Rees, as director of the Maldon Institute, helped organize an 
invitation-only conference in New York City on terrorism that drew FBI agents 
and police, according to conference sponsors.

Berlet said state police erred in using the institute as a basis for police 
action.

"It issues monographs and monitors cults and terrorist groups and left-wing 
groups," said Berlet, senior analyst with the left-leaning Political Research 
Associates, based in Massachusetts. "It does so from an old-fashioned 
counter-subversion perspective that is obsessed with finding reds under every 
bed."

Berlet said police needed to distinguish protesters who were engaged in 
nonviolent and legal protest from those breaking the law.

"You're never going to draw those appropriate distinctions if you're relying 
on these kind of scurrilous, McCarthyite allegations," he said.

Lewis, the state police spokesman, noted that the affidavit drew from "a wide 
variety of sources" and did not rely solely on the Maldon Institute's work. 
The affidavits drew most heavily on information developed by troopers who had 
infiltrated the warehouse.

The affidavits, in alleging communist links to the protest, cited 
specifically a Maldon Institute research report dated April 7. Lewis said the 
state police would not release that report.

"The department does not believe it has an obligation to provide the public 
with all information it receives as part of its intelligence-gathering 
operation, whether or not the department pays for that information," he said.

The affidavit's specific allegation is that communist money flowed to a 
protest group called the Pennsylvania Consumer Action Network through its 
supposed ties to People's Global Action, an anti-capitalist group formed in 
Switzerland two years ago.

All of this astounded Mike Morrill, a leader of the Pennsylvania Consumer 
Action Network. His group organized a peaceful march for July 30 - one 
permitted by the city. 

Morrill last week released his group's donor list. It showed that the group 
raised about $48,000 for the Republican convention protests, with the largest 
contributions coming from well-known city labor unions. Of the total, $200 
came from the Communist Party of Eastern Pennsylvania, the only communist 
group listed.

Morrill said he took no part in the Aug. 1 street blockades that disrupted 
city traffic.

"Imagine my surprise when I found out my organization was awash in money, 
funded by Soviet-era organizations and communist-inspired groups from around 
the world," Morrill said.

"Were it so, I'd probably have a better wardrobe and live in a nicer house."
============
Michael Morrill
PA Consumer Action Network
529 Court St., #509
Reading, PA 19601
1-610-478-7888


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