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Sunday, March 12, 2006
Gestapo tactics
Professor Believes FBI Grilled Him for His Political Beliefs
News Report, Elena Shore,
New America Media, Mar 09, 2006
A Pomona College professor who is an outspoken critic of U.S. policy in Venezuela was questioned Tuesday by two agents from
the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department and the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force (JTTF) in what he calls an act of intimidation.
The detectives visited Miguel Tinker-Salas during his office hours at about 2:40 or 2:45 pm Tuesday. They questioned him for
about 20 minutes in his office at Pomona College in Claremont, Calif. The detectives identified themselves but their names
are being withheld at the request of the FBI.
According to Tinker-Salas, the agents told him they were interested in the Venezuelan community and concerned that it may
be involved in terrorism. They asked him if he had relationships with the Venezuelan embassy or consulate, and if anyone in
the Venezuelan government had asked him to speak out about Venezuela-related matters.
“They were fishing,” says Tinker-Salas, “to intimidate and silence those who have a critical analysis of U.S. foreign policy.”
After they left, several students outside Tinker-Salas’ office told him the detectives had asked them about his background,
his classes and his politics, and even took note of the cartoons on his door.
Tinker-Salas says the detectives told him this was part of a larger policy to interview people on various campuses. He does
not know if other professors have been questioned. He says the agents who visited him did not interview the other Venezuelan-born
professor at Pomona College.
The FBI declined to comment on the incident.
A Latin American and Chicano histories professor, Tinker-Salas believes he was targeted as a result of his outspoken politics
regarding the U.S. policy toward Venezuela and Latin America. Tinker-Salas was born in Venezuela and is a U.S. citizen, having
lived in the United States since high school. A noted historian and commentator on CNN en Español, he has been open about
his conditional support for the democratically elected government of President Hugo Chavez and critical of the U.S. attempt
to “undermine democracy” in Latin America.
According to the ACLU of Colorado, the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force, which operates across the country, is violating First
Amendment rights by equating nonviolent protest with domestic terrorism.
“The FBI is unjustifiably treating nonviolent public protest as though it were domestic terrorism,” said Mark Silverstein,
Legal Director of the Colorado ACLU, following the release of new documents obtained from the FBI under the Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA) on Dec. 8, 2005.
“The FBI’s misplaced priorities threaten to deter legitimate criticism of government policy while wasting taxpayer resources
that should be directed to investigating real terrorists.”
3:21 am pst
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