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Fear for Sale
By Greg Palast
May 12, 2004
September 11, 2001, was Derek Smith's lucky day.
There were all those pieces of people to collect -- tubes marked "DM" (for
"Disaster Manhattan") -- from which his company would extract DNA for victim
identification, work for which the firm would receive $12 million from
New York City's government.
I have no doubt that Smith, like the rest of us,
grieved, horrified and heartsick, at the murder of innocent friends and
countrymen. As for the 12-million-dollar corpse identification fee, that's
chump change to the $4 billion corporation Smith had founded only four
years earlier, ChoicePoint of Alpharetta, Georgia, a suburb of Atlanta.
For ChoicePoint, with its 15-billion-plus records
on every living and dying being in the United States, Ground Zero would
become a profit center lined with gold. Contracts would gush forth from
War on Terror fever not hurt by the fact that ChoicePoint did something
for George W. Bush that the voters would not: select him as our president.
Here's how they did it. Before the 2000 election,
Choice-Point unit Database Technologies, under a $4 million no-bid contract
under the control of Florida Secretary of State Katherine Harris, was paid
to identify felons who had illegally registered to vote. The ChoicePoint
outfit altogether fingered 94,000 Florida residents. As it turned out,
less than 3,000 had a verifiable criminal record; almost everyone on the
list had the right to vote. The tens of thousands of "purged" citizens
had something in common besides their innocence: The list was, in the majority,
made up of African Americans and Hispanics, overwhelmingly Democratic voters.
And that determined the race in which Harris named Bush the winner by 537
votes.
270 million suspects
But before ChoicePoint's miles of files on Americans
could become a wartime weapon, the United States had to change radically.
That change was announced by President Bush: On September 11, we Americans
were the victims of the terrible attack.
By September 12, we became the suspects.
Not one single U.S. citizen hijacked a plane,
yet President Bush and Attorney General John Ashcroft, through powers seized
then codified in the USA PATRIOT Act, fingered 270 million of us for surveillance,
for searches, for tracking, for watching.
To say that ChoicePoint is in the "data" business
is to miss their market concept utterly: These guys are in the Fear Industry.
Secret danger lurks everywhere. Al Qaeda's just the tip of the iceberg.
What about the pizza delivery boy? ChoicePoint hunted through a sampling
of them and announced that 25 percent had only recently come out of prison.
"What pizza do you like?" asks CEO Smith. "At what price? Are you willing
to take the risk?Š"
ChoicePoint also has a product to calm the fears
of mothers panicked by the stories on Geraldo of child-snatching cults:
"ChoicePoint Cares." That's the name of the corporation's DNA identification
program to help reunite kids on milk cartons with their parents.

Computer Prozac
Underneath ChoicePoint Cares, Ground Zero identi-fication
work, and pizza-man rapist hunts lies the sales pitch of panic. For a jittery
nation, ChoicePoint has the computer Prozac: DNA databases and criminal
history certification so you won't be taken hostage by child-napping hijackers
who deliver your pepperoni-and-double-cheese pie. The company wants to
remove your discomfort at their entry into your bank records and bloodstream;
to convince you to want them to hold the info on you and your children;
to encourage you to think of their recording your every move as protection,
not intrusion, the security of a kindly big brother to watch over you.
ChoicePoint is a little sensitive about its little
DNA biz. The company insisted to my research team that they only track
DNA of criminals and missing kids.
But an insider at ChoicePoint says the chairman
told him about a longer-term plan. "Derek [Smith] said that it is his hope
to build a database of DNA samples from every person in the United States,"
from birth to death and beyond linked to all other data on a person. The
plan, said the source, is for now kept under wraps because Smith expects
"resistance" from the public. (Thanks to investigator Eric Boucher for
this info. Boucher attracts informants through his day job as rock star
Jello Biafra of Dead Kennedys fame.)
Until September 11, the Fear Industry had a tough
sell. The Berlin Wall was down and Americans were chillin' through eight
years of Clintonian peace and prosperity. The old liberal notion that more
jobs meant less crime tested true. The national mood was "What, me worry?"
September 11 let the venomed bats out of the cupboard:
Total Information Awareness (TIA), USA PATRIOT, not to mention plans for
a couple of wars, all drafted long before the attack. Seizing on the tragedy,
our presi-dent dusted the bat droppings off these freeze-dried Orwellian
schemes and presented them to America as his swift, bold response to the
Threat Out There.
The Third Ring
In Hollywood, Jack Nicholson picked up the zeitgeist:
"If I were an Arab American I would insist on being profiled. This is not
the time for civil rights." I imagined hardened pillboxes on Malibu beach.
Maybe Jack's right, and we have to trade a couple
of freedoms for our safety. But is our new imitation KGB spending our cyberspy
budget to make us truly safer?
I had hoped so, until a "little birdie" faxed
me what appeared to be confidential pages from ChoicePoint's contract with
Mr. John Ashcroft's Justice Department. A no-bid $67-million deal offered
profiles on any citizen in half a dozen nations. The choice of citizens
to spy on caught my eye. While the September 11 hijackers came from Saudi
Arabia, Egypt, Lebanon and the United Arab Emirates, ChoicePoint's menu
offered records on Venezuelans, Brazilians, Nicaraguans, Argentinians and
Mexicans.
What do these nations have in common besides a
lack of involvement in the September 11 attacks? Coincidentally, each is
in the throes of major electoral contests in which the leading candidates -- presidents
Luiz Ignacio "Lula" da Silva of Brazil, Néstor Kirchner of Argentina
and Mexico City mayor Andres Lopez Obrador -- have had the nerve to challenge
the globalization demands of George Bush.
When Mexico discovered ChoicePoint had its citizen
files, the nation threatened company executives with criminal charges.
ChoicePoint protested its innocence and offered to destroy the files of
any nation that requests it.
But ChoicePoint, apparently, presented no such
offer to the government of Venezuela, home of President Hugo Chavez.
Hugo Chávez drives George Bush crazy. Maybe
it's jealousy: Unlike Mr. Bush, Chávez won office by a majority
of the vote. Or maybe it's the oil. Venezuela sits atop a reserve rivaling
Iraq's. In Caracas, I showed Congressman Nicolas Maduro the ChoicePoint-Ashcroft
agreement. Maduro, a leader of Chávez's political party, was unaware
that his nation's citizen files were for sale to U.S. intelligence. But
he understood their value to make mischief.
If the lists somehow fell into the hands of the
Venezuelan opposition, it could im-measurably help their computer-aided
drive to recall and remove Chávez. A Choice-Point flak said the
Bush administration told the company they haven't used the lists that way.
The PR man didn't say if the Bush spooks laughed when they said it. Our
team located a $53,000 payment from our government to Chávez's recall
organizers, who claim to be armed with computer lists of the registered.
What was practiced in Florida, without Choice-Point's knowledge, could
be retooled for Venezuela, then Brazil, Mexico and so on. Is Mr. Bush fighting
a war on terrorŠor a war on democracy?
Which brings us to the Third Circle:
That which took shape here is a disguised kind
of intelligenceŠwhich is annexed to the third security ring, which is the
invisible ring.
The man spoke these words in Spanish, with an
American accent, unaware of the camera. He added a moment later, "We are
doing a job and [I trust] he will not be childish, Mr. 'Corey,' and that
he will be on the corner saying, 'I am from the CIA, I am from the CIA.'"
I watched this murky video in Vene-zuela's capital.
The men caught in the lens discussing these vague espionage plans worked
for Wackenhut Corporation, Caracas. You may recall Wackenhut, the jails-R-us
guys who got caught running the illicit spying operation on Alaska oil
industry whistleblowers.
The man who headed Wackenhut's oper-ations in
Alaska shifted to Venezuela in 1991 where, according to Spy magazine, he
ran a "black" information (i.e., disinformation) campaign against the government.
Currently, the company has a contract to protect the U.S. embassy, a delicate
job after our State Department's applauding a coup against the elected
Chávez government.
Wackenhut does not deny the authenticity of the
Third Ring tape. It was just "an ordinary meeting of company officials."
And here the darkness descends. Wackenhut says
its rent-a-spies acted legally for a client they cannot name. Is it credible
to believe that Wackenhut, doing sensitive security work for the U.S. ambassador,
could conduct operations, legal or not, which could provoke a foreign power?
Indeed, a plotter on the tape says, "All of you must be invisible with
regard to everything that is related to the American embassy."
What exactly is Wackenhut up to? And how does
the Bush crew use or misuse ChoicePoint's lists of Latin electorates?
Herein lies the danger of this brave new world
of the privatization of spookery: We lose control. By "we," I mean Americans
and our elected representatives. Even in the worst days of the CIA, Senator
Frank Church held hearings and exposed the dangerous rot in our intelligence
services. A special prosecutor went after Ollie North's Iran-Contra gang,
which gave weapons to the Ayatollah. But how do we challenge the new privateers
in espionage who can go for Mr. Ashcroft or Mr. Bush where prudence or
the law tells them not to?
Hacking the Constitution
There are glimmers of ill doings already. The
Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC), Washington, sued to obtain
Ashcroft-ChoicePoint documents. The contract‹no-bid, of course‹remains
so secret, even its true cost and title has been, extraordinarily, withheld.
But EPIC found several gems, including the gushing notes of a government
spook who requested that agents think of "far-out, funky" ways to use data.
More disconcerting was a handwritten note in government
files recommending ChoicePoint for more work because the company "is very
responsive to [U.S.] Marshals Service and has made enhancements to their
public information databaseŠto meet our needs." Uh, oh. If ChoicePoint
obtained special info for Big Brother, then officialdom crossed a legal
line. As the privacy institute's attorney Chris Hoofnagle explains, the
law permits the government to access private databases that are freely
available on the commercial market. But private companies may not create
wide-ranging files on U.S. citizens for the government. In other words,
if the FBI can't spy on Americans without probable cause for suspicion,
it can't get around the law by handing the espionage work to a contractor.
It's not a small difference. The law in question is the Bill of Rights.
Those Amendments prohibit our government from investigating us unless there's
reason to believe we are criminals.
Courageous federal judge Rosemary Pooler ruled,
"As terrible as 911 was, it didn't repeal the Consitution." But with the
privatization of computerized surveillance, the Constitution can be secretly
hacked.
What about Jack Nicholson's point? Screw rights,
we want safety. Well, Jack, we're both old farts who can remember the Cuban
Missile Crisis. In 1962, the Russians were going to drop The Big One on
us. But we didn't have to worry, Mrs. Gordon told us, if we just got under
the desk, covered our necks and, "Don't look at the flash!"
TIA, ChoicePoint's DNA info for the FBI's "CODIS"
files, Genoa, data mining, the Third RingŠit's the new "Duck and Cover."
Does this really make America safer?
ChoicePoint's Smith admonishes that, if we'd only
had his databases humming at the airports on September 11, the hijackers,
who used their own names, would have been barred from boarding. However,
experts inform me that Osama no longer checks in as "Mr. bin Laden," even
at the cost of losing his frequent flyer miles.
Nevertheless, our president suggests that, if
we can get semen samples from every American and Venezuelan, take off our
shoes at the airport, don't ask the names of the seized and imprisoned
or the price of contracts, we'll be safe from the Saudi hijackers and baby
snatchers and fromŠthemŠwhoever "them" are.
Just remember, Don't look at the flash!
This article is excerpted from the election
edition of Greg Palast's New York Times bestseller The Best Democracy Money
Can Buy, out this month from Penguin. Greg Palast has released a
new CD, Weapon of Mass Destruction, available on www.GregPalast.com
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