Memphis Police Created Facebook Profiles To Spy On Black Activists

 

TeleSur (8/7/18)

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) has filed a lawsuit against the Memphis, Tennessee Police Department, accusing them of illegally surveilling members of the Black Lives Matter movement.

Following the lawsuit, the City of Memphisreleased documents detailing several tacticsused by the Memphis Police Department (MPD) to keep track of activists and their activity on social media. According to the documents, the operation was led by the department’s Office of Homeland Security.

This project was designed to “deal with threats” to the Police Department or to the city of Memphis, but its focus was redirected towards groups and individuals staging local protests, The Guardian has reported.

A significant amount of activists’ personal information was obtained through “Bob Smith” a fake Facebook profile managed by the MPD. With this profile, the MPD posed as an anarchist activist liking different activist groups and befriended activists in order to track them through their reactions to certain posts.

According to the documentation, the investigation led to a presentation named “Blue Suede Shoes,” which included information on activists who frequently attended demonstrations, such as headshots, names, close contacts and their association with movements. A PowerPoint presentation, which included information on people that had never been arrested at a protest or accused of breaking any laws, was also produced. …

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  • State Surveillance of Black Social Movements Lives on — From the Black Panthers to Black Lives Matter, surveillance technology has changed but the targets have remained the same. The excuses used to justify spying on Black social movments remain strikingly similar throughout the decades. Now, the very tools that movements have used to organize themselves – technology and social media – are being used against them. For Black History Month, teleSUR looks back at the ever-present state surveillance of Black social movements. … Read the Rest