Undercover cop goes Green

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And no, i don't mean that he humped a dead moose.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-12148753


The trial of six green campaigners has collapsed after an undercover policeman who had infiltrated their group offered to give evidence on their behalf.


The six were charged with conspiring to shut down the Ratcliffe-on-Soar power station in Nottingham in 2009.

The case was due to start on Monday, but was abandoned after Pc Mark Kennedy contacted the defence team to say he would be prepared to help them.

The prosecution subsequently dropped their case.
Mr Kennedy had been intimately involved in the green movement since 2000.
He was known to those within it as Mark "Flash" Stone, having earned the nickname because he always seemed to have more money than the other activists.

Confronted


He lived a double life: as Mark Kennedy of the Metropolitan Police he had a wife and children; but as Mark Stone, green activist, he had an unsuspecting girlfriend in Nottingham.
He would disappear for extended periods, telling his girlfriend he had to visit his "brother" in the United States.

In October 2010, Mr Kennedy was confronted by some of the activists after they found documents which revealed his true identity.
He admitted he had been a Met Police officer and had infiltrated their organisations, before then disappearing.

Danny Chivers, who was one of the six defendants in the failed case, said Mr Kennedy was not just an observer, but an agent provocateur.
"We're not talking about someone sitting at the back of the meeting taking notes - he was in the thick of it."

Speaking about the Ratcliffe-on-Soar protest, Mr Chivers said: "Mark Stone was involved in organising this for months - they could have stopped it at the start."
Instead, Mr Chivers said the police officer helped recruit as many people as possible.
He also drove a reconnaissance party to the power station in his van and then hired a truck for the main protest, Mr Chivers added.

The activists' plan was to try to shut down the coal-fired power station for a few days as a protest against global warming.
But in April 2009, when 114 people had gathered for a meeting at the Iona School in Nottingham, hundreds of police swooped on the building and arrested them all for "conspiracy to commit aggravated trespass".
Eighteen were convicted late last year.

Ratcliffe-on-Soar was one of many actions in Britain and across Europe which Mr Kennedy was involved in, including the protests against the G8 summit at Gleneagles in 2005 which helped give birth to the Climate Camp movement.
"He was one of the key people setting up Gleneagles 2005," said Mr Chivers, who also claimed the undercover officer drove protesters there in his van.

'Violated'


Activist websites are full of denunciations of Mr Kennedy by former close friends.
There is some abuse, but most say they feel "violated", "betrayed" and "sickened".

One writes: "He must be a deeply conflicted individual."
When confronted, Mr Kennedy told the activists he left the police after the Nottingham arrests in 2009.

It is unclear whether this is true, or where he is now, but contacted the activists' defence team to say he would be prepared to help their case.
When the defence then asked the prosecution to disclose full details of Mr Kennedy's activities the prosecution dropped the case.

The 18 protesters who were convicted last year are now expected to consider appealing against their convictions.
The Met Police are refusing to comment officially on Mr Kennedy.
Man, it actually sounds a bit like he was an activist undercover as a cop that's undercover as an activist...
 
So wait... the police financed, provoked, and guided a protest group to become Eco-terrorists? Isn't this the definition of entrapment? Or does England not have that law on the books?
 
So wait... the police financed, provoked, and guided a protest group to become Eco-terrorists? Isn't this the definition of entrapment? Or does England not have that law on the books?
For some reason entrapment never seems to apply when it is the police officer organizing the attacks and browbeating the conspirators back in line when they try to pull back from the violence. Hell there have been cases where the police informant organized the group, provided the explosives and picked the target and yet was the only one not charged with terrorism.

Normal laws don't seem to apply to terrorism trials. Apparently because it is hard to really infiltrate a serious terrorist network we accept police cutting corners and making their own terrorists to arrest.
 
So wait... the police financed, provoked, and guided a protest group to become Eco-terrorists? Isn't this the definition of entrapment? Or does England not have that law on the books?
Well from the sound of it it looks like they just encouraged them and actively recruited new members, not that they came up with the idea of trying to shut down the plant.
 
Well from the sound of it it looks like they just encouraged them and actively recruited new members, not that they came up with the idea of trying to shut down the plant.
But it also sounds like they helped finance it, actively participated in the planning, and helped secure the means to arrive at the protest. Knowingly helping finance a criminal act makes you culpable to said act as a co-conspirator, which makes them an agent provocateur.

Seriously, they should have just busted these people for conspiracy when they were planning the act. Instead, it's turned into a colossal cluster fuck that may end in these people getting acquitted.
 
I

Iaculus

Don't think it helped that this guy apparently ended up going native during the infiltration, though.
 
But it also sounds like they helped finance it, actively participated in the planning, and helped secure the means to arrive at the protest. Knowingly helping finance a criminal act makes you culpable to said act as a co-conspirator, which makes them an agent provocateur.
My point was that you made it sound like they convinced them to turn to action instead of just words... wasn't arguing that the police didn't go too far.

Seriously, they should have just busted these people for conspiracy when they were planning the act. Instead, it's turned into a colossal cluster fuck that may end in these people getting acquitted.
Eh, the charges where dropped... it says so right there at the end.

Also, the previous persons that where found guilty where given community service and stuff, it wasn't like they where actual crazies.
 
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