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February 26, 2006

RISING UP... at PRISONER’S JUSTICE FILM FESTIVAL 2006

PRISONER’S JUSTICE FILM FESTIVAL 2006

Toronto's Prisoner's Justice Action Committee presents
The Second Annual
Prisoner's Justice Film Festival
February 23-26, 2006

This event is generously supported by the Social Justice Cluster,
University of Toronto

The first Toronto Prisoner's Justice Film Festival was held in January of
2005 and drew hundreds of community members, abolitionists, youths,
activists, students, educators, artists, ex-prisoners, family members and
allies from across Ontario. This year's festival will build on the first,
as we work to build a movement that challenges the prison-industrial
complex, and demands justice, not jails.

Join us for an exciting selection of informative films including Canadian,
U.S., and international submissions. Films will be accompanied by guest
panels including current and ex-prisoners, families of prisoners,
activists and advocates, film-makers, researchers and writers. Audiences
will be encouraged to join in the discussion. Between films, participants
will have the chance to enjoy musical performances, take in displays of
prisoners' art, and check out ally organizations at our community info
fair.

Thursday February 23, 2006 6-9.30pm
Friday February 24, 2006 7pm to late
Saturday February 25, 2006 12noon-10pm
Sunday February 26, 2005 2-9.30pm

All film screenings at Innis Town Hall - University of Toronto
Located at the corner of Sussex Ave and St. George St.

Friday Party at the Multipurpose Room, Student Campus Center
Ryerson University, 55 Gould St.

Festival Schedule

Thursday, February 23rd

6:00 – 9:30pm Health in Prison
Opening with Manitou Kwe Singers (Women Spirit Singers)
Manitou Kwe Singers (Women Spirit Singers), founded in 1995 by Amber
O'Hara (Waabnong Kwe) is an all women's hand drum group. All members of
Manitou Kwe Singers are of Native ancestry. Herstorically, they have sung
for the missing or murdered women in Canada, for prisoners, justice and
against violence in general.

Exceptional People’s Olympiad
(Canada, 2000, 15min, Big House Productions/CBC)

This film was shot and produced by a film production group inside Collins
Bay Federal Jail near Kingston. This film highlights the annual weekend
Olympics for athletes with disabilities organized and paid for by
prisoners at Collins Bay. This film highlights some of the relationships
that have developed over the course of this event. An interesting
snap-shot of two communities so often made invisible by our society.

Prison Lullabies (USA, 2003, 83min, Brown Hats Productions)
Dirs: Odile Isralson, Lina Matta

Prison Lullabies is the remarkable portrait of four women living on the
bad side of luck, struggling with drug addiction, arrested for dealing and
prostitution, and serving prison time with one common bond – arrested
pregnant, Amy, Monique, Joann, and Anne Marie have all given birth behind
bars. One of only five prisons in the U.S. to provide a nursery program
for inmates, Taconic Correctional Facility in New York State allows the
women to keep their babies for the first 18 months of their lives while
insisting that the mothers participate in a rigorous series of classes
that range from basic child care to anger management and drug counseling.
Each woman is released in the course of filming. Each must choose, minute
to minute, whether to find a job, break the cycle of relapse and re-arrest
that has led to the loss of her other children, or pick up the crack pipe,
abandon the child, and return to the streets. Shot in cinema-verité style,
Prison Lullabies addresses these issues by allowing the audience the
opportunity to observe and listen as the stories of the inmate mothers
unfold in their own time and in their own words. Prison Lullabies is an
extraordinary tale – that of four women making life-altering choices and
seizing the glimmer of possibility the prison nursery program is holding
out for them and for the future of their children.

Q&A with
Ayden Scheim, prison activist
Psychiatric survivor, OCAB Speakers Bureau


Friday, February 24th
7:00pm "LYRICIST LINKUP 6: Poetik Justice"
Presented by 8 Rooks Enlightenment & I.S.I.S. CIRCLE ENTERTAINMENT

Ryerson University Multi-Purpose Room (Student Campus Centre), 55 Gould St.

Hosted by Soul-R & EvE! Featuring Spin, Lady Loxx, Leviathan, Jah Paul &
Elisha, Blak Child, EvE, Soul-R and El Machetero

Open-Mic! Cultural Catering! Vendor's Market!

Sponsors: Ryerson Students' Union, Big It Up International, Lite It Up
Candles, Dogon Star Productions
Music: DJ El Machetero
Contact: 8Rooks.Com

Saturday, February 25th

12:00 - 2:00pm Networking Forum

An opportunity to share information about what various individuals and
groups are currently doing in the area of prisoners’ justice activism –
both for new folks who want to get involved, and for folks who are already
involved but want to build stronger connections. Come and identify
networking /collective support needs for prisoner’s justice activists and
to brainstorm ideas for keeping each better connected. Explore the
possibility of forming a radical prison workers network and discuss ideas
around organizing a prisoner’s justice week and/or other actions which
will help build collective solidarity in the prison abolition movement.


2:00 - 5:00pm Youth Incarceration

Juvies (USA, 2004, 66 min, Chance Films Inc.)
Dirs: Leslie Neale

From award-winning documentary filmmaker Leslie Neale (Road to Return)
comes this riveting look at a world most of us will never see: the world
of juvenile offenders who are serving incredible prison sentences for
crimes they either did not commit or were only marginally involved in. For
two years, Neale taught a video production class at Los Angeles Central
Juvenile Hall to 12 young people who were all being tried as adults.
Juvies is the product of that class, which was a learning experience for
both students and teacher - and becomes a learning experience for all of
us, as
we witness the heartbreaking stories of children abandoned by families and
a system that has disintegrated into a kind of vending machine justice.
Narrated by actor Mark Wahlberg, himself a former juvenile offender, and
poetry read by Mos Def.

Sun Up ‘till Sun Down (USA, 2005, 22 min, Prison Moratorium Project)
Dir. Tania Cuevas

A lively documentary produced by the Prison Moratorium Project about their
campaign against the construction of youth prisons and the growing
movement in New York to end imprisonment. Imaginative techniques of
conveying the startling reality of the prison industry make this film
engaging as well as informative.

Performances by
Spin, spoken word artist, community organizer
Toronto Underground Street Journalist Mr. Bones

Q&A with
Veronica Salvatierra, Community Youth Worker, St Stephen’s Community House
Lee Ann Chapman, B.A. LL.B, staff lawyer at Justice for Children and Youth.
Jagjeet Chhabra, 81 Reasons Campaign
Representative, Black Youth Taking Action


5:00 - 7:15pm Women Political Prisoners of the Middle East

Women in Death Castles (Palestine, 2004,13min)
Dir: Balata Film Collective

A high proportion of Palestinian women prisoners in Israeli Occupation
prisons are from the Nablus region. In this film, recently released women
from Balata and Nablus speak out about their pain and struggle while
imprisoned. Testimonies describe interrogation, physical and mental
torture, loneliness. The film Includes interviews with ex-prisoners,
children of current prisoners and officials from the Prisoners’ Society.

Red Names (Canada,1999, 12min)
Dirs: Amin Zarghami, Shahrzad Arshadi

This is a short video celebrating the legacy of thousands of women who
lost their lives in Iran between 1979 and 1999 due to their political,
social and religious beliefs. For Amin Zarghami & Shahrzad Arshadi,
working on this video was an opportunity to pay tribute to the memory of
these women - some of whom they knew personally - and grieve their loss.
It is intended as a testament both to their suffering and to the political
tyranny that led to their execution.

Women in Struggle (Palestine, 2004, 56min)
Dir: Buthina Canaan Khoury

This film documents the lives of Palestinian women who are ex-political
detainees, depicting their struggle during years of imprisonment in
Israeli jails and exploring the effect on their present-day life. The film
focuses on the lives of four women who became involved in the Palestinian
national struggle for independence. The women testify in their own words
about their histories, and about daily life in the current Palestinian
Intifada at a time of the “war on terror” and the apartheid wall. The film
seeks to understand the women’s efforts to preserve their dignity and
integrate into Palestinian social and political life. Although these four
women are no longer physically incarcerated, they actually find themselves
in a bigger prison carrying their imprisonment within them in every aspect
of their life.

Q&A with
Shahrzad Mojab, Director, Women and Gender Studies Institute, University
of Toronto
Shahrzad Arshadi, filmmaker
Rafeef Ziadeh, Sumoud


Performance by Faith Nolan, singer-songwriter, blues guitarist and prison
activist http://www.faithnolan.org


7:30 - 10:00 Resistance Caged (Political Prisoners)

Mission Against Terror (Cuba/Ireland, 2004, 48 min, Canal Education and
Two Islands Productions)
Dirs: Bernie Dwyer, Roberto Ruiz Rebo

As Havana wakes up to another day, five Cuban men are serving their time
in prisons scattered throughout the United States. Their crime? Protecting
their country and people against terrorism. Arrested on Sept. 12, 1998 and
subjected to a trial, which US civil rights lawyer, Leonard Weinglass,
calls a "violation" from start to finish, the Cuban five were locked away
for a total of three life sentences plus 68 years. There are very few
cases that are political by their nature. This was one. "Mission Against
Terror" charts Cuba's 45-year struggle against terrorism and the five
men's fight to win justice.

Souha Surviving Hell (Lebanon, 2001, 60min)
Dir: Randa Chahal Sabbag

From the director of Civilisees, which opened the 2000 Human Rights Watch
International Film Festival and received its Nestor Almendros Prize, Randa
Chahal Sabbag now turns her lens on South Lebanon. The subject of Chahal
Sabbag's film is the charismatic Souha Becharre, whom many call the
"fiance du Liban." In 1989 at the age of twenty-one, Souha - a devoted
communist - agreed to attempt the assassination of Lebanese General
Antoine Lahad, who was collaborating with the Israeli Army in the South of
Lebanon. Lahad survived, but Souha was quickly arrested and thrown in the
Khiam prison where she spent ten years for the attempt on Lahad's life.
Conditions in Khiam were horrific, and Souha endured six of those years in
solitary confinement. Chahal Sabbag follows Souha in the months following
her release, as she tirelessly travels Lebanon - speaking about her
experiences at Khiam and searching out others who were imprisoned there.
And despite all she suffered in Khiam, Souha is a survivor who shares her
story with a sense of hope for the future - both her own and that of
Lebanon.

Q&A with
Representative from Sumoud Political Prisoners Solidarity Group.
Tom Keefer - Seth Hayes Support Committee, Autonomy & Solidarity
Morteza Gorgzadeh, Toronto Forum on Cuba
Patrick Elie, Former Secretary of State for National Defense, Haiti,
President of Foundation Eko Vwa Jan Dominique

Sunday, February 26th

2:00 - 4:00pm Immigration Detention and the Secret Trials

Rising Up: the Alams (USA, 2005, 12min)
Dir: Konrad Aderer

An immigrant family, the Alams, are picked up during the special
registration program in the United States after 911. Faced with removal to
persecution they decided to resist with the revolutionary organization -
Desis Rising Up and Moving, a South Asian working class organization.

Don't Ask Don't Tell (Canada, 2005, 11min)
Dirs: Jean McDonald and Alex Rotalski

Approximately 200,000 non-status immigrants who live in Canada face
deportation and detention. Women abused by the spouse cannot call police,
lesbian couples are refused community housing. In Toronto immigrant
communities are fighting back. This film documents their struggle.

Whose Rights, Anyway? Justice for Mohammed (Canada, 2005, 23 min)
Dir: Anice Wong

Provides public information about the security-certificates process by
highlighting the case of Mohamed Harkat who has been in detention in
Ottawa for over 18 months.

L'echo du Silence (Echo Of Silence) (Canada, 2003, 23 min)
Dir: Chloe Germain-Therien

In 1997 two Basque men, Gorka Perea and Eduardo Plagaro, sought refugee
status in Canada after being charged with arson in Spain. They claimed
that their confessions to the crime were signed under torture. In 2001 the
two men were detained as suspected terrorists in a prison in Rivière des
Prairies, Quebec. The Echo of Silence documents their experience in
Canada: their detention, their temporary release, and finally their
extradition in June 2005, despite an active grassroots movement to keep
them in Canada.

Q&A with
Chloe Germain-Therien, film-maker
Mac Scott - No One is Illegal
Sima Zerehi - Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell
Matthew Behrens - Toronto Action for Social Change
Family members - Friends and Family of Gary Freeman


4:30 - 6:30 The Politics of Prison

Torture Inc - America’s Brutal Prisons (UK, 2005, 24 min)
Dir: Deborah Davies

Savaged by dogs, Electrocuted With Cattle Prods, Burned By Toxic
Chemicals, Does such barbaric abuse inside U.S. jails explain the horrors
that were committed in Iraq? They are just some of the victims of
wholesale torture taking place inside the U.S. prison system that we
uncovered during a four-month investigation for the UK’s Channel 4. It’s
terrible to watch some of the videos and realise that you’re not only
seeing torture in action but, in the most extreme cases, you are
witnessing young men dying.

This Black Soil - A Story of Resistance and Rebirth (USA, 2004, 58 min,
Working Hands Productions)
Dir: Teresa Konechne

This inspiring and provocative new film chronicles the successful struggle
of Bayview, Virginia, a small and severely impoverished rural
African-American community, to pursue a new vision of prosperity.
Catalyzed by the defeat of a state plan to build a maximum-security prison
in their backyard, the powerful women leaders and residents created the
Bayview Citizens for Social Justice, a non-profit organization, secured
$10 million in grants, purchased the proposed prison site land and are now
building a new community from the ground up. Under the leadership of
visionary women, this new rural village challenges all conventional ideas
of community development and includes not only improved and affordable
housing, but a sustainable economic base to earn a living wage, a
community center for educating its residents, a daycare center,
laundromat, and a community farm, which not only provides jobs and income
for the organization, but returns them to their roots, working on the
land.

Q&A with
Julia Sudbury, Canada Research Chair in Social Justice, Equity and
Diversity, University of Toronto
Rai Reece, PJAC
Giselle Dias


7:00 - 9:00 Indigenous and First Nations Prisoners

The Heart Has Its Own Memory (Canada, 2005, 13 minutes)
Dir: Audrey Huntley

This short film looks at violence against First Nations Women in Canada,
the lack of justice for missing Aboriginal women and racist police
inaction and impunity. Huntley creates a collage of the women’s stories
and interviews with family members and friends. The film plays with native
oratory and is a testimony to the pain and grief of the community as a
whole and a message of no more silence.

To Heal The Spirit (Canada, 1991, 47 min)
Why Not Productions Inc.

An emotionally charged documentary that focuses on First Nations women in
prison and the way in which many women discover spirituality and gain a
sense of identity within the oppressive confines of prison walls.

My Name is Kahentiiosta (Canada, 1995, 30 min)
Dir: Alanis Obomsawin

This affecting film profiles a young, courageous Kahnawake Mohawk woman
who was arrested after a 78 day armed standoff in 1990 between the Mohawks
and the Canadian federal government. Kahentiiosta is detained four days
longer than other women because the court refuses to accept her aboriginal
name. This is a compelling look at a people’s movement for
self-determination and one young woman’s refusal to capitulate in the face
of great adversity.

Q&A with
Jonathan Rudin, Aboriginal Legal Services of Toronto
Chief Leo Friday, Kashechewan First Nations
Representative from No More Silence
Amber O'Hara (Waabnong Kwe)

9:00pm: Closing Ceremony with Musical Guests


How to get there:
All Film Screenings at Innis Town Hall - University of Toronto, 2 Sussex
Avenue. Corner of Sussex Ave and St. George Street, just south of Bloor
Street.
5 minute walk from St. George Station.

Friday Party at the Multipurpose Room, Student Campus Center, Ryerson
University, 55 Gould St, Near Yonge and Gerrard.
5 minute walk from Dundas Station.

All film programmes $5 suggested donation.
Friday night pay-what-you-can $5-$10. This is an all-ages event and all
venues are wheelchair accessible.

About the Prisoner's Justice Action Committee:

The Prisoner's Justice Action Committee believes that prisons do not make
our communities safer or more secure. We believe that the prison
industrial complex perpetuates violence and oppression, including racism,
classism, sexism, colonialism, and homophobia. PJAC works to end
incarceration and detention and to create healthy communities built on
social justice.

Please contact us with your questions, comments or ideas.

Pjac_committee@yahoo.com

Visit our website: http://www.pjac.org

Many thanks to our sponsors

CKLN 88.1fm
Criminology Department, University of Toronto
Defense for Children International, Canada
Equity Studies Department, University of Toronto
Faculty of Nursing, University of Toronto
John Howard Society Toronto
Ontario Public Interest Research Group, York University
Prisoner's HIV/AIDS Support Action Network
Sexual Diversity Studies Program, University of Toronto
Social Justice Cluster, University of Toronto
Toronto Forum on Cuba
Trans Identified/Woman Identified Caucus, CUPE 3903, York University
Women and Gender Studies Institute, University of Toronto
Women Political Prisoners of the Middle East Project (Shahrzad Mojab)

Endorsers

81 Reasons Campaign
8Rook Productions
Aboriginal Legal Services of Toronto
Al-Awda Right of Return Coalition (Toronto)
BIFA, Bath Penitentiary
Black Action Defense Committee
Black Inmates and Friends Assembly
Buried Alive Illustrations
Campaign to Stop Secret Trials in Canada
CKLN
Coalition to Stop the War Toronto
Colours of Resistance - York University
Friends and Family Gary Freeman
Gavel Club, Bath Penitentiary
Isis Entertainment
Justice for Children and Youth
Justice for Mohamed Harkat Committee
Lifers Group, Bath Penitentiary
Lifers Group, Joyceville Penitentiary
Lifting as We Climb
Native Brotherhood, Bath Penitentiary
No One Is Illegal
Ontario Coalition Against Poverty
Prison Talk Online
Resistance on the Sound Dial
Rittenhouse
Satan Macnuggit
St. Clare's Multifaith Housing Society
Strength in SISterhood
Sumoud
Toronto Action for Social Change
Toronto Don't Ask Don't Tell Campaign
Womyn4justice - Kingston
Words Action Resistance

February 23, 2006

NSA Surveillance and the Case of Sherman Austin

Editor's note: I came across this article, contacted the email given for supporters and received a reply from his mother, who as you can imagine suffered immeasurably through the political imprisonment of her son. She gave me permission to repost the article, which I'm doing to raise awareness of this case. Please be sure to visit the support links for Sherman below.

Former political prisoner and former webmaster of Raisethefist.com, Sherman Austin talks about NSA wire-taps and FBI “anti-terrorism” surveillance used against him shortly after 9/11.

by Sherman Austin
edited, typed and posted by Akwala

There seems to be alot of buzz in the media on how Bush authorized the use of illegal NSA wire-taps and surveillance for domestic spying to stop terrorism. I thought I'd write an article summarizing how this was used in my case while running a political web site and direct action network www.Raisethefist.com
[ Raise The Fist ]

BEFORE 9/11

Before 9/11, Raisethefist.com was receiving approximately 2,000 hits daily from people around the world. Government agencies also frequented the site daily, monitoring articles, commentary posted by other users and continuously checking the front page for updates. In many cases Raisethefist.com received over 100 hits in a single day from U.S government agencies, the majority of these hits connecting through Department of Defense gateways. These agencies were mostly federal, FBI, Secret Service, etc. but monitoring also came from local police, California highway patrol, etc.

There was also daily monitoring coming from government and military departments in the UK, Canada, Egypt, Japan, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Brazil, etc. on a daily basis. All of this information was filtered, logged and archived through tracking programs I wrote on the server. It's all logged. As raisethefist.com grew more popular so did the hits from government agencies on the site. This type of monitoring didn't just stick to the web site. I would organize events and post information on the site and the FBI would show up. At one event the FBI circled the area in a car stopping people they recognized who were attending the event calling them by name, they also had an undercover agent taking pictures across the street. This is a little taste of what was going on before 9/11/2001.

AFTER 9/11

Right after 9/11, government traffic poured into the web site like never before. I was running raisethefist.com off a number of servers that were connected to a residential DSL line. This DSL line was connected through a residential phone number that was installed in the same room as all the equipment.

Before my home was raided 3 ½ months after 9/11 by the FBI and Secret Service L.A joint-terror task force, they had been packeting the internet line that raisethefist.com was hosted from. In other words they were watching all data coming in and out of the line and saving it on a remote device. [the feds did not have to obtain a warrant. The NSA was secretly authorized to perform this type of surveillance] This started happening immediately after 9/11. In addition they were breaking into several instant messenger accounts and sending messages to other people pretending to be me. For others it wasn't easy to distinguish the difference because they talked just like me. Obviously the team of people the NSA / FBI hired for the job spent a great deal of time doing social profiling while monitoring my conversations. I would be on one screen name then get kicked off, sign onto a different screen name and receive a threat from the other screen name I was just on saying "your ass is going to jail". I was told "this is a matter of national security." They would also threaten friends of mine sending them messages such as "your ass is next." They would send me messages with information they knew about myself, the servers I was running, and the conversations I had online with other people.

I have logs of all this activity. I also confirmed these were indeed the feds when during the raid when I mentioned to the FBI I knew they were packeting my DSL line and hacking into instant messenger accounts. They didn’t dispute my argument. Special Agent John I. Pi with the FBI who conducted the raid said, "How did you find out?" I also got to see the individuals who were hired for the job as they accompanied the FBI at my first court arraignment.

At the same time these instant messenger accounts were being hacked into and commandeered by the feds, my phone line was being heavily tapped. In addition I would also receive calls over the line at the oddest hours of the night. Knowing the line was tapped I never answered the phone until the calls became more consistent. I would pick up the phone asking who was there. Nobody would answer but I could tell someone was on the other end because I could hear them breathing. At first I figured it might just be a prank phone call or something.. but the calls wouldn't stop and became more consistent. Every time I picked up the phone I got no answer. But they wouldn’t hang up either. These calls would come in at spontaneous hours: 1pm, 3am, 6am, 8pm, etc. It got to a point where the calls came 24 hours straight with about 2-5 minute intervals. At this point it was obvious the calls weren't coming from a human being but instead it was some kind of automated system running each call through.

If this alone wasn't peculiar, at the very same time there was alot of unusual activity outside my house. I would come home during the day or late at night and see cars with black tinted windows parked in front of the house. All of the windows were tinted pitch black. They never left until after I parked and went inside the house. In one case two individuals were parked across the street one late night when I arrived home. I noticed there was no other car on the side of the street they were parked on so the they stood out and immediately caught my eye. I watched them in my rear view mirror as I parked and they were both focused directly on me. I turned off my headlights and was about to get out of the car before I hesitated. I started up the car again and drove around the block and they tried to follow me.

These incidents became more and more common and continued to intensify before the raid.

THE FBI RAID 1/24/02

On January 24, 2002, at approximately 4PM--while I was taking a nap--some 25 federal agents from the FBI and Secret Service joint-terror task force were surrounding my house with loaded sub-machine guns, shot guns, and bullet proof vests. I didn't know they were there until my sister woke me up saying there were FBI-looking cars parked all up and down the street and people outside all focused in on the house. I went to the front door and was pulled outside. I saw agents emerge from their hiding spots around all angles of the house with their guns drawn. They had even jumped the fence into the backyard to cover the rear end of the house. The FBI came with a 25 page warrant for search and seizure. They knew exactly were my room was when they entered the house. One agent holding a sub-machine gun said "follow me it's this way" leading the others down the hallway to back of the house to the room where I had the servers. The FBI had pictures of the house including a written description and a complete structural floor plan with every room before they came in. I was probably very lucky I wasn't home alone because I was completely unaware that agents were positioned right outside my bedroom window with loaded weapons while I was asleep. Although I would have probably woke up once they started breaking down the front door with the long piece of special steal they brought with them.

I was told the raid was because of Raisethefist.com. I asked how such an operation could be conducted because of a web site. I was told it was now legal under the new USA Patriot Act (which had passed only 90 days ago).

The secret service asked me if I wanted to see the president killed. The FBI kept trying to ask me about Raisethefist.com and where the logs were. Too bad for them I just happened to purge them before they came. The FBI also said I had content on the web site that dealt with information on how to manufacture explosives. This was a lie. In fact this information existed on a page of a completely different web site I simply had a link to. Nonetheless I was accused of authoring it. The FBI was looking for anything to justify a raid and get their hands on the servers. So they took another persons web site, lied, and said I admitted to authoring it when I never did. The FBI admitted to monitoring raisthefist.com and said I was being watched for along time. When the FBI left they said I had crossed over a line and as long as I got back on the other side of that line everything would be okay. In other words they were telling me to keep my mouth shut and to discontinue "Raise the Fist". After the raid I continued my plans to attend the World Economic Forum protests in New York. The Secret Service notified the New York police chief of my presence. When I arrived I noticed I was being followed and surveilled by agents in an SUV. The police started targeting demonstrators in a number sweeps on the crowd. In the first one I was arrested with 26 other people. We were taken to Brooklyn Navy Yard Jail and I was taken into a back room in hand-cuffs and interrogated for several hours by a detective from the FBI and a Secret Service agent. I was asked if I was terrorist or involved in any terrorist organizations. They asked about Raisethefist. They asked how I got to New York and where my car was parked. They said I wouldn't leave New York until they searched my car. I was then released. I was in the lobby of the court house for about 30 minutes until I was arrested by the FBI and hurried into a black SUV where I was taken to a federal building then to Manhattan MCC where I was placed into a 24-hour lockdown maximum security federal prison cell. I was in the same cell block as those being accused of the U.S.S Cole bombing and the bombing of the U.S Embassy in Kenya. I could hear one of the guards arguing with the inmate in the cell next to mine about the Taliban.

After this 13-day ordeal of being called a "man on a mission" by the FBI, and newspapers such as the New York Post reading "baby-bomb bust" and "teen terrorist" (I was 18 at the time) , I was released as federal prosecutors decided not to file an indictment just yet. They first wanted to go through all of the servers that were seized during the raid.

I flew back to California.

AFTER THE RAID AND FIRST FBI ARREST

You would think at this point that the surveillance and harassment would've toned down a bit since the FBI got what they wanted. But this wasn't the case, it intensified even more. A month later I got raisethefist.com back online by obtaining some remote backups I made before the raid. I also continued my organizing within the community. Raisethefist.com became a network with people setting up chapters in their schools and neighborhoods. This was called the RAISE THE FIST DIRECT ACTION NETWORK. [http://DAN.Raisethefist.com] I encouraged people to start more chapters in their local communities, schools, etc. Chapters started sprouting up around the U.S , Germany, Brazil, Canada, etc. Views were no longer only being discussed online through words but were now being put to action in our own neighborhoods. Because of all the media coverage after the raid and arrest, Raisethefist.com was now receiving allot more hits. Over 140,000 a week. The site worked up so much bandwidth that it was constantly going down because hosting companies complained they couldn't handle the load. Eventually I was able to collocate the server to a high-speed backbone in Irvine.

I moved to Long Beach and worked with a collective at a revolutionary and community empowerment book store which was built right next door to a living quarters where we lived. Immediately after getting raisethefist.com back online instant messenger accounts were being hacked into again. This time the threats were alot more aggressive and consistent. Email accounts that were associated with the raisethefist.com domain name registration were hacked into and used to re-route raisethefist.com to a different server knocking the site off-line. When this happened I posted logs of the conversations and threats I received over the screen name that was being hacked into and commandeered by the feds on http://la.indymedia.org. The next day I received a message with the new password and I was told that I better not try to change it because they were watching and they had full control over whether the site would stay up or not. On one occasion I managed to obtain the IP address of one of the person(s) commandeering these accounts. I traced the IP down to an area of Los Angeles near a federal building.

In addition I was also being followed undercover agents. One time I posted a banner on the top of raisethefist.com announcing a press-conference and march that was being held in Inglewood after the police beating of Donovan Jackson. I left with a group of friends. We took 2 cars. It wasn't until we were on the freeway when our friends in the other car told us we were being followed by a man in the white car behind us. He followed us all the way into Inglewood. When we arrived we parked a few blocks away from the city hall. We could see police and other people in suits on top of the City Hall roof with binoculars, cameras and walkie talkies. Immediately after we parked 4 motorcycle cops drove over to us and followed us to the event. The man in the white car followed us on foot. When we later left we were escorted out of Inglewood by 4 motorcycle cops until we got on the freeway. Being followed like this became a common occurrence. And it also came from local police not just the feds. One time I was riding my bike down the street late at night. A police car drives up in front of me on the sidewalk and stops me. The cop gets out and says , "What's up Austin!" Then 2 more units show up right after him and both police get out and say "What's up Sherman!", "What's up Austin!". I'm then asked about raisethefist.com and where I’m going. I asked them why they were so quick to stop me and how they all knew my name and I learn my picture is hanging up in the police station.

During this harassment and surveillance I was also waiting to hear back from my public defender on whether or not I was facing any charges. After a period of 6 months federal prosecutors call my lawyer and tell him they didn't find anything on the computers to get me for but they didn't want to let me off the hook. So they present us with a pre- indictment binding plea agreement. Something that my lawyer said he's never seen before because he's used to seeing a formal indictment first. But in this case the prosecutors were so quick to present me with a plea deal. The bargain was to admit to authoring and distributing the pages about explosives that existed on the other web site that I didn’t author or distribute. This web site was called the RECLAIM GUIDE. It was authored and implemented by a different individual. And it's not like the FBI didn't know this. 2 weeks before federal prosecutors contacted my lawyer, the FBI paid this person a visit. They confirmed that he was indeed the author of information on how to manufacture explosives and put it on online. Then they left.

False documents were drafted up saying I admitted to authored the "RECLAIM GUIDE" and all the information on how to build and manufacture explosives. These 2 pieces of evidence are actually in the FBI discovery. Apparently the FBI forgot to black-out the part where they visited the person who actually wrote the explosives information. These 2 contradicting articles were ignored by prosecutors. They wanted to pretend they didn't even exist because they know the FBI screwed up. They pressed forward urging that I sign this pre-indictment plea agreement.

THE PRE-INDICTMENT CONVICTION / NSA WIRE-TAPS AND SURVEILLANCE COVER-UP

Everyone keeps asking why I was never formerly indicted. This was to cover up the NSA wire-taps and surveillance.

At a formal indictment evidence is presented to the court or grand jury. This is a formal document written for a prosecuting attorney charging a person with some offense. This document is supposed to contain evidence backing up the prosecutors accusation.

The only so-called evidence the prosecutors had was obtained through ILLEGAL NSA WIRE TAPS and surveillance. I know the prosecutors had this information because they referred to it in a meeting me and my lawyer had with them when I requested to see the all this so-called evidence they said they were going to use against me if I didn't take the plea.

If there was a formal indictment then the FBI would have been forced to unveil the NSA wire-taps and continuous surveillance. Then this whole media buzz about Bush authorizing the NSA to do illegal surveillance against so-called terrorists would have been in the media along time ago. They couldn't afford this type of publicity. This is why they desperately tried to keep this "hush-hush." This is also why they wrote up false-documents stating that I admitted to authoring information on how to build explosives. They could take the fact that I simply posted a link on raisethefist.com to another person's web site which I did not author but happened to contain a page on "bomb-making information," and twist it around. It was all they needed to stir up the 9/11 reactionary emotionalism in the court and get their conviction. The feds wanted this conviction so bad and so quick because they knew what would have happened if this had gone public.

Every time I rejected the plea I was told I wouldn't have a second chance and that the feds would come down on me hard in court and I’d be looking at 3-4 years in prison. They told my lawyer I only had one chance to accept a plea or go to trial. It was a one chance offer and I'd better make my decision right away or face years in prison. I immediately rejected the plea telling my lawyer I wanted a trial. The prosecuters held out and bought time and tried to convince me and my lawyer. I kept rejecting it. Then I told them I would take it. At the arraignment I changed my mind again and said I wasn't taking any plea deal. Now expecting to prepare for a trial, the prosecutors limboed around to buy more time and told my lawyer the deal was still on the table. They said I would be looking at 3-4 years in prison if convicted at trial. I said okay fine and rejected again. Then I changed my mind again at the last minute and asked if I could take it. The prosecutors turned around so quickly with the plea agreement wanting me to sign. They initially said I only had one chance to take the plea and that was it. So I decided to change my mind again and reject it. Then they went into legal limbo again trying to buy more time. Why didn’t they just take it to court like they initially said they were going to do? It was obvious something very fishy was going on. They were so desperate to have me sign the plea. My lawyer said he had never seen a case like this in all the years of his practice.They said they had all this evidence against me yet they never wanted a formal indictment.

DEATH THREATS

During this period of going back and forth to court playing this game of legal limbo I was also receiving countless death-threats from neo-Nazis and white supremacists. I got them by email and they were constantly posted to the raisethefist.com news wire. There had always been death threats from white supremacists, except now they were much more consistent, direct and some cases very peculiar. One made reference to a huge black-out , "when all the lights go off" following with "your nigger ass gets killed." The next day the entire East Coast experienced the biggest black-out in 30 years. This is when several power grids went down in August of 2003 leaving 60 million people from Ottawa to Detroit, from Toledo to Hartford, from Cleveland to New York City without electricity. A day later the same person who posted this threat posted again saying "See I told you so , you better watch out" and followed with more death threat rhetoric. This was all logged and archived on the server.

On August 4, 2003 I was sentenced to a year in federal prison and 3 years probation after being threatened with an additional 20 years under a terrorism enhancement. My lawyer didn't want to take the case to trial under these conditions and I had no legal funds to afford the legal team I needed. I was convicted under statute, 18 U.S.C. 842 (p)(2)(A) "DISTRIBUTION OF INFORMATION RELATED TO EXPLOSIVES OR WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION", pushed through Congress by Democrat Sen. Dianne Feinstein in the late 1990s under Clinton’s anti-terrorism bill. The offending material, which again I emphasize I did not author, contained amateurish instructions on how to assemble simple explosives.

The individual who actually wrote this information was not convicted of anything. He was white. As I said before, the FBI questioned him, confirmed he authored this information, and left. They fabricated a case in cahoots with federal prosecutors, Dianne Feinstein, John Ashcroft and Judge Steven V. Wilson.

After I was sentenced government agencies continued to monitor the site heavily. My main concern was getting the site secured and ready for when I went in so it would stay online for the next 4 years without my assistance. 3 weeks before I had to self-surrender the server went down because the hosting company went out of business. The only way to get raisethefist.com back online was to physically pick up the server from where I had it collocated in Irvine. When I picked up the server I was informed that the FBI called them 2 weeks prior asking to get access to the raisethefist.com box. Luckily the guy running the company declined to give them any access. Yet the FBI was actively trying to get their hands on the server once again.

I brought the server back to Long Beach and hooked it up to my residential DSL struggling to keep the site online amidst the threat of feds coming with another search warrant to seize it. Luckily I received assistance to have it moved to a remote location again.

Once I was sentenced, I was ordered to self-surrender to the U.S marshals in 30 days. At this point the death threats came in just about every day. I was told I'd be leaving prison in a body bag. At first I thought the threats were coming from just a couple of people. When I tracked them I noticed they were coming from many different areas and different people.

A few months prior to being sentenced I also received information from anonymous persons telling me there was a price on my head set by the NSA and other higher-ups in the government. I was informed about 3 different supposed assassination attempts to be carried out. I was given some detail on who was serving the contracts, names , license plate numbers, etc. Other then that I was told it was a surprise I was still alive but everything was being taken care of and I was being "looked out for."

After I self-surrendered to the U.S marshals I was taken to San Bernardino detention facility to await transfer to my designated institution. It just so happens that the San Bernardino Detention Facility has the largest number of Aryan Brotherhood and neo-Nazis.

The U.S Marshals, FBI, USPO, and all other government agencies and persons working on my case all knew about the daily death threats coming from neo-Nazis saying they were determined to have me killed once I entered prison. And yet I’m placed in an institution with the largest population of Aryan Brotherhood and neo-Nazis.

I was in the general population dormitory for about a day and a half. I noticed the whites were all in the back of the dormitory. My name is called over the intercom to be escorted to one of the deputy offices. Before I leave one of the white inmates walks up to the front of the dormitory and approaches me. I've never even talked to this guy before. He seems extremely interested in my whereabouts and asks where I’m going. I tell him I don't have a clue. He asks me to find out and tell him when I get back. I get escorted to the office by a deputy sheriff where two detectives from San Bernardino County are waiting to talk to me. They start asking me questions about raisethefist.com such as who was now running the web site. I declined to answer. Then they ask about the death threats I had been receiving prior to coming in. They tell me that a price is on my head and all of the neo-Nazis and Aryan Brotherhoods know where I was and word was out. They tell me the reason why they decided to intervene wasn't to stop anybody from getting hurt but instead it was allot of paperwork if something did happen. San Bernardino would have blood on their hands they didn't want to deal with. So I was placed into PC (protective custody) until I was airlifted to Oklahoma Federal Transfer center where I spent 2 weeks in the hole, then finally to Tucson FCI where I spent another week in the hole before being let out onto the yard in general population.

CONTINUED SURVEILLANCE AFTER RELEASE...FEDS MOVE IN ACROSS THE STREET

My official release date was Sept 1, 2004. After I was released I stayed at my mom's apartment for a few months before I got back on my feet. I had pretty much lost everything so I had to start over. Only 2 weeks being out and the FBI had already moved in across the street. A man and a woman who both worked at the same Westwood Federal Building that Special Agent John I. Pi worked at along with the rest of his team.

They had the blinds closed 24/7 on all the windows. And if a window didn't come with blinds they covered it with black cloth. I noticed something wasn't right early on when I was outside at night walking my dog. I notice the guy who just moved into the unit driving up in his blue car. He parks and sees me across the street and doesn't get out. I walk next to his car and stop and he freezes up. Then I walk the opposite direction down the street and he watches me the whole time through his rear-view mirror. When I’m out of sight he drives off. Then he comes back thinking I’m not around, parks his car, and enters the unit. I noticed there was something definitely strange about the look he gave me but I didn't want to jump to conclusions so quickly. It was later confirmed through a neighbor that they indeed worked at the Westwood federal building. Undercover agents shouldn't talk to neighbors about where they work. But it was pretty obvious anyway. Sometimes when they came home at odd hours of the night and they forgot to take off the security badges around their necks. We have photographs. After about 5 months they finally left.

Today the case is still far from over. I’m still serving the 3 years of strict probation which prohibits me from having any access to a computer as well as associating with anyone who espouses violence for political change (whoever that might be). And due to the nature of the case any time I get stopped or pulled over by the police and my name is run I'm detained because it say's I have "terrorist ties." Harassment and surveillance still continues to this day.

Nonetheless, I'm writing this to show people just how deep this NSA wiretapping and surveillance issue goes. This article is only a summary on my case. This whole issue is far deeper than the Department of Defense simply profiling demonstrators at an anti-war march in Hollywood. And if you happened to be profiled because you attended an anti-war march in Hollywood I’m sure it went far beyond just taking your picture and name and putting you in a database. The fact that every single one of these big anti-war marches are routed down streets with the most security cameras on them speaks for itself.

Bush, Cheney, the NSA, FBI , etc. They're all trying to justify their domestic spying program saying it was necessary to stop terrorists attacks in the U.S. Let's not forgot about the countless people who "look Muslim" or "look middle-eastern" or "look Arab" who were detained and held for months with absolutely no charges. Taken from their homes and their families and eventually deported. Let's stop looking at how the "war on terrorism" targeted political decent for one minute and look how it was targeted against your average citizen simply because of the way he or she looks. Let's stop looking at the police repression used against anti-war marches for a minute and look at how people who never attended a single protest or demonstration in their life suddenly ended up in a 24-hour lockdown maximum security federal prison cell. This is national security. It has nothing to do with stopping "terrorism." Some say we're moving closer and closer to a police state. The fact of the matter is we've already been in a police state. And it's just advanced to the next level. What are we going to do about it? Continue to vote? Continue to pay the price? Will we continue to participate in this political circus of democrats and republicans which is nothing more than a tool to keep the people demobilized and distracted from building a revolutionary movement? Are we going to wait until the next presidential selection only to be bamboozled again, and again, and again? Or are we going to finally realize that we will only get what we are organized to take.


For more information on Sherman's case and contact info please visit http://www.freesherman.org or
http://www.raisethefist.com

Sherman was released from federal prison in 2004 with 3 years of strict probation. He has since been focusing on writing a book about his case and working on music projects playing with the group Colectivo Error.

this article was originally posted at
http://www.infoshop.org
Saturday, February 25 2006 @ 01:03 PM PST

February 21, 2006

10-Year U.S. Strategic Plan For Detention Camps Revives Proposals From Oliver North

from PacificNews.org

by Peter Dale Scott
peterdalescott.net
New America Media
Feb 21, 2006

Excerpt:

The Halliburton subsidiary KBR (formerly Brown and Root) announced on Jan. 24 that it had been awarded a $385 million contingency contract by the Department of Homeland Security to build detention camps. Two weeks later, on Feb. 6, Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff announced that the Fiscal Year 2007 federal budget would allocate over $400 million to add 6,700 additional detention beds (an increase of 32 percent over 2006). This $400 million allocation is more than a four-fold increase over the FY 2006 budget, which provided only $90 million for the same purpose.

Both the contract and the budget allocation are in partial fulfillment of an ambitious 10-year Homeland Security strategic plan, code-named ENDGAME, authorized in 2003. According to a 49-page Homeland Security document on the plan, ENDGAME expands "a mission first articulated in the Alien and Sedition Acts of 1798." Its goal is the capability to "remove all removable aliens," including "illegal economic migrants, aliens who have committed criminal acts, asylum-seekers (required to be retained by law) or potential terrorists."

read full article

February 20, 2006

RISING UP: THE ALAMS at MoMA Documentary Fortnight

Alisha

MOMA DOCUMENTARY FORTNIGHT SCHEDULE for CALL FOR CHANGE SERIES

Location:
All screenings will take place in The Museum of Modern Art s Roy and Niuta Titus Theaters. The MoMA s address is 11 West 53rd Street / New York, NY / 10019

Getting to the MoMA:
Subway: E or V to Fifth Avenue/53 Street; B, D, or F to 47-50 Streets/Rockefeller Center.
Bus: M1, 2, 3, 4, 5 to 53 Street. (For more detailed directions, please see http://www.moma.org/visit_moma/directions.html)

Monday, February 20

6:00 pm
Third World Newsreel: Call for Change [part 1]. 2005. USA.
The activist media group Third World Newsreel has produced a series of shorts on national issues and on New York City's communities of color. Program includes:

Rising Up: The Alams, on a Bangladeshi family fighting the post-9/11 anti-immigrant crackdown;
Saj: Muslim in America, on a Muslim woman living in New York;
Dastar: Defending Sikh Identity, on job discrimination against Sikhs;
Among the First to Die, on Guatamalan immigrants in the Marines;
Just Ralph, on a Palestinian immigrant; and Work and Respect, on organizing domestic workers.

Program 69 min. New York premiere.
(Introduced by Dorothy Thigpen from Third World Newsreel, and the directors).

8:30 p.m.
Third World Newsreel: Call for Change [part 2]. 2005. USA.
Untold Legacy, on reparations for slavery;
Latino Poets Speak Out, a series of performance pieces;
Fulton and Franklin, on police bag searches;
Voices in the Street, on security at the Republican National Convention;
Military Option, on the military recruitment of high schoolers;
Military Promises, on mental health in the military;
She Rhymes Like a Girl, on Black women rappers;
Walking with FUREE, on demonstrations by Welfare recipients.

Program 75 min. New York premiere.
(Introduced by Thigpen and the directors).

February 04, 2006

Revolution in the Gulf Coast

Being a pretty minimal blogger, I don't usually follow up on events I participate in -- I wonder how many people in documentary production have the time. But I have to take a moment to praise Common Ground Relief. If you have not forgotten the thousands of people whose lives have been disrupted by Hurricane Katrina, or if you have forgotten but have the capacity to remember, please visit their site and support them however you can.

I didn't know a great deal about Common Ground Relief before my comrade Greg Pason (whom I know and greatly respect from his work with the Committee for the Release of Farouk Abdel-Muhti) asked me to show some of my first-hand Katrina footage for the meeting last Wednesday, After Katrina: Solidarity Not Charity, Reclaiming the Gulf. But I was honestly amazed at the work Sean White documented and described in his slide show presentation.

Not only is Common Ground Relief a genuine grassroots organization, but they've been highly effective at responding to the needs of the communities in the Greater New Orleans area. Rather than impose a set of programs, they base their work on communicating with the residents and finding out what they actually need. They've become the primary aid organization in areas federal and state agencies have failed. They've established solid channels to fill food and medical needs, and help residents save their homes from destruction by damage, mold and the encroachment of profit-driven elements.

There's a quiet, growing form of resistance to the rapacious, warmongering, plutocratic spiral the U.S. is in now. It's a form of revolution that doesn't waste energy either fighting a corrupt regime or pleading with it. They just go and do what needs to be done, outside the system.