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SF Labor Council: "Condemn FBI Raids on Trade Union, Anti-War and Solidarity Activists" (resolution adopted Sept. 27, 2010)
SF Labor Council: "Condemn FBI Raids on Trade Union, Anti-War and Solidarity Activists" (resolution adopted Sept. 27, 2010)
San Francisco Labor Council
Resolution
[Note: The following
resolution -- submitted by David Welsh, NALC 214, and Alan Benjamin,
OPEIU 3 -- was adopted unanimously by the SFLC Delegates' Meeting on
Sept. 27, 2010.]
Condemn FBI Raids
on Trade Union, Anti-War and Solidarity Activists
Whereas, early morning Sept.
24 in coordinated raids, FBI agents entered eight homes and offices of
trade union and anti-war activists in Minneapolis and Chicago,
confiscating crates full of computers, books, documents, notebooks,
cell phones, passports, children's drawings, photos of Martin Luther
King and Malcolm X, videos and personal belongings. The FBI also
raided offices of the Twin Cities Anti-war Committee, seizing
computers; handed out subpoenas to testify before a federal Grand Jury
to 11 activists in Illinois, Minnesota and Michigan; and paid
harassment visits to others in Wisconsin, California and North
Carolina; and
Whereas, one target of the
raid was the home of Joe Iosbaker, chief steward and executive board
member of SEIU Local 73 in Chicago, where he has led struggles at the
University of Illinois for employee rights and pay equity. Brother
Iosbaker told the Democracy Now radio/TV program that FBI agents
"systematically [went] through every room, our basement, our attic,
our children's rooms, and pored through not just all of our papers,
but our music collection, our children's artwork, my son's poetry
journal from high school -- everything." He and his wife, a
Palestine solidarity activist, were both issued subpoenas. The
earliest subpoena dates are October 5 and 7; and
Whereas, the majority of
those targeted by the FBI raids had participated in anti-war protests
at the 2008 Republican National Convention in St. Paul MN, which
resulted in hundreds of beatings and arrests [with almost all charges
subsequently dropped]. Many of those targeted in the 9/24 raids were
involved in humanitarian solidarity work with labor and popular
movements in Colombia -- "the most dangerous place in the world to
be a trade unionist"-- whose US-funded government has been condemned
by the AFL-CIO and internationally for the systematic assassination of
hundreds of trade unionists; and
Whereas, the nationally
coordinated dawn raids and fishing expedition marks a new and
dangerous chapter in the protracted assault on the First Amendment
rights of every union fighter, solidarity activist or anti-war
campaigner, which began with 9/11 and the USA Patriot Act. The raids
came only 4 days after a scathing report by the Department of Justice
Inspector General that soundly criticized the FBI for targeting
domestic groups such as Greenpeace and the Thomas Merton Center from
2002-06. In 2008, according to a 300-page report obtained under the
Freedom of Information Act, the FBI trailed a group of students in
Iowa City to parks, libraries, bars and restaurants, and went through
their trash. This time the FBI is using the pretext of investigating
"terrorism" in an attempt to intimidate activists.
Therefore be it resolved,
that the San Francisco Labor Council denounce the Sept. 24th FBI raids
on the homes and offices of trade union, solidarity and anti-war
activists in Minneapolis, Chicago and elsewhere; the confiscation of
computers and personal belongings; and the issuance of Grand Jury
subpoenas. This has all the earmarks of a fishing expedition. The FBI
raids are reminiscent of the Palmer Raids, McCarthy hearings, J. Edgar
Hoover, and COINTELPRO, and mark a new and dangerous chapter in the
protracted assault on the First Amendment rights of every union
fighter, international solidarity activist or anti-war campaigner,
which began with 9/11 and the USA Patriot Act;
And be it further resolved,
that this Council make the following demands:
1. Stop the repression against trade union, anti-war and international solidarity activists.
2. Immediately return all confiscated materials: computers, cell phones, papers, documents, personal belongings, etc.
3. End the Grand Jury proceedings and FBI raids against trade union, anti-war and international solidarity activists;
And be it further resolved,
that this Council participate in the ongoing movement to defend our
civil rights and civil liberties from FBI infringement; forward this
resolution to Bay Area labor councils, California Labor Federation,
Change to Win and AFL-CIO; and call on these organizations at
all levels to similarly condemn the witch hunt;
And be it finally resolved,
that this Council urge the AFL-CIO to ensure that denunciation of the
FBI raids is featured from the speakers' platform at the October 2,
2010 One Nation march in Washington, DC, possibly by inviting one of
those targeted by the raids, for example the SEIU chief steward whose
home was raided, to speak at the rally.
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