The surprise dis

closure that the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,
through its state Homeland Security Agency, along with a number of local
police departments in the state, have been employing a private Israeli
security company with strong links to Mossad and the Israeli Defense
Force to spy on law-abiding citizens, grows increasingly disturbing when
the website of the company, called the Institute of Terrorism Research
and Response, is examined.
Image captured from ITRR's website
ITRR’s slick site at TerrorResponse.org
features a homepage image of an armor-clad soldier or riot policeman
preparing to fire an automatic pistol, while the company boasts of being
“the preeminent Isreal/American security firm, providing training,
intelligence and education for clients across the globe.”
The firm, which offers courses locally at the University of
Philadelphia, notes that all its course offerings, some of which are
taught in Israel, are “approved by the Israeli Ministry of Defense.”
The course titles include such compelling topics as: “Tactical Advantage
in Combat,” “Civilian Battlefield,” “Undercover/Plainclothes Tactical
Operations,” “Israeli Shooting Techniques,” “Arena Combat,” “Hard Entry
(Arrest)” and “Principles of Night Operations.” While a number of the
titles link to course descriptions, the links to the undercover class
and the civilian battlefield class were disabled when this reporter
visited the site, which was two days after the company’s role as a state
security contractor was exposed.
The description for the Tactical Advantage course, which the website
says was designed for military, law enforcement and security personnel,
describes the program as “intense, dirty, aggressive and based on
Israeli Counter-Terror Schools policy.” It says “This course pushes
trainees to the physical and mental edge.”
American organizations which engage in protests and rallies, hearing
that reference to the Israeli Counter-Terror Schools policy, might
recall the IDF’s handling of the aid flotilla that was boarded on the
high seas by IDF troops as they read these lines. That assault, in which
the Israelis used 9mm semi-automatic weapons against defenders armed at
most with sticks and light chains, left nine flotilla participants,
including a young Turkish American, dead.
The Institute of Terrorism Research and Response, which only lists a
post-box address in Philadelphia (though in its report on the scandal
the Philadelphia Inquirer referred to ITRR as a
“Philadelphia-based company with offices in Philadelphia and
Jerusalem”), also advertises a subsidiary operation it calls a Targeted
Action Monitoring Center (TAM-C), which it claims is “world renowned”
and which it says supplies “factual, actionable intelligence to
subscribers.” All information gathered by the firm’s staff of “former
law enforcement, military and intelligence professionals” is sent to the
Israeli headquarters of the TAM-C for processing--a move which
effectively insulates it from discovery by any surveillance victims who
might seek disclosure under federal or state Freedom of Information
laws, or who might sue in court for violation of their civil liberties.
While ITRR, founded in 2004, doesn’t name any of its clients, it
says they range from Fortune 100 companies, including the power
industry, maritime companies, US infrastructure companies, “the company charged with protecting oil production facilities,” missionary
organizations and pharmaceutical firms, to law enforcement agencies and
joint terrorism task forces.
A search on Google for references to ITRR doesn’t turn up
much, but there is a report in July 2008 by a Washington-based
right-wing site called National Terror Alert, which attributes a warning
of a “possible large-scale terror attack” to ITRR. Claiming that it had
“intercepted communications from an organization closely associated
with international terrorists, to include al Qaeda,” the National Terror
Alert organization says ITRR reports that, “Available intelligence and
recent events indicate that terrorists have an established capability
and current intent to mount an attack on the target and there is some
additional information on the nature of the threat. It is assessed that
an attack on the target is a priority for the terrorists and is likely
to be mounted.”
Nothing came of this "alert," but it should be noted that a
year later, the first head of the new federal Department of Homeland
Security, former Republican governor of Pennsylvania Tom Ridge, admitted
that the color-coded terror alerts issued by his office had been
manipulated to serve Republican political interests. It should also be
recalled that the 2008 ITRR “warning” came during the height of the
election season, just before the two national party conventions. As the
Philadelphia Daily News commented at the time in a headline, “GOP kicks
off fall campaign with heightened terror alert.”
But ITRR does much more than just monitor terrorists.
Indeed, it seems to be far too busy monitoring legitimate, non-violent
and completely legal protest organizations and other political groups to
do much real anti-terror work. According to news reports on
ITRR’s work for the Pennsylvania Homeland Security Agency and also the
Pittsburgh Police Department, it would appear that ITRR was spying on
and providing Pennsylvania State Police and Homeland Security with
reports on everything from anti-war groups and anti-oil-shale-fracking
groups to gay rights groups, animal rights groups, environmental
organizations and even Good Schools Pennsylvania, a citizens association
formed to back Gov. Ed Rendell’s school reform initiatives. Even a
Harrisburg, PA man who likes to bring a 25-foot inflatable pig to
demonstrations to symbolize government waste was targeted.
While local news media reports in Philadelphia have suggested
that ITRR is just composed of two people, Aaron Richman, an Israeli
police captain and security consultant and Michael Perelman, a retired
New York City police commander, the website makes it clear that the
company actually employs a large number of people in Israel, and may
have as many as 15 people working “in the field” in the US.
Its activities are not limited to Pennsylvania either. The firm
boasts on its website that “Information provided to clients ranges from
issues of global jihad to Mexican Cartel threats along America’s
southern border (maybe that’s where Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer got her
weird tale, eventually debunked and retracted, of beheadings in the
border desert?) to providing guidance of the threat of disorders as a
result of international monetary meetings.”
This latter is a reference to the yeoman work ITRR reportedly
did for the Pittsburg Police Department in advance of the disastrous
G-20 meeting in Pittsburgh, which turned into a police riot after the
local government and police brought in hundreds of reinforcements from
other cities, with cops suited up as though for war, to lock down the
city and prevent students from demonstrating against the predations of
international capital and international “free trade” agreements. It
appears that ITRR had ingratiated its way into the confidence of
demonstration planners by having its agents join chat rooms and websites
“posing as G-20 opponents.” One wonders whether these same agents may
have also acted as agents provocateur.
As the head of Pennsylvania’s Homeland Security Agency, James
Powers, who hired ITRR, put it, “We got the information to the
Pittsburgh Police, and they were able to cut them off at the pass.”
So much for the Constitutional right to protest!
Several calls for comment made to the Homeland Security Agency and
the Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency which oversees it went
unanswered, but Perelman has released a statement saying "The Institute
of Terrorism Research and Response tracks events, givinglaw enforcement a
heads-up for the potential of disorder as our bulletins provided to the
[state] clearly show...[and] does not follow people, conduct
surveillance, photograph, or record individuals."
This claim is undermined by the details in some of its
reports (a select bunch of ITRR weekly "terror" alert report released by
the state government after the scandal broke included one on the
Brandywine Peace Community, which regularly runs a protest at the
Lockheed Martin military contractor plant just northwest of
Philadelphia. The report says, "When their focus is not directed at
Lockheed itself, protesters will likely gather at the traffic light on
the corner of Mall and Goddard to wave signs at cars." Less this report
not sound terrifying enough, the report adds ominously (with no
supporting evidence to back its claim) that even so, the event could
attract "radical protesters from the ranks of local communist and/or
anarchist movements."
Gov. Rendell, after the story about ITRR’s activities for
the state under a no-bid, $125,000/year contract, broke, claimed he was
“embarrassed” by the spying on non-violent civic action organizations,
and vowed to cancel the contract effective this October.
It is not clear, however, that there will be any information
provided about who was spied on over the time the company has been
active. Members of both political parties in the state legislature are
calling for a General Assembly hearing into ITRR’s activities, but such
calls in this closely divided body generally come to little or nothing.
Meanwhile, Rendell, a lame duck governor headed for the exit, is
unlikely to do anything about the issue beyond saying he’s embarrassed
by it. He has said he has no intention of firing Powers.
I know how damaging this kind of spying by state and local
governments can be. Back in the mid-1970s, when I and some journalist
colleagues owned and ran a small weekly alternative newspaper in Los
Angeles, the LA Vanguard, we were among the targets of a
massive illegal spying campaign by the paranoid Los Angeles Police
Department’s “red squad,” the Public Disorder Intelligence Division. Our
staff was actually penetrated by a young red squad officer, who
pretended to be a student wannabe journalist in order to try to learn
our sources for reports on the LAPD. But we were only one of about 200
groups, ranging from a local anti-nuclear group to the Peace &
Freedom Party, a well-known third party in California electoral
politics, to the National Organization for Woman and even the office of
then City Councilman Zev Yaroslavsky.
The reason we all learned about what the LAPD red squad was doing
was that one spy was outed, a class-action suit was filed by the ACLU of
Southern California, there was discovery ordered by the court, and
eventually the city of Los Angeles settled with the victims of the
campaign, to the tune of $1.8 million.
The Pennsylvania ACLU may eventually sue Pennsylvania over this
latest domestic spying outrage, but the times have changed, and it is
hard to be confident that the courts, no great friend of civil liberties
at the state level, and packed with Reagan and Bush 1 and 2 appointees
at the federal level, will mandate disclosure of the names of groups
spied on, much less of the records that were compiled. Furthermore,
because the state did this spying through an outside contractor, which
is headquartered in Israel, government and police agencies could claim
that the records are for the most part out of their hands and beyond the
courts’ jurisdiction.
At least one man, Gene Stilp, owner of the giant inflatable
pig, already has plans to sue the government in federal court. "When
people's civil rights are trampled it's a federal issue," says Stilp,
himself a licensed attorney. Stilp says he isn’t satisfied with
Rendell’s statement that he is “embarrassed” by the disclosure of ITRR’s
contract. “Being embarrassed doesn’t cut it,” says Stilp, who is
calling for an investigation into ITRR’s spying activities by the
attorney general or the federal government, and full disclosure of which
groups and individuals were spied upon.
Another person who has good reason to believe he was probably targeted by ITRR is ThisCantBeHappening!’s
own John Grant. Says Grant, “The more I read about this affair, the
more disturbing it seems. I'm a Vietnam veteran and part of an
organization -- Veterans For Peace -- that very publicly opposes the
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. We meet monthly and we organize events
with other anti-war groups. All First-Amendment-protected, red-blooded
American stuff. To think that some self-ordained watchdog group of
security freaks is monitoring me and my friends and reporting our
activities to God-knows who in the context of 'terrorism' -- and
probably making tons of money doing it -- really pisses me off. Governor
Rendell should be embarrassed. He should come clean and make
public all the groups and people this gang was spying and reporting on.
The fact they are somehow connected to Israel -- a nation many of us
have been critical of -- is further reason to clear up what's going on."