Authorities in Massachusetts were never told the Russian
government warned the United States of suspected Boston Marathon bomber
Tamerlan Tsarnaev, but investigators were largely preoccupied with another
problem at the time: protesters.
The US Federal Bureau of Investigation opened a probe into
Tamerlan Tsarnaev two years ago on the recommendation of Moscow, but closed
their case without concluding he posed any threat — and without warning
officials local to Boston that a suspected radical extremist was residing in
their town. On the other hand, evidence has proved that a Boston police
counterterror intelligence unit spent a significant amount of time and money in
2011 using a US Department of Homeland Security-funded fusion center to spy on
and monitor protest groups, the Tea Party Movement and including Occupy Wall
Street anti-war demonstrators.
On Thursday, Boston Police Commissioner Ed Davis admitted to
a congressional panel that federal agents failed to warn his department of
Tsarnaev, an ethnic Chechen who died last month during a firefight with police.
Investigators believe he orchestrated a terror plot during the April 15 race
with the help of his brother, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, who has since been
apprehended, charged and confined to a federal facility.
Hours after Davis told lawmakers “we would have liked to
know” about the Russian tip-off, NBC News national investigative correspondent
Michael Isikoff accused the FBI and DHS for failing to do their job, all the
while concentrating their resources on a campaign to investigate peaceful
demonstrators.
Last October, the American Civil Liberties Union in
Massachusetts published a trove of documents confirming that the Boston Police
Department spied on protesters and even relied on their local federally-funded
fusion centers to further their probe.
“[O]fficers assigned to the Boston Regional Intelligence Center
[BRIC] at the Boston Police Department are collecting and keeping information
about constitutionally protected speech and political activity,” the ACLU
announced at the time.
“What’s happening in this city is really disturbing, and if
you talk to activists who have been out on the streets protesting war for 10
years, protesting on behalf of immigrants’ rights or workers’ rights, they will
tell you that this is not a surprise,” Kade Crockford of the ACLU told RT then.
“The Boston Police Department has clearly been monitoring political speech for
some time in this city.”
This week, Isikoff calls into question why that conduct was
approved of but an investigation into Tsarnaev was not.
“The police monitoring of the activities of Tea Party and Occupy
Boston -- an off-shoot of the Occupy Wall Street protests that swept the
country in 2011 -- came during a period after the U.S. government received the
second of two warnings from the Russian government about the radical Islamic
ties of alleged Boston Marathon bomber Tamerlan Tsarnaev,” he wrote.
In fact, Isikoff goes on to note that Boston police actually
investigated protesters — not potential terrorists — hours after US
intelligence was warned of Tsarnaev for a second time.
“The internal police documents about the activities of the
BRIC show that on Sept. 30, 2011 — just two days after the second Russian
warning about Tsarnaev was sent to the CIA — the Boston police unit was focused
on an upcoming ‘Take Back Boston Rally’ planned for the city’s Dewey Square,”
he wrote.
In the wake of last month’s tragedy, lawmakers across the
country have requested more counterterrorism resources, particularly
surveillance cameras, in hopes of deterring future attacks. Those tools were
already plentiful and available to law enforcement, though, and have been since
the DHS began erecting fusion centers during the George W. Bush presidency.
Days after the marathon, the president of the National
Fusion Center Association Mike Pena began a statement to the media writing, “I
want to tell the nation about the hard work that our fusion centers do every
day to protect citizens across the United States.”
The BRIC facility in Massachusetts, Pena said, was “doing
everything possible to support the analysis and processing of information
related to the investigation.” If they had acted earlier on Russia’s warning,
though — and not targeted protesters — the bombing might not have even
happened. Instead, wrote Isikoff, US homeland security grants were being used
to monitor protesters, “including tracking the Facebook pages and websites of
the protesters and writing reports on the potential impact on ‘commercial and
financial sector assets’ in downtown areas.”
Previously, Massachusetts State Police spokesperson David
Procopio told the Boston Globe that his agency — which oversees the BRIC — was
left in the dark when Russia warned of Tsarnaev.
“We were not privy to the tip,’’ he admitted. “They didn’t
share that information with us.”
“Without that information, the Fusion Center was never in a
position to help federal authorities connect the dots on a potentially
dangerous person,” explained the Globe.
Days before the ACLU published their filings last October, a
Senate subcommittee published a 141-page report on fusion centers that made a
case for shutting down the facilities and saving an estimated $1.4 billion.
“The Subcommittee’s investigation could not verify that the
statutory basis for DHS’ involvement in fusion centers – to strengthen federal
counterterrorism efforts – was reflected in the department’s efforts. Congress
should require DHS to conform its efforts to match its counterterrorism
statutory purpose, or redefine DHS’ fusion center mission,” the committee
wrote. Elsewhere, lawmakers said the only thing fusion centers seemed to do
right as collect “a bunch of crap.”
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