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CHIMO

(9,223 posts)
Sun Sep 2, 2012, 10:24 AM Sep 2012

Cross-border undercover networks are a 'global puzzle'

More light has been shed recently on a particularly hidden area of undercover policing. The Mark Kennedy controversy helped to provide a little glimpse of this, but much remains unknown.

During his seven years infiltrating the environmental movement, Kennedy spent quite a lot of time spying on, and disrupting, activists in other countries.

The Channel Four documentary on him called him 'the go-to cop for foreign governments who needed information about their own activists'.

He was deployed in 11 countries on 40 occasions, according to one official report. These countries included Germany, Denmark and Iceland. In Denmark, for instance, he says that he infiltrated a Danish community centre that had housed progressive causes for more than a century, obtaining intelligence to help police storm it and close it down in violent raids.


http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/undercover-with-paul-lewis-and-rob-evans/2012/aug/31/international-undercover-work-still-secret

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Cross-border undercover networks are a 'global puzzle' (Original Post) CHIMO Sep 2012 OP
Two points: historically, this goes back to the 1840s; now a way to get around national laws leveymg Sep 2012 #1

leveymg

(36,418 posts)
1. Two points: historically, this goes back to the 1840s; now a way to get around national laws
Sun Sep 2, 2012, 10:36 AM
Sep 2012

that otherwise forbid police infiltration and disruption of domestic political groups.

For a history of international police agents provocateur, please, see: http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL0612/S00032.htm

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