US Universities Caught Up in National Counterterror Surveillance Network, Targeting Pro-Palestine Student Activists
A nationwide network of counterterrorism surveillance centers is being used to monitor and suppress pro-Palestine student activism on US university campuses. The hubs, set up after 9/11, were designed to facilitate information-sharing between law enforcement agencies but have been exploited to target communities of color and suppress free speech.
The Ohio State University Police Department was warned about an upcoming pro-Palestine demonstration by a local counterterrorism hub in April, prompting swift action from campus administrators. The warning sparked a security response that led to the arrest of 36 students who were occupying a building on campus.
This is not an isolated incident. An investigative series by The Intercept has found that at least five US universities were monitored by fusion centers for their pro-Palestine activism, with millions of pages of documents obtained through public records requests revealing a coordinated effort to suppress dissenting voices.
One university, California State Polytechnic University, Humboldt, took its surveillance efforts to the next level. The campus's IT department tracked IP addresses and user information connected to WiFi in a student-occupied building, while the FBI issued warrants for the search and seizure of devices belonging to protesters.
Experts warn that this kind of coordination between law enforcement agencies and universities is a threat to civil liberties. "Fusion centers have also come under fire for sharing dubious intelligence and escalating local police responses to BLM," said Rory Mir, associate director of community organizing at the Electronic Frontier Foundation. "For universities to knowingly coordinate and feed more information into these systems to target students puts them in harm's way and is a threat to their civil rights."
The trend has its roots in the Biden administration, which laid the groundwork for repressive tactics used by the Trump administration later on.
Research support provided by the nonprofit newsroom Type Investigations.
A nationwide network of counterterrorism surveillance centers is being used to monitor and suppress pro-Palestine student activism on US university campuses. The hubs, set up after 9/11, were designed to facilitate information-sharing between law enforcement agencies but have been exploited to target communities of color and suppress free speech.
The Ohio State University Police Department was warned about an upcoming pro-Palestine demonstration by a local counterterrorism hub in April, prompting swift action from campus administrators. The warning sparked a security response that led to the arrest of 36 students who were occupying a building on campus.
This is not an isolated incident. An investigative series by The Intercept has found that at least five US universities were monitored by fusion centers for their pro-Palestine activism, with millions of pages of documents obtained through public records requests revealing a coordinated effort to suppress dissenting voices.
One university, California State Polytechnic University, Humboldt, took its surveillance efforts to the next level. The campus's IT department tracked IP addresses and user information connected to WiFi in a student-occupied building, while the FBI issued warrants for the search and seizure of devices belonging to protesters.
Experts warn that this kind of coordination between law enforcement agencies and universities is a threat to civil liberties. "Fusion centers have also come under fire for sharing dubious intelligence and escalating local police responses to BLM," said Rory Mir, associate director of community organizing at the Electronic Frontier Foundation. "For universities to knowingly coordinate and feed more information into these systems to target students puts them in harm's way and is a threat to their civil rights."
The trend has its roots in the Biden administration, which laid the groundwork for repressive tactics used by the Trump administration later on.
Research support provided by the nonprofit newsroom Type Investigations.