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NEW: ACLU Says Oregon DOJ Surveilling Black Activists; Don’t Shoot PDX Says It’s “Not Surprising”

Tuesday, November 10, 2015

 

Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum

The American Civil Liberties Union of Oregon, along with several other community groups, sent a letter to Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum on Tuesday, asking her to investigate the Oregon Department of Justice for conducting digital surveillance on Oregonians using the “Black Lives Matter” hashtag.

“It is improper, and potentially unlawful, for the Oregon Department of Justice to conduct surveillance and investigations on an Oregonian merely for expressing a viewpoint, or for being a part of a social movement,” the letter reads. “We are concerned that such unwarranted investigations are racially motivated, and create a chilling effect on social justice advocates, political activists and others who wish to engage in discourse about the issues of our time. Furthermore, during a time when you, as attorney general, are chairing the Law Enforcement Profiling Task Force mandated by House Bill 2002, we are particularly concerned that the Oregon Department of Justice is conducting investigations such as this.”

Signed on to the letter to Rosenblum are representatives from the Urban League of Portland, AFL-CIO, the Asian Pacific American Network of Oregon, the Center for Intercultural Organizing, NAACP Eugene/Springfield Branch, the ACLU of Oregon, the NAACP Portland Branch and Oregon AFSCME Council 75.

Teressa Raiford, an Organizer with Don’t Shoot PDX, told GoLocal that the actions of the Department of Justice are “obviously illegal and corrupt, but not surprising.”

“They were the ones always saying we were breaking the law and it turns out they were the ones breaking the law the whole time,” Raiford said of the Department of Justice. “Oregon just got an “F” in corruption and ethics and this can show you why. This speaks to the leadership and the system that we have here in Portland and in Oregon. We have an upcoming election, and we need to get rid of the old and bring in the new. This is a corrupt system we have here, so it really isn’t surprising.”

Read the full letter below:

Attorney General Rosenblum:

We, the undersigned, have been notified that the Oregon Department of Justice has conducted digital surveillance on Oregonians because of their use of the Black Lives Matter hashtag on social media.

As recounted by our colleague, Urban League of Portland President Nkenge Harmon Johnson, and other sources, two weeks ago, her husband, the Director of Civil Rights for Oregon Department of Justice, Erious Johnson, was called to your office. At that meeting, it was revealed that the Oregon Department of Justice Criminal Justice Division has been using software to conduct “threat assessments.” The division searched the Twitter feeds of Oregonians who have used the hashtag “Black Lives Matter.” We do not know how many Oregonians were investigated by the Department of Justice. We do know, however, that Director Johnson was one of them. Because he had posted tweets using that hashtag, he was identified under the Oregon Department of Justice’s threat assessment process.

It is improper, and potentially unlawful, for the Oregon Department of Justice to conduct surveillance and investigations on an Oregonian merely for expressing a viewpoint, or for being a part of a social movement. We are concerned that such unwarranted investigations are racially motivated, and create a chilling effect on social justice advocates, political activists and others who wish to engage in discourse about the issues of our time. Furthermore, during a time when you, as attorney general, are chairing the Law Enforcement Profiling Task Force mandated by House Bill 2002, we are particularly concerned that the Oregon Department of Justice is conducting investigations such as this.

Certainly, we do not know all of the facts and look forward to hearing from you. More information is needed about the scope, breadth and purpose of the Department of Justice’s activities related to Black Lives Matter, and other social justice movements. As a result, we call for:

-An immediate halt to digital and other surveillance of Black Lives Matter, related topics, and those individuals using that hashtag.

-An independent audit, conducted by an entity accepted by the undersigned, to determine who at the Oregon Department of Justice created and authorized this threat assessment practice; when it began; whether the investigations included email, browser history, phone, and other online and off-line activity; what were the department’s intentions; and what has been done with this information.

-Said independent audit to review whether the Criminal Justice Division was properly supervised or trained to avoid racial bias.

-An apology and disclosure to all Oregonians ensnared in this surveillance.
Direct contact from your office to each person who was surveilled, including providing those individuals with a copy of all of the information about them that was reviewed by the Department of Justice.

-A public meeting held by you, Attorney General Rosenblum, during this month to explain the information that is currently known about the use of this software to investigate Oregonians, and your response to the situation.

-Your commitment to address digital surveillance as part of the Law Enforcement Profiling Task Force recommendations.

-Audit results to be shared with the public by December 31, 2015.
It is startling that Oregon taxpayers’ dollars were spent in this way. We are copying this correspondence to members of the executive and legislative branches in hopes that they will commit to ensuring an effective and transparent process going forward. We seek answers and accountability about the existence of a digital surveillance program in our Department of Justice that appears to target civil, racial and human rights activities in Oregon. We request your immediate response and remediation.

Sincerely,

Nkenge Harmon Johnson, Urban League of Portland

Tom Chamberlain, AFL-CIO

Joseph Santos-Lyons, Asian Pacific American Network of Oregon

Kayse Jama, Center for Intercultural Organizing

Eric Richardson, NAACP Eugene/Springfield Branch

David Rogers, ACLU of Oregon

Jo Ann Hardesty, NAACP Portland Branch

Ken Allen, Oregon AFSCME Council 75

CC:

Governor Kate Brown

Secretary of State Jeanne Atkins

Bureau of Labor and Industries Commissioner Brad Avakian

House Speaker Tina Kotek

Senate President Peter Courtney

 

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