Josh Harper Finally Testifies

On February 8 animal rights activist Josh Harper finally testified before a federal grand jury about what he knows about the Animal Liberation Front and Earth Liberation Front.

Harper was supposed to testify before the grand jury last year, but instead spent four months as a fugitive attempting to avoid testifying. Charged with criminal contempt, he was arrested in September 2000 and is scheduled to go on trial March 6 on the contempt charge.

Hoping to avoid prosecution, Harper cut a deal with federal authorities in which he agreed to submit to questioning by the grand jury. According to The Oregonian, after testifying Harper said that he was asked about a number of ALF/ELF crimes going back to 1997 and that he invoked his rights under the Fifth Amendment several times to avoid answering questions.

Source:

Panel questions anarchist sought in eco-terrorist case. Bryan Denson, The Oregonian, February 9, 2001.

Wall Street Journal on ELF Guilty Plea

Yesterday the Wall Street Journal ran an unsigned piece of commentary about the guilty plea recently entered by a young man who admitted to burning homes in the Long Island, New York, area in the name of the Earth Liberation Front.

The Journal worries that,

…despite ELF’s extraordinary run of arson, public outrage hasn’t caught up with the crimes, which the group boasts about on various Internet sites. Because its targets have been corporations, construction sites and research labs, there has been an inclination to dismiss the group as misguided idealists.

…think of the reaction had that been, say, an abortion clinic or an African-American church.

Regardless of why the ELF doesn’t have a higher profile in the media, a more interesting question is whether the FBI plans on taking action against the ELF web site. In all the news reports about the plea bargain, prominent mention has been made of the fact that the arsonists in Long Island downloaded everything they needed to know about how to torch the luxury homes from the ELF site.

In fact the ELF web site distributes an Animal Liberation Front manual in PDF form, Arson Around with Auntie ALF, describing in detail how to go about committing acts of arson. Although they have standard “don’t try this at home” warnings, those are unlikely to be a very solid defense against criminal conspiracy charges, possibly under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organization statute, and even more likely a |Racketeering Influenced and
Corrupt Organization| civil suit by developers.

Source:

Review & Outlook. Wall Street Journal, February 14, 2001.

ELF Terrorist Pleads Guilty

Just weeks after Earth Liberation Front activists burned down luxury homes in Long Island, New York, Newsday and ABC reported that 17-year-old Jared McIntyre secretly plead guilty to the crime on February 10. McIntyre is reportedly working with authorities in identifying those who helped him commit the arsons.

McIntyre is believed to have been one of four individuals — all juveniles or young adults — responsible for a string of arsons committed in the name of the ELF. In all, nine homes under construction were burned, while there were 10 other incidents of property destruction in New York’s Suffolk County, including the destruction of a field containing genetically modified corn.

As is typical with Animal Liberation Front/Earth Liberation Front crimes, McIntyre was a part of a self-contained cell that committed crimes in the name of the ELF, but likely had no contact with any larger organizational structure. According to news reports, the FBI believes there may be a larger structure to the ELF, but this is likely wishful thinking on the part of the FBI.

McIntyre met his fellow terrorists at an animal rights rally in Port Jefferson, New York, in October 2000. They then downloaded instructions on how to carry out arson from an ELF web site. When McIntyre’s house was searched, police found spray paint and explosives.

McIntyre reached a plea agreement whereby he plead guilty as an adult to a charge of arson rather than risk a trial where he would have likely been charged with constructing bombs, possession of explosives, criminal conspiracy and other crimes. Meanwhile McIntyre’s agreement to plead guilty to adult charge means prosecutors don’t have to go through lengthy hearings trying to move his case from juvenile to adult court.

Source:

Teen guilty of arson. Newsday, February 11, 2001.

A green crusade erupts in flames. Tom Kenworthy, USA Today, February 14, 2001.

ALF/ELF Target McDonald's Corporate Headquarters

In a press release, the Animal Liberation Front and Earth Liberation Front took responsibility for the December 7, 2000 vandalization of McDonald’s corporate office in Long Island, New York. According to the release,

At roughly 1:30am Friday, December 7th, members of the ALF and ELF descended upon McDonald’s corporate offices in Haupauge. Here we smashed over 10 windows and spraypainted anti meat slogans against environmental destruction. We will not be stopped.

For good measure, ALF press officer/activist added that, “McDonald’s represents the core idea of American capitalism which places profit, power, and greed ahead of life.” Whereas vandalism is life affirming.

Source:

Earth Liberation Front Claim Joint Credit for Economic Sabotage at McDonald’s Corporate Offices on Long Island, NY. Front Line Information Service, press release, December 9, 2000.

Edward Walsh on the Animal Enterprise Act

Several years ago, the United States created the Animal Enterprise Protection Act which was supposed to give courts and prosecutors more power to go after animal rights terrorists. The results have been less than stellar — only a single activist has ever been convicted under the law and there are now more terrorist acts than ever before, with the animal rights terrorists expanding into environmental issues. What is to be done?

Edward Walsh wrote an excellent review of the Animal Enterprise Protection Act for Lab Animal which is reprinted on the web site of the National Animal Interest Alliance (Walsh is a member of NAIA’s board of directors). While Walsh correctly perceives the Animal Enterprise Protection Act’s problems, I must respectfully disagree with a good portion of his analysis.

Why is the law so rarely invoked (i.e., almost never)? Walsh thinks it is because of confusion and loopholes within the law itself. I suspect there is a different dynamic at work — namely there is almost no political pressure to actually devote significant resources to exposing and prosecuting animal rights terrorists.

For this, the animal rights terrorists have largely themselves to thank. By carefully focusing exclusively on property crimes and avoiding injury or death to human beings, the Animal Liberation Front makes it difficult to justify the sort of massive investigation that has focused on extremist anti-abortion protesters who have frequently inflicted injuries and even committed murder. Moreover, by targeting property the vandals simultaneously create a great deal of positive outpourings from within the animal rights movement, while at the same time avoiding the sort of national negative press that might otherwise galvanize a public outcry against them.

Think about it — when was the last time an act of animal rights terrorism was included in a network news broadcast. The only recent instances I can think of were the attack on a laboratory at the University of Minnesota and the Earth Liberation Front’s arson in Colorado, neither of which created any sort of sustained outrage among the public.

Add to that mix the extreme difficulty in tracking down ALF and ELF terrorists. As the FBI has repeatedly said, political terrorists organized into small autonomous cells (as the ALF/ELF are) are the most difficult terrorists to catch. To date the terrorists who have been caught and prosecuted in the United States have been apprehended largely by accident (i.e. the terrorists made a serious mistake which brought them to the attention of police). Moreover, since there is no overarching ALF organization, but rather ALF is more like a brand name for animal rights terrorism, catching the perpetrator of a given act of terrorism only implicates maybe four or five other activists at most. The result is a minimal payoff for an extremely difficult task.

It is doubtful that, barring any such outcry from the public, police and prosecutors are going to devote significant resources to cracking down on animal rights terrorism. I suspect that it will, unfortunately, require the loss of life before the proper resources are allocated this important task. And, unfortunately, I think loss of life is becoming more and more likely.

Although they have been pretty successful at evading capture, however, animal rights terrorists have been singularly unsuccessful at creating political change in the United States. Frustration at their political impotence seems to be motivating the terrorists to take more daring and dramatic actions, and it is only a matter of time before there is a loss of life associated with these actions (there have, in fact, already been some close calls in the United States).

Once the political will is there, the Animal Enterprise Protection Act will be largely irrelevant. In fact it is hard to understand the point of having such an act in the first place except as a symbolic gesture. It would be far better off to simply charge animal rights terrorists with arson, burglary or what have you and ask judges to consider the political nature of their crimes during the sentencing phase.

One idea I oppose strongly is Walsh’s suggestion that there be a federal death penalty for animal rights terrorists who commit murder. It would be better to see a mandatory life without parole for people who commit acts of political murder.

Source:

The Animal Enterprise Protection Act: A scientist’s perspective brings the law into focus. Edward J. Walsh, Lab Animal, February 2000, v.29, #2.

Why Josh Harper Won't Testify to Grand Jury

On Friday, November 17, 2000, animal rights activist Josh Harper was scheduled to be indicted in Portland, Oregon, for refusing to testify before a grand jury. Harper has in the past claimed to be an innocent conduit of information from other, anonymous, activists who have carried out terrorist attacks on animal enterprises. Although apparently not a target of any investigations himself, federal prosecutors subpoenaed Harper to testify before a grand jury investigating such attacks. Prosecutors likely believe that Harper has direct knowledge of who is carrying out Animal Liberation Front/Environmental Liberation Front attacks.

Harper’s own behavior makes it seem likely that he has such knowledge. Harper has repeatedly told animal rights-friendly audiences that he has no idea who is behind the ALF attacks, but refuses to appear before a grand jury and say, “I have no idea who is behind the ALF attacks.” Why?

If you believe Harper, its because his way of protesting the oppressive state. If you read between the lines, however, Harper’s got the best reason in the world for not testifying — he almost certainly does know who was behind the attacks and if he testifies otherwise he would open himself up to later perjury charges.

A recent statement by Harper seems to indicate he knows more than he claims. According to Harper,

This is a first in our movement, and will set a precedent that could be very harmful. The government is essentially saying, “Snitch on your friends or go to jail” Failure to cooperate with a grand jury is going to start costing people years of their lives.

If, as Harper claims, he has no knowledge of who committed several prominent ALF attacks, why would he be forced to snitch on friends before the grand jury? It might come as a shock to animal rights activists, but generally “their my friends” is not considered a good reason not to testify about criminal actions of acquaintances.

Sources:

Don’t Let Harper’s Jailing Go Unnoticed. Frontline Information Service press release, November 15, 2000.

Josh Harper Statement: Increase the Momentum. Frontline Information Service press release, November 11, 2000.

No-show spurs FBI to arrest Eugene activist. Mark Larabee, The Oregonian, September, 29, 2000.

Josh Harper Statement. Frontline Information Service press release, October 2, 2000.