That was a quite detailed article that ought to catch the attention of
the DHS group that handles communications shortly, and quite rapidly
you will no longer be able to purchase a "virtual radar" array .

Unfortunately for them, The devices are in civilian hands, amd
apparently the right ones.

My Asberger's is acting up, hang on...
(Terminal Truthseeking will be a DSM-V syndrome separate from Asberger's)

Blogger stays in prison, defying grand jury order

Demian Bulwa, Chronicle Staff Writer
Monday, October 16, 2006
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2006/10/16/MNG7FLQ5OT1.DTL

Blogger and anarchist Josh Wolf, spending his 57th day in federal
prison today for refusing to surrender video he shot of a violent San
Francisco protest, is well on his way to becoming the longest-jailed
journalist in U.S. history.

To the government, the 24-year-old San Franciscan is hindering a
federal grand jury investigation into serious crimes -- an attack on a
police officer who suffered a fractured skull during the July 2005
rally and the attempted burning of his patrol car.

To Wolf and his supporters, including prominent press organizations,
he is the latest victim of a Bush administration assault on
journalists and is being punished because he won't help a law
enforcement fishing expedition. Wolf says he didn't even film the
crimes in question.

But Wolf's case features its own thorny questions. Among them are
where the line between journalist and activist is drawn, and which
side of that line Wolf is on. Another is whether federal agents are
using the investigation into the rally as part of a broader attack on
the anarchist movement, as Wolf contends.

The standoff was brought into sharper focus last week when an attorney
for Wolf described for The Chronicle the portions of the video that
Wolf has withheld from the grand jury since being called to testify in
February. Wolf had posted an edited version on the Internet, parts of
which were shown in television news reports after the protest.

The attorney, Martin Garbus, said the footage does not depict the
crimes in question, but features interviews with about 10 protesters
who shed masks to speak into Wolf's camera lens.

"They expected he would safeguard them, which is what he is doing,"
Garbus said. "When they take off the masks and talk to this guy,
they're assuming it will not be shown in a hostile place," such as a
grand jury room.

FBI spokesman Joseph Schadler said Wolf's footage could help
investigators even if it doesn't show a police officer being clubbed
or someone trying to burn a squad car. If the government found
potential witnesses, Schadler said, "that's a huge difference from a
fishing expedition for anarchists."

In a telephone interview from the Federal Correctional Institution in
Dublin, Wolf said he could not surrender the video because he would be
acting as an arm of law enforcement, damaging relationships with
sources. He also questioned the government's motives.

If he screened the video for the grand jury, he said, "They would say,
'Do you know this person, or this person, or this person?' They would
then take all those people and call them into the grand jury, the same
way the House Un-American Activities Committee did to create a list of
Communists."

Asked if he would testify in front of a grand jury under any
circumstance, Wolf said, "I feel that secret courts are antithetical
to democracy," but declined to give a direct answer.

Wolf's saga began July 8, 2005, when anarchists led a rally in the
Mission District against an economic summit taking place in Scotland.
Protesters lit fireworks, pulled news racks into streets and
confronted police. Two men and a woman were arrested.

According to a police report, Officer Peter Shields and his partner
encountered a group of masked rioters and, outnumbered, tried to drive
off. But a protester placed a large Styrofoam sign under their car,
disabling it, the report said.

Then, while separated from his partner, Shields was struck on the head
with a blunt object that fractured his skull, the report said.

Protesters "ignited pyrotechnic devices" under the patrol car "in an
attempt to ignite the entire vehicle," the report said. The car did
not burn. The report says it suffered a damaged taillight but was
"drivable."

The next day, Wolf posted footage on his video blog, www.joshwolf.net,
where he described himself as an "artist, an activist, an anarchist
and an archivist." The longest segment showed Shields' partner trying
to hold down the protester who had allegedly shoved the Styrofoam
under the car.

Wolf wrote on his blog, "I think that this was a case of wrong place
and wrong time for actions which may at some point be necessary but at
this point were nothing but childish random acts of anarchy that serve
no purpose but to further divide the community. I feel that the issue
of the cop that was injured was one of collective self-defense or
mutual aid. I neither condemn nor condone the action of whoever struck
the blow."

Wolf and his lawyers say Shields was assaulted while Wolf was busy
filming his partner -- an assertion that appears to be consistent with
the police report. The partner reported that he was arresting the
protester when he heard a call of an officer down.

In an interview, Wolf said he had seen a smoldering piece of Styrofoam
near the patrol car when he walked up to it, but had not pointed his
camera at it. "It was a nonevent," he said.

Wolf also posted his video at in www.dybay.org, a media collective
that has in the past been monitored by police. And he sold a "selected
portion" to KRON-TV, he wrote, "in an attempt to steer KRON's story
toward a more balanced outlook of the event."

Within days, records show, San Francisco police asked the FBI-led
Joint Terrorism Task Force for help in finding out who assaulted
Shields. According to Wolf, a police inspector and two FBI agents
visited him at his home and asked him to hand over his tape, but he
refused. Later, he was subpoenaed.

Wolf said his visitors asked broad questions about anarchists and
whether he routinely filmed them.

Wolf's subsequent incarceration -- he spent August behind bars at the
order of U.S. District Judge William Alsup, was freed during his
initial appeal, then returned to prison Sept. 22 -- comes at a time of
alarm for freedom-of-the-press advocates. Federal prosecutors also are
trying to imprison Chronicle reporters Lance Williams and Mark
Fainaru-Wada for refusing to reveal who provided confidential grand
jury testimony in the steroid probe involving the Bay Area Laboratory
Co-Operative.

Wolf wound up behind bars because U.S. Attorney Kevin Ryan's office,
rather than local prosecutors, pursued the case. Normally, assaults
and arsons are state crimes, and in California a journalist would be
protected by the state's shield law from testifying about his sources.

Federal prosecutors got around that, however, by saying the arson of a
police car would be a federal crime because the Police Department gets
funding from Washington. There is no law protecting journalists from
cooperating with federal grand juries.

Ryan spokesman Luke Macaulay said the case was not taken over by
federal prosecutors to gain Wolf's video. He said the grand jury is
focused only on events at the rally but is "not restricted to the
charge of attempted arson of a police vehicle."

To Wolf's defenders, the case reinforces the need for a federal shield law.

"This is yet another sign that the government doesn't understand what
journalists do," said Gregg Leslie, legal defense director of the
Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press. He said Wolf risks being
"seen as an agent of the police and the state," which would destroy
his credibility and could put him in danger.

Leslie said Wolf's sympathy for the protesters did not make him less
of a journalist, as long as he did not have a hand in organizing the
rally.

A three-judge panel of the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals,
however, dismissed Wolf's credentials. In a footnote to its decision
last month noting that reporters have no special immunity from federal
grand jury subpoenas, the judges said Wolf wouldn't qualify for
protection under California's shield law because he wasn't employed by
a newspaper, magazine or wire service -- a point that Wolf says
ignores the changing media landscape.

"The notion that I needed to be under contract by a major media outlet
is preposterous," Wolf said. "What is a journalist? There's no
journalist license. The easiest way I can see of judging a journalist
is whether his peers judge him to be a journalist."

But not all journalists believe Wolf is doing the right thing.

Reporters have parted with unaired video footage before, and in Wolf's
case, "martyrdom might be avoided with a little common sense," said
Mark Feldstein, a longtime television reporter who is now an associate
professor of media and public affairs at George Washington University
in Washington, D.C.

Without a strong reason to defy the grand jury, such as the protection
of confidential sources, Wolf should find a way to compromise and
release the video, Feldstein said -- perhaps by posting it in full on
his video blog.

Wolf said he has no plans to release the video. Unless there is a
major shift in the case, he faces the possibility of becoming the
longest-jailed journalist ever in the United States, surpassing
Vanessa Leggett, a Texas true-crime author jailed for 168 days in 2001
for refusing to identify her sources to a federal grand jury
investigating a homicide.

Wolf could be jailed until July, when the term of the grand jury ends.

"It's not all that bad," he said. "The worst part is not being able to
go outside when I want a breath of fresh air, and not being able to
listen to the kind of music I like to listen to. Being a slave to
AM/FM radio is not the same as having my iPod."

Wolf said work on his next project isn't hindered by his surroundings.
He wants to create a blog for prisoners.

E-mail Demian Bulwa at dbulwa @ sfchronicle.com.

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