20. Terror Act Against Animal Activists
Sources:
Vermont Journal of Environmental Law, March 9, 2007
Title: The AETA is Invidiously Detrimental to the Animal Rights
Movement (and Unconstitutional as Well)
Authors: David Hoch and Odette Wilkens
http://www.vjel.org/editorials/2007S/Hoch.Wilkens.Editorial.htm
Green is the New Red, November 14, 2006
Title: US House Passes Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act With Little
Discussion or Dissent
Author: Will Potter
http://www.greenisthenewred.com/blog/2006/11/13/aeta-passes-house-recap/
Earth First! Journal, November, 2006
Title: 22 Years for Free-Speech Advocates
Author: Budgerigar
Student Researcher: Sverre Tysl
Faculty Evaluator: Scott Suneson, MA
The term terrorism has been dangerously expanded to include
acts that interfere, or promote interference, with the operations of
animal enterprises. The Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act (AETA), signed
into law on November 27, 2006, broadens punishment present under the
Animal Enterprises Protection Act (AEPA) of 1992. One hundred and sixty
groups, including the National Lawyers Guild, the Natural Resources
Defense Council, the League of Humane Voters, Physicians Committee
for Responsible Medicine, and the New York City Bar Association, oppose
this Act on grounds that its terminology is dangerously vague and poses
a major conflict to the US Constitution.
The broad definition of an animal enterprise, for example,
may encompass most US businesses: any enterprise that uses or
sells animals or animal products. The phrase loss of any
real or personal property, is elastic enough to include loss of
projected profit. Concerns deepen as protections against interference
extend to any person or entity having a connection to, relationship
with, or transactions with an animal enterprise.
A letter from the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) to Congress
dated March 6, 2006, on behalf of hundreds of thousands of activists
and members and fifty-three affiliates nationwide, explains their
opposition to AETA based on the concern that First Amendment activities
such as demonstrations, leafleting, undercover investigations, and boycotts
may be punishable as acts of terror under the overly vague and open-ended
law.
The ACLU letter maintains, Lawful and peaceful protests that,
for example, urge a consumer boycott of a company that does not use
humane procedures, could be the target of this provision because they
disrupt the companys business. This overbroad provision
might also apply to a whistleblower whose intentions are to stop harmful
or illegal activities by the animal enterprise. The bill will effectively
chill and deter Americans from exercising their First Amendment rights
to advocate for reforms in the treatment of animals.
Author Will Potter argues that the harsher amendments that AETA brings
to its predecessor, AEPA, are hardly necessary, as AEPA was successfully
used to disproportionately prosecute the SHAC 7six animal rights
activists organized to expose the illegal and inhumane operations of
Huntingdon Life Sciencesfor animal enterprise terrorism.
Budgerigar of Earth First! recounts that three of the defendants were
charged under AEPA in September of 2006 with interstate stalking and
conspiracy to commit interstate stalking for organizing demonstrations
and running a website that published names and addresses of those involved
in the vivisection industry. The group was collectively sentenced to
twenty-two years in prison. The supreme irony of this case,
notes Budgerigar, rests in the fact that these activists were
convicted of conspiracy to damage the profits of an animal enterprise,
but not of actually damaging it. Even so, the ever-so-honorable judge
ordered the defendants to pay a total of $1,000,001 in restitution fees.
Yet Congress deemed that AEPA was not a serious enough tool for going
after animal rights extremists. David Hoch and Odette Wilkens
of Equal Justice Alliance ask, How did this bill [AETA] pass the
House?
Hoch and Wilkens explain that in spite of the fact that one hundred
and sixty groups opposed its passage, the House Judiciary Committee
placed AETA on the suspension calendar, under which process bills that
are non-controversial can be passed by voice vote. The vote on the bill
was then held hours earlier than scheduled, with what appears to have
been only six (out of 435) Congresspersons present. Five voted for the
bill, and Dennis Kucinich, who said that [t]his bill will have
a real and chilling effect on peoples constitutionally protected
rights, voted against it. Kucinich went on to say, My concern
about this bill is that it does nothing to address the real issue of
animal protection but, instead targets those advocating animal rights.
Budgerigar concludes, The message could not be more clear: run
an effective activist campaign, and you will be vilified, criminalized,
and imprisoned.
UPDATE BY DAVID HOCH AND ODETTE WILKENS
The Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act (AETA), whose recent passage received
virtually no media coverage, will chill the first amendment rights of
animal advocates and serve as a template for future limitations on the
free speech of all activists. The Act subjects anyone who (1) uses interstate
commerce, (2) with the intent to damage or interfere with an animal
enterprise or with any person or entity associated with an animal
enterprise, and (3) causes any economic damage or corporate profit loss
or bodily injury or fear of bodily injury, or (4) conspires or attempts
to do any of the foregoing, to prosecution for animal enterprise
terrorism.
AETA expands the Animal Enterprise Protection Act (AEPA), under which
six animal activists were convicted and imprisoned for publicly advocating
animal protection activities. The new law requires less serious conduct
than the physical disruption to...an animal enterprise called
for in AEPA, provides stiffer penalties for economic damage and subjects
violators who cause no economic damage, bodily harm or fear of serious
bodily harm, to as much as one year in prison, while also serving as
a predicate for wiretapping.
AETA serves animal enterprises wishing to brand animal activists as
criminals and treating dissent as terrorism, and indicates a trend toward
treating dissent as terrorism, as evidenced by the Justice Departments
current attempt to increase sentences up to twenty years through the
application of a concept called terrorism enhancement.
AETA violates the First and Fourteenth Amendments by proscribing formerly
protected modes of expression and invidiously discriminating against
animal activists through the imposition of harsher sanctions than those
applied to similar or even more serious crimes under the 2005 federal
sentencing guidelines. The Act is also unconstitutionally vague, due
to the indecipherable ambiguity of statutory terms such as interfere
with or profit loss. That vagueness extends to declared
exemptions for lawful boycotts and peaceful protests, which could involve
the same conduct that would subject one to prosecution under AETA. A
lawful boycott is, by definition, the intent to interfere with and cause
economic damage to some enterprise.
Furthermore, an animal enterprise need not be acting lawfully to be
protected under the Act. Illegal animal enterprise is not an affirmative
defense for activities such as whistle-blowing or undercover investigations
into animal cruelty, labor conditions, or environmental violations.
To pass AETA, the House invoked a technicality that allows non-controversial
bills to be approved by a voice vote, and then voted when only six members
were present, although the bill was highly controversial, with approximately
one hundred sixty organizations opposing its passage. The Act is unjust,
oppressive, and unconstitutional and the honorable thing would be for
Congress to repeal it, but without public knowledge and pressure that
is unlikely. Therefore, a more prudent strategy would be to increase
public awareness until a critical mass convinces Congress to rescind
the Act.
To learn more about AETA or become involved in the effort to repeal
it, visit the Equal Justice Alliance website at http://noaeta.org/index.htm.
UPDATE BY WILL POTTER
Shortly after passage of the Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act, the Fur
Commission USA distributed an announcement to supporters proclaiming
Mission Accomplished! Corporations have been eager to appropriate
much of the War on Terrorism rhetoric against activists,
but this was an interesting PR choice. Bush stood on the USS Abraham
Lincoln in front of a banner proclaiming Mission Accomplished
in 2003, only to be dogged by that hubris months, and now years, later.
It looks like corporations may be haunted by similar ghosts in this
domestic front of the War on Terrorism. Not only has the
legislation not deterred illegal activity by underground activists,
it may have actually added fuel to their fire. On January 5, 2007, the
Animal Liberation Frontconsidered by the FBI to be the number
one domestic terrorist threatdistributed an anonymous communiqué
related to vandalism at the home of a University of Utah animal researcher.
It concluded: PS. To all the vivisectors we have yet to visit:
dont bask in your recent legislative victory for too long. This
new animal enterprise law means NOTHING. ALF
It wasnt an isolated incident. Just two days after the president
signed the law, another communiqué claimed credit for vandalizing
the windows of a pharmaceutical company, and underground activists signed
it: Dedicated to the SHAC 7! (The SHAC 7 are a group of
activists convicted under the original legislation. They were never
accused of anything like breaking windows: they conspired
to violate the law by running a website and vocally supporting both
legal and illegal tactics against companies doing business with a controversial
lab).
If the purpose of AETA is to go after underground activists, that mission
is far from accomplished. And if the purpose of AETA is to go after
the above ground, activists are organizing to challenge
that mission as well. Just a few weeks after the legislation passed,
student activists protested outside the offices of US Rep. James P.
McGovern in Massachusetts, naming and shaming him for not being present
for a vote. McGoverns staff quickly stated publicly that he does
not support the law, he would have voted against it if he had known
about a vote, and he would advocate for repeal.
And then there were dozens of community events around the world to
raise awareness about labeling activists as ecoterrorists,
from South Africa to Greece to Minneapolis, MN.
Mission Accomplished? Ahem.
To be clear, in some ways the mission of the Animal Enterprise Terrorism
Act has been accomplished: it has instilled a level of fear in mainstream,
above-ground, legal activists that they may one day be hit with the
T-word in this ever-expanding War on Terrorism.
But through my reporting Ive found that an interesting thing happens
when people learn about this Green Scare and the corporate
and political interests behind it: that fear easily turns to rage. More
than 140 comments have been posted on the article I wrote about the
legislation passing the House. Some of them express fear and a bit of
hopelessness. Many share the tenor of Jersey who wrote:
do they really think everyone is going to crawl into the woodwork
and stand for this?
Since the law passed, I have been speaking regularly in public forums
like the New York City Bar Association, Yale Law School, activist conferences,
and with both mainstream and alternative press, and Ive been able
to see that phenomenon over and over again: questioning and investigating
the legislation, and the money behind it, demystifies the law. It declaws
it.
That knowledge is what ultimately worked against Senator Joseph McCarthy,
succeeding where the loyalty oaths and the naming
names failed. It can work now, too. If reporters do their jobs,
and expose these issues to the general public, people can stop being
afraid and start being pissed.
For more information, please visit www.GreenIsTheNewRed.com.