To silence protesters, BART pulls plug on cell phone antennas

by Dave Id

Oscar-Grant-rally-3-boys-I-am-Oscar-Grant-Fruitvale-BART-010709-by-photographer-Indybay-web, To silence protesters, BART pulls plug on cell phone antennas, Local News & Views The San Francisco Bay Area, historic birthplace of the Free Speech movement and a pioneer in the digital age, is now apparently the first place in the United States to have had its electronic communications deliberately disabled in order to pre-empt a political protest. As an act of prior restraint against potential protesters’ free expression, the Bay Area Rapid Transit agency cut power to the underground mobile phone antennas within the BART system for several hours on Aug. 11, thereby denying tens of thousands of evening commuters access to broadband internet networks, telephone service and even 911 calls.

Civil liberties organizations such as the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) and the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), as well as the hacktivist group known as Anonymous, are now vociferously objecting. Without even realizing how premature it was to smirk and brag to the corporate media about having disabled the antennas after service was cut, BART appears to have stepped in another big pile of shit as it so often tends to do. Besides the public shaming it is now receiving across the internet in an ever-growing number of articles and op-eds, FCC, legal and hacktivist repercussions for the agency may be yet to come. The protest BART hyperventilated about never even happened.

At first, when called out on the phone service shutdown last night, BART police Lt. Andy Alkire bragged that disabling the antennas was “a great tool to utilize for this specific purpose.” BART PR spokesperson Linton Johnson was seen smirking about the service cut on television newscasts – when he wasn’t trying to shift responsibility for the decision out of his press department.

Today however, from the New York Times to CNET to Fox News to Al Jazeera, the internet is flooded with hundreds of stories about the apparent first-ever anti-protest disabling of cell phone antennas in America – and it’s not likely BART officials think their decision to disable the phone antennas is so cute and funny any more. BART board members have yet to make a public statement regarding the matter.

Not surprisingly – to anyone who has followed BART’s record of police violence, cover-ups and evolving stories over time – the agency has lied repeatedly about having cut power to the communications antennas to which they have access. A BART official first denied that the agency had even disabled mobile phone service.

Later, regarding who at the agency ordered the service shutdown, Lt. Andy Alkire told a TV news station that the decision came from the media relations department. Linton Johnson attempted to deny knowledge of where the decision came from, but then admitted that his department “suggested” it when confronted with Alkire’s statement.

This morning, BART followed up by releasing a written statement claiming that it had asked mobile phone carriers to cut service for them. BART’s deputy chief communications officer James Allison then fessed up that “BART staff or contractors shut down power to the nodes,” adding that BART notified cell carriers after the action was taken. A spokesperson for Sprint, however, said that Sprint “learned about the service disruption from the news.”

BART continues to insist, as reported in AP wire stories, that only four stations in downtown San Francisco had their service disabled – Embarcadero, Montgomery, Powell, Civic Center – but service was also noticeably down at 16th Street Mission station in San Francisco and downtown Oakland underground stations. It has not yet been confirmed if antennas were disabled in other underground stations throughout the entire BART district.

BART’s spin machine has attempted to flip onto protesters complaints expressed about decisions BART made during the July 11 Justice for Charles Hill action in downtown San Francisco stations – namely that BART ran trains through crowded stations at dangerously high speeds during the demonstration – in order to justify their own disabling of the antennas, by first claiming in an advisory about a potential Aug. 11 protest that their primary motivation was safety and, in another release the following day, that demonstrators would create “unsafe conditions.”

muBARTek-by-LulzSec, To silence protesters, BART pulls plug on cell phone antennas, Local News & Views In an attempt to create an atmosphere of fear and danger around BART protests, Linton Johnson encouraged the public to “Report unsafe behavior. Do not confront protesters. Stay out of harm’s way.” Of course, protesters at BART actions have never hurt anyone, emphasizing through repeated exhortations that demonstrators not even “deny passengers egress from trains or station,” yet BART police continue to beat and kill passengers.

And so it appears BART’s primary rationalization for their action rests on their disingenuous claim to have been acting on behalf of passenger safety rather than to block the content of a protest, which would be more problematic legally. Trying to personalize the sense of sheer terror demonstrators create, BART police deputy chief Benson Fairow played his role by telling the media,

“It was a recipe for disaster. … The fact that they started to conspire to commit illegal actions on the station platform was our concern. I asked myself: If my wife, mother or daughter was on that platform, would I want them to be in that situation?” In another news outlet, Fairow made use of his family in a more gruesome manner: “Would I want my wife or daughter to get kicked (onto BART tracks) in a protest that we could have avoided?”

It is unclear how protesters with working mobile phones would be more likely to cause his wife to be shoved onto train tracks than protesters without phones. Yet still, on the basis of this anecdotal fear factor, BART would have us believe the decision to cut mobile phone service throughout the system was made, a supposedly sensible trade-off between very real speech and very imaginary harm to passengers.

Senior staff attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, Kevin Bankston, confronts another excuse that BART seems to feel removes itself from culpability for the deliberate service disruption. “BART makes the point that a few years ago you couldn’t even use your cell phone in the BART stations, but that’s beside the point. At this point, they have made a policy of allowing it on the platform. To withdraw that ability to express yourself … under a desire to prevent particular political speech between protesters was a shocking disregard of the free speech rights of every BART passenger and, indeed, was a prior restraint on any expressive activity they would otherwise have engaged in.”

Additionally, Bankston points out other First Amendment implications of BART’s decision to disrupt phone service. Given that BART claimed that the cell phone shutdown was initiated because “organizers … stated they would use mobile devices to coordinate their disruptive activities and communicate about the location and number of BART Police,” Bankston says the public should be concerned because “it was targeted specifically at blocking one type of speech. … In lawyer-speak, it’s not content neutral.”

The EFF as an organization issued a statement today, writing plainly that “cutting off cell phone service in response to a planned protest is a shameful attack on free speech. BART officials are showing themselves to be of a mind with the former president of Egypt, Hosni Mubarak, who ordered the shutdown of cell phone service in Tahrir Square in response to peaceful, democratic protests earlier this year.

“Free speech advocates have called out British Prime Minister David Cameron for considering new, broad censorship powers over social networks and mobile communication in the U.K., and we are appalled to see measures that go beyond anything Cameron has proposed being used here in the United States.

“Cell phone service has not always been available in BART stations. The advent of reliable service inside of stations is relatively recent. But once BART made the service available, cutting it off in order to prevent the organization of a protest constitutes prior restraint on the free speech rights of every person in the station, whether they’re a protestor or a commuter. Freedom of expression is a fundamental human right. Censorship is not okay in Tahrir Square or Trafalgar Square, and it’s still not okay in Powell Street Station.”

Freedom of expression is a fundamental human right. Censorship is not okay in Tahrir Square or Trafalgar Square, and it’s still not okay in Powell Street Station.”

The ACLU of Northern California likewise declared, “We rightly criticize governments that respond by shutting down cell service, saying it’s anti-democratic and a violation of the right to free expression and assembly. Are we really willing to tolerate the same silencing of protest here in the United States? … Shutting down access to mobile phones is the wrong response to political protests, whether it’s halfway around the world or right here in San Francisco. You have the right to speak out. Both the California Constitution and the First Amendment to the United States Constitution protect your right to free expression.”

ACLU of Northern California: “Shutting down access to mobile phones is the wrong response to political protests, whether it’s halfway around the world or right here in San Francisco.”

Despite BART’s bragging and self-congratulation immediately after the fact, their tune changed as BART learned that civil libertarians were objecting to their decision to pull the plug on underground mobile phone antennas. BART released the following statement Friday morning:

“08.12.2011

“Statement on temporary wireless service interruption in select BART stations on Aug. 11

“Organizers planning to disrupt BART service on August 11, 2011 stated they would use mobile devices to coordinate their disruptive activities and communicate about the location and number of BART Police. A civil disturbance during commute times at busy downtown San Francisco stations could lead to platform overcrowding and unsafe conditions for BART customers, employees and demonstrators. BART temporarily interrupted service at select BART stations as one of many tactics to ensure the safety of everyone on the platform.

“Cell phone service was not interrupted outside BART stations. In addition, numerous BART Police officers and other BART personnel with radios were present during the planned protest, and train intercoms and white courtesy telephones remained available for customers seeking assistance or reporting suspicious activity.

“BART’s primary purpose is to provide, safe, secure, efficient, reliable, and clean transportation services. BART accommodates expressive activities that are constitutionally protected by the First Amendment to the United States Constitution and the Liberty of Speech Clause of the California Constitution (expressive activity), and has made available certain areas of its property for expressive activity.

“Paid areas of BART stations are reserved for ticketed passengers who are boarding, exiting or waiting for BART cars and trains, or for authorized BART personnel. No person shall conduct or participate in assemblies or demonstrations or engage in other expressive activities in the paid areas of BART stations, including BART cars and trains and BART station platforms.

“Updated: August 12, 2011 1:08 pm”

Note that BART’s original version of this statement, before the update, claimed that “BART asked wireless providers to temporarily interrupt service at select BART stations,” not that “BART temporarily interrupted service at select BART stations” as it reads now. Official statements posted on their own website are no more likely to be true than off-the-cuff remarks made to the media by defensive agency representatives.

As for when exactly “certain areas” were made available for protesters is an open question. And never mind that BART is a public agency authorized by the state of California or that courts have ruled that even private property such as shopping malls can be considered public for the purposes of allowing political free speech and may not prohibit certain types of speech based upon its content.

BART hit the panic button on this one. They literally pulled a Mubarak. So desperate to avoid further publicity regarding its violent and unaccountable police force, and determined not to be pressured by demonstrators into taking any disciplinary action against any of its own, BART took the unprecedented and historic step of being the first in the nation to disable mobile phone service for tens of thousands of people based on “rumors“ of an impending protest.

So desperate to avoid further publicity regarding its violent and unaccountable police force, and determined not to be pressured by demonstrators into taking any disciplinary action against any of its own, BART took the unprecedented and historic step of being the first in the nation to disable mobile phone service for tens of thousands of people based on “rumors“ of an impending protest.

Although, of course, even on that point, BART can’t seem to get its story straight. Lt. Andy Alkire said, “We had pretty good intelligence that (a protest) was going to happen.” Deputy Chief Benson Fairow, who eventually took credit for owning the decision to cut phone service, stretched it even further by claiming that “I am 99 percent certain (the protest) was going to happen. We saw people who were clearly ready to take action, with backpacks and tools.”

They saw people with backpacks on trains? Scary. What tools? This reporter toured through the system at the time, and the only thing witnessed even close to anyone possessing “tools” was some unsuspecting male passenger being hauled off of a train at Civic Center station by a gang of riot police because some green-vested BART employee who had been called to duty for protest surveillance thought the audio turntable parts in an open bag the man was carrying seemed suspicious. If anyone was present expecting a protest, it was simply due to the media hype BART had stirred up.

BART lies and lies and only admits to the truth when it is forced to by undeniable evidence. Even then, it fails to hold the bad actors in its midst accountable. The more you know about the agency, the more this pattern reveals itself. Whether and when the agency or any individuals within it will be taken to task for the misdeeds and lies of its officials and police officers remains to be seen, but you can continue to expect that BART will do everything in its power to avoid doing the right thing the first time.

To let BART know how you feel about the lack of accountability within their police department or the agency’s attempted silencing of dissent, see http://bart.gov/siteinfo/contact.aspx. You can also confront the BART board of directors in person at their bi-weekly board meetings – the next one is scheduled for Thursday, Aug. 25.

Writer’s note: If you find yourself unable to get enough of BART’s PR machine, you can always visit BART-TV for this gem about the events of Aug. 11: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HsKEvd6gH0A. Apparently, BART has come to believe that they can no longer trust the corporate media to 100 percent get their message out – 98 percent is just not enough. And since BART steps in it as often as they do, perhaps the agency does need its own propaganda channel to encourage hate for protesters.

A message from Anonymous to the Bay Area Rapid Transit System (BART)

To the people of the USA:

opBART-by-Anonymous, To silence protesters, BART pulls plug on cell phone antennas, Local News & Views The past year has brought about some substantial awareness through some unfortunate events that have occurred throughout our world. From internet censorship to the unnecessary violence inflicted upon unarmed civilians, we’ve all seen what can happen once a portion of us are gagged.

In Egypt and Tunisia, we saw people struggling to make their voices heard. We have seen companies such as Telecomix delve into the nastiness of political corruption in an attempt to free those censored individuals from their prisons of silence. We’ve seen social media such as Facebook and Twitter explode with users from around the world speaking out against censorship.

Today, we’ve seen America come alive. In the Bay Area, we’ve seen people gagged and, once more, Anonymous will attempt to show those engaging in the censorship what it feels like to be silenced.

OpBART is an operation geared toward balance – toward learning. You do not censor people because they wish to speak out against the wrongful things occurring around them. The Bay Area Rapid Transit has made the conscious decision of ordering various cell phone companies to terminate services for the downtown San Francisco area inhibiting those in the area from using cell phones – even in the case of an emergency.

To BART:

We will not tolerate censorship.

We will do everything in our power – we are legion – to parallel the actions of censorship that you have chosen to engage in.

We will be free to speak out against you when you try to cover up crimes, namely on behalf of those who have engaged in violence against a mostly unarmed public.

We will set those who have been censored free from their silence. That’s a promise.

Anonymous demands that this activity revolving around censorship cease and desist, and we know you are already planning to do this again.

We will not issue any more warnings.

To the people of San Francisco:

People of San Francisco, join us Monday, Aug. 15, at 5 p.m. for a peaceful protest at Civic Center station to illustrate the solidarity with people we once knew and to stand up for your rights and those of your fellow citizens.

We will be wearing “blood” stained shirts for remembrance to the blood that is on the hands of the BART police.

For the people outside of San Francisco, show solidarity by using black fax, email bombs and phone calls to the BART board of directors. BART decided to cut off your communications and now we will flood theirs.

We request that you bring cameras to record further abuses of power by the police and to legitimize the protest. The media will certainly spin this in an attempt to make our actions appear to be violent or somehow harmful to the citizenry at large. Remember, this is a peaceful protest. Any actions trying to incite violence in our protest are not of our people, and they ought to be discouraged.

We are Anonymous,

We are legion,

We never forgive,

We never forget,

Expect us.

BART contact info:

  • Phone: (510) 465-2278, (415) 989-2278, (650) 992-2278, (925) 676-2278, (510) 441-2278, (510) 236-2278 and (510) 465-2278
  • Fax: (510) 464-6011
  • Email: BoardofDirectors@bart.gov

File a complaint with the FCC online against BART:

Contact Anonymous via Twitter at @OpBART or email at OpBART@gmail.com.