Last Updated:
Tuesday, September 19, 2006 05:49:24 AM
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Tuesday, September 19, 2006 |
Reporter Palast Slips Clutches of Homeland Security
by Greg Palast, Sep 14, 2006
Last Updated:
Tuesday, September 19, 2006 05:49:24 AM |
Greg Palast |
orget the orange suit. Exxon
Mobil Corporation, which admits it was behind the criminal
complaint brought by Homeland Security against me and television
producer Matt Pascarella, has informed me that the oil company
will no longer push charges that Pascarella and I threatened
"critical infrastructure."
The allegedly criminal act, which put us on the wrong side of
post-9/11 anti-terror law, was our filming of Exxon's Baton
Rouge refinery where, nearby, 1,600 survivors of Hurricane
Katrina remain interned behind barbed wire.
I have sworn to Homeland Security that we no longer send our
footage to al-Qaeda -- which, in any case, can get a much better
view of the refinery and other "critical infrastructure" at
Google maps.
Given Exxon's back-down, I hope to confirm with Homeland
Security, Baton Rouge, that charges will be dropped today.
Matt and I want to thank you, our readers and viewers, for your
extraordinary and heartfelt responses. Public support
undoubtedly led Exxon to call off the feds.
Of course, this was never about our tipping off Osama that
Louisiana contains oil refineries. This has an awful lot to do
with a petroleum giant's sensitivity to unflattering depictions
of their plants which are major polluters along Louisiana's
notorious "Cancer Alley."
I've learned that, in April last year, Exxon brought a similar
Homeland Security charge against Willie Fontenot, an assistant
to the Attorney General of Louisiana. Fontenot was guiding a
group of environmental studies pupils from Antioch College on a
tour of Cancer Alley. Exxon's complaint about the "national
security" threat posed by their photos of the company's facility
cost Fontenot his job.
The issue is not national security but image security. You can
get all the film you want from Exxon of refineries if you'll
accept nice, sanitized VPRs (video press releases) of clean
smokestacks surrounded by happy herons.
What's dangerous is not that reporters will end up in
Guantanamo; the insidious effect of these threats is to keep
networks from filming government and corporate filth,
incompetence and inhumanity. Besides the Exxon foolishness, our
camera crew was also blocked from filming inside the notorious
Katrina survivors trailer encampment.
Furthermore earlier that same day, a FEMA contractor had grabbed
our camera, in mid-interview, when polite but pointed questions
exposed their malfeasance.
As with Exxon, the bar from filming at the refugee camp and in
the offices of the government contractor were presented to us as
a "Homeland Security" matter.
After the September 11 attacks, CBS Newsman Dan Rather said,
"George Bush is the President. …Wherever he wants me to line up,
just tell me where."
Reporters who step out of line, who ask uncomfortable questions
and film uncomfortable scenes, soon find their careers toasted,
as Dan can attest to.
One of George Bush's weirder acts in office (and that's saying a
lot) was to move FEMA, the Federal Emergency Management Agency,
whose main job is to save us from floods and earthquakes, into
the control of the Department of Homeland Security. Exxon's
refineries, once "pollution source points" scrutinized by
government watchdogs, are now "critical infrastructure"
protected by federal hounddogs.
As the front lines in the War on Terror expand from Baghdad to
Baton Rouge, we find that America has been made secure only
against hard news and uncomfortable facts.
Again, our sincere thanks and gratitude for your support. Cakes
with files have been consumed.
- Greg Palast, New York
Many of you have asked for copies of the film which threatened
national security. In response to your requests, with the
permission of
LinkTV, we are making "Big Easy to Big Empty: the Untold
Story of the Drowning of New Orleans" available on DVD. The
disc will also include an interview of reporter Greg Palast by
Democracy Now's Amy Goodman plus an excerpt from Palast's
bestseller,
Armed Madhouse on the topic, "Class War and Hurricane
Katrina."
For a copy of the film, I am asking for a modest, tax-deductible
donation to our foundation, the
Palast Investigative Fund. The fund supports our work and
pays our legal fees.
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Source: Greg
Palast's Newsletter
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