The Case of Sherman Austin: Muzzled Activist in an Age of Terror
Wednesday, February 16, 2005 at 07:45PM
TheSpook
On the afternoon of January 24, 2002, approximately 25 federal
agents, guns in hand, stormed the home of Sherman Austin, a
Sherman Oaks, California activist who founded www.raisethefist.com, an
online site that hosted many political activists' websites. The federal
agents, who had been monitoring Austin's Internet activities for
several months, seized his computers and other personal
belongings, including anti-war and anti-globalization literature.
"They showed me a search warrant, and I just glanced at it They
just went into the house. They searched all the rooms in the
house. They knew where my room was. They went back there, looked
at all the computers, asked me to come in and tell them what all
the computers were for specifically so they knew how to dismantle
the network I had been running," Austin recalled. "They
searched the garage, pretty much everywhere with their guns still
out and drawn. They still had people surrounding the house with
their weapons drawn." When the agents later left Austin's
home, his room had been ransacked, but they failed to charge him
with a crime. Austin, bewildered by the search, still planned on
driving to New York City to protest the World Economic Forum in
early February 2002. Upon arriving in New York, though, Austin
was quickly apprehended by city police. "While I was in jail,
they handcuffed me and took me to a backroom, where a detective
from the FBI and a Secret Service agent were, and they
interrogated me for about three or four hours," Austin said.
"During this whole time, I kept noticing more and more FBI agents
walking in and out of the room. They asked me stupid questions
like whether I was a terrorist or involved in any terrorist
organizations. I told them, 'No,' and it's funny, one of the
agents looked at me like I was seriously a terrorist and that I
was lying to him." [more
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