In These Times
May 9, 2002
by Hank Hoffman
In the wake of
February 12 congressional hearings on the purported "eco-terrorism"
threat, Jeffrey Kerr, lawyer for People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals
(PETA), wonders whether activists will soon be asked, "Are you now or have
you ever been a vegetarian?"
Kerr speaks only half in jest. PETA was targeted as a supporter
of eco-terrorism at the hearings because in April 2001, the animal rights group
donated $1,500 to the Earth Liberation Front (ELF) Press Office. In a letter
from Rep. Scott McInnis (R-Colorado), PETA was asked to defend the contribution.
The group said the money was meant to "assist [then ELF spokesman] Craig
Rosebraugh with legal expenses related to free speech."
The congressional hearings focused overwhelmingly on the property
destruction committed by groups like the Animal Liberation Front (ALF) and ELF.
McInnis, chairman of the House Resources Subcommittee on Forests and Forest
Health and hearings organizer, has made a fight against eco-terrorism his new
crusade. He made waves last fall when he sent a letter, signed by several other
Republicans, to eight mainstream environmental groups - Greenpeace, Sierra Club,
National Wildlife Federation, Natural Resources Defense Council, Earthjustice
and League of Conservation Voters. Waving the bloody shirt of September 11, he challenged
them to "publicly disavow the actions of eco-terrorist organizations"
like ELF and ALF.
Although none of the groups either advocated or committed such
acts - and some, like the Sierra Club, had a history of denouncing them--they
all responded affirmatively, albeit with varying degrees of enthusiasm or
disdain. Earthjustice executive director Vawter Parker wrote that he was "disgusted
by the assumption of the signers of the letter that the people answer to
Congress; it used to be the other way around." McInnis' letter was viewed
as a clumsy attempt to establish guilt by association, and his subsequent claim
of having formed a "coalition" with the groups to combat eco-terrorism,
laughable.
"It's the newest brand of McCarthyism, because lies and
half-truths are being spewed forth by people in the pockets of
industries," Kerr says of being targeted at the hearings. "It's
frightening from a freedom and liberty point of view when you are labeled a
terrorist because you're helping to defend an individual's fundamental
constitutional rights." PETA has had nothing to do with the actions
labeled as eco-terrorism, Kerr says, and neither condemns nor condones them.
ELF and ALF - more autonomous cells and individuals than actual
groups - claim to have inflicted upwards of $40 million in property damage over
the past five years. The sabotage campaign has been waged with firebombs and
directed at targets that include lumber companies, a ski resort development and
an agricultural genetic research institute.
ELF guidelines posted online require group members to
"take all necessary precautions against harming any animal, human and
non-human"--and no deaths or serious injuries have resulted from any ELF
or ALF direct actions. Despite their strictures against inflicting harm on
individuals, the two groups are now considered by the FBI to be the country's foremost
domestic terrorism threat. Law enforcement authorities have been largely
unsuccessful in finding and prosecuting the perpetrators, but say that it's
only a matter of time before one of these actions results in death.
As the hearings demonstrated, since September 11, an ongoing
effort to criminalize nonviolent, direct-action dissent by associating it with
violence and property destruction has gained steam. Two bills that would
virtually criminalize protest - and not just violent protest - are now pending
at the state and federal levels. Rep. George Nethercutt (R-Washington)
introduced his Agroterrorism Prevention Act last August to combat attacks on
"plant enterprises" like the University of Washington's Center for
Urban Horticulture, leveled by fire last year.
Under Nethercutt's bill - which upgrades penalties for
conduct "intended to injure, intimidate, or interfere with plant or animal
enterprises" - uprooting a field of genetically engineered corn would be
considered terrorism. Another bill before the Pennsylvania state legislature, hailed
as a "model bill" by the anti-environmental Center for the Defense of
Free Enterprise, would also so broadly define eco-terrorism as possibly to
cover activists in a sit-in blockade at a store selling old growth lumber.
McInnis denies he is motivated by post-September 11 political
opportunism. The hearings, he says, were scheduled last May. "I don't
think we need new legislation. We need awareness."
The acts for which ELF and ALF claim responsibility are already
illegal, he notes. "The question is, how do we get past the Robin Hood
mystique some of these organizations are successful at building?" McInnis
says he will continue to investigate financial contributions to groups like ELF
and ALF.
There are disagreements within the broad environmental movement
as to whether the actions of ALF and ELF actually constitute
"terrorism." Some contend that they don't meet the definition because
they aren't directed at inflicting physical harm to people. In an unsolicited
letter to McInnis, Ray Vaughan of WildLaw, a non-profit environmental law firm,
likened monkeywrenching sabotage to the Boston Tea Party.
ELF itself doesn't characterize what it does as terrorism. But
ironically, Craig Rosebraugh, who was subpoenaed to testify at the hearings and
until recently was ELF's spokesman, may disagree. McInnis is using the
eco-terrorism issue as a "divide and conquer" tactic against the environmental
movement, he says. In a phone interview, he says that he differs from the ELF
in viewing their actions as terrorism - "But I don't consider that
negative."
"I think the actions they engage in are purposely
conducted to cause that fright, to cause terror in industries to make them stop
acting in ways that are contrary to the health of the environment," says
Rosebraugh. Successful social movements, he argues, "have used every tool
in the toolbox. There's the necessity of not only legal campaigns but also, in
most, if not all, occasions, a wholehearted illegal campaign involving
terrorism, property destruction and beyond."
Dan Clore
mailto:clore@columbia-center.org