bediger4000 5 days ago

Why? That's unequivocally constitutionally protected speech. Why is our tax money being wasted on this?

  • afavour 5 days ago

    To intimidate. They're probably quite aware they'll lose in court. But in the mean time they might discourage some folks from turning out on the street.

  • JoshTriplett 5 days ago

    Are you under the impression that the current administration cares about what the law says?

    "Conservatism consists of exactly one proposition, to wit: There must be in-groups whom the law protects but does not bind, alongside out-groups whom the law binds but does not protect"

  • tptacek 5 days ago

    They're "investigating", presumably with data gleaned from arrests and CIs; you have a right to speech, and a right not to be prosecuted for speech, but a much, much narrower right not to be "investigated", collapsing to ~epsilon when the investigation involves data the FBI already has.

    • janalsncm 5 days ago

      Yeah whenever people say “the first amendment is not a freedom from consequences” it is only a freedom from certain consequences (and that freedom only goes as far as the government is willing to protect it). It is a freedom from being convicted. They can still arrest you, you can still spend time in jail, prosecutors can even file charges. A court is supposed to throw those charges out. And in extreme cases you can be convicted and sent to prison for years before SCOTUS rules.

      • tptacek 5 days ago

        Nobody has been charged.

        • jakelazaroff 5 days ago

          I think GP is speaking generally, not with regard to this situation specifically; obviously people have been charged for constitutionally-protected speech before.

    • andreygrehov 5 days ago

      No. According to the latest reports, while searching for ICE vehicles, the protesters are unlawfully scanning license plates, which strongly suggests they are receiving insider help.

      • anigbrowl 5 days ago

        There is nothing unlawful about scanning license plates. You are allowed to photograph them in the same way you are allowed to stand around writing them into a notebook if that activity is your idea of fun. Where do people get these ideas?!

      • derbOac 5 days ago

        "Unlawfully scanning license plates"? What does that even mean?

        Like searching a vehicle database? That's available to all sorts of people, like auto body repair shops.

        Taking a photo of a license plate? Nothing illegal about that.

      • janalsncm 5 days ago

        Can you rule out the much less technically advanced explanation that this information was crowdsourced? And people are simply observing the license plates that are plainly displayed?

        Frankly I don’t think it should have to come to license plate numbers. In a free society law enforcement should clearly identify themselves as such. We should not need secret police.

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  • hackyhacky 5 days ago

    When has the constitution mattered to this administration?

  • therobots927 5 days ago

    [flagged]

    • JumpCrisscross 5 days ago

      No, they haven’t. This kind of advocacy crosses from lazy nihilism to negligence.

      • [removed] 5 days ago
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      • dragonwriter 5 days ago

        > > > Why is our tax money being wasted on this?

        > > The fascists won. That’s why?

        > No, they haven’t.

        Yes, they did, that’s why they are able to use the executive branch of the federal government to enforce their wishes at the moment, with virtually no constraint yet from the legislative branch, and no significant consequences yet for ignoring contrary orders from the judicial branch.

        They may lose at some point in the future, but something that might happen in the future is irrelevant to the question of why what is happening now is happening, and it is happening because they won. Unambiguously.

      • anigbrowl 5 days ago

        They inarguably won the last election and control 2 branches of government.

      • therobots927 5 days ago

        I should’ve clarified. They won the 2024 election. And the democrats are controlled opposition who take money from fascists. For all intents and purposes they have won. That may not be a permanent state of affairs.

      • 8note 5 days ago

        i think it sets the framing that beating them back is from a losing position rather than equal.

        if you want the fascists to un-win, you need to treat the world as it is: the fascists are ascendent.

  • Sparkle-san 5 days ago

    Because too many people dismissed the claims that electing Trump would lead to a fascist administration as alarmist. Turns out he meant every word he said during his campaign.

  • randallsquared 5 days ago

    Conspiracy to commit a crime is typically not included in protected speech. Whether you think that's happening here will depend mostly on what side you take, I suspect.

    • neogodless 5 days ago
      • mycodendral 5 days ago

        18 U.S.C. § 372 - Conspiring to impede or interfere with a federal officer

        Freedom of expression does not include freedom from prosecution for real crimes.

    • JKCalhoun 5 days ago

      Interesting that there would be people on a "side" that think there was a conspiracy to commit a crime. What crime?

      • direwolf20 5 days ago

        Interference with a law enforcement investigation?

      • rexpop 5 days ago

        It's a crime.

        What do you have against crime?

        Nonviolent political action is often criminalized.

      • mycodendral 5 days ago

        18 U.S.C. § 372 - Conspiring to impede or interfere with a federal officer

      • mindslight 5 days ago

        In the fascist's mind, anything that isn't supporting Dear Leader's vision of "greatness" is a crime.

      • PrettiGoodDead 5 days ago

        [flagged]

        • mrtesthah 5 days ago

          We already know that "doxxing" on its own is not a crime, and moreover that [non-undercover] federal agents are not entitled to keep their identities secret.

          We also know that legal observation and making noise does not constitute interference.

          So those may be their stated reasons, but they will not hold up in court.

  • mycodendral 5 days ago

    Federal felony, not free speech.

    18 U.S.C. § 372 - Conspiring to impede or interfere with a federal officer

    • derbOac 5 days ago

      There's been lots of legal writing pointing out these statutes basically refer to impeding an officer by threat or physical force, which that statute you cite states. It doesn't refer to anything about providing food to someone who is fearing for their lives and won't leave the home, or communicating about the publicly observed whereabouts of law enforcement.

      • mycodendral 4 days ago

        "molest, interrupt, hinder, or impede him in the discharge of his official duties"

        The explicit coordination of things like: vehicle blocking, personnel blocking, personnel removal, disruptive distraction could clearly qualify.

        How the courts choose to interpret & prosecute is up to them.

    • kennywinker 5 days ago

      Are these federal officers? They’re men in masks with camo and body armor kidnapping people off the streets and refusing to show identification beyond a patch that says “ICE”.

      That is who is alleged to be impeded.

      • mycodendral 4 days ago

        Yes, they are federal officers. There is no pattern of mass kidnappings by impersonators occurring here.

        Interpreting masked officers in tactical gear as kidnappers, or claiming that a patch saying “ICE” is insufficient identification, is not a legally valid basis for suspicion or resistance.

    • OhMeadhbh 5 days ago

      Sure, but you should read what "impede" and "interfere" mean both in the regs and court precedent. Following ICE agents around is neither impeding or interfering by current federal court definitions. But yeah... that can change quickly.

    • janalsncm 5 days ago

      “Free speech” is a concept not a law. The first amendment protects certain types of speech. Whether something is free speech or not does not depend on the US government’s opinion or the Chinese government or your mother in law.

      Publishing locations alone is not conspiracy to commit a crime. If ICE is impeded as a result of this information, that’s not enough. Conspiracy requires the government to prove that multiple people intended to impede them.

      • spiderice 5 days ago

        Which is probably the easiest thing ever to prove, since people are openly trying to impede them

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  • poplarsol 5 days ago

    Coordinating roadblocks, "dearrests", warning the subjects of law enforcement operations, and intentionally causing the maximum amount of noise in neighborhoods neighborhood are not things you will be able to get a federal judge to characterize as "constitutionally protected speech".

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bsimpson 5 days ago

> “You cannot create a scenario that illegally entraps and puts law enforcement in harm’s way”

Remember when words, at least usually, meant things?

  • RIMR 5 days ago

    For real, if you're legitimately worried about your officers being legally entrapped, you've got some really untrustworthy officers.

  • bigyabai 5 days ago

    I remember a time when people were better at lying, at least.

plagiarist 5 days ago

The FBI should investigate the first item in the Bill of Rights.

resters 5 days ago

How many rights can Trump trample in one year? This is a big deal. I realize most of the problems started with the patriot act (most members of congress are culpable for that). We should all have zero tolerance for the erosion of our rights, zero tolerance for fake emergencies!

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OhMeadhbh 5 days ago

Couple of minor nits:

1. Some rando on X saying "OMG! I infiltrated a lefty signal group" doesn't mean said rando actually did infiltrate a signal group.

2. Signal was not the app Hegseth, et al. used. They used TM SGNL, which is a fork of Signal. But that's a minor nit.

3. Encryption is not the same thing as authentication. And authentication is somewhat meaningless if you let everyone into your encrypted group chat.

  • nextlevelwizard 5 days ago

    Anyone organizing your neighborhood and events keep inner circle chats to only people you have personally vetted and use a new group chat for every event/topic and delete the groups for past events.

    Be mindful of what you share in a big group chat where you don’t know everyone

whatsupdog 4 days ago

A lot of comments that don't go along the liberal hivemind are being downvoted and flagged, even though they don't break hacker news rules. If this community can not hear opposing opinions, then let's just ban political and politically charged news from being shared and discussed here.

  • danorama 4 days ago

    Can I suggest that using the term "liberal hivemind" is really never going to help your case no matter what your "opposing opinion" is?

  • TheCoelacanth 3 days ago

    Ah, yes, that liberal hivemind saying that first amendment rights are a thing and that mild resistance is not grounds for summary execution. Classic liberal hivemind.

JumpCrisscross 5 days ago

I’ve never seen a set of voluntary fall guys like Noem, Patel and Miller. (And Hegseth for when a military operation fails.)

  • ourmandave 5 days ago

    Every one is a potential fall guy except the King. First sign you're a liability and under the bus you go. And unless you're on Truth Social you're usually the last to know.

  • metalliqaz 5 days ago

    Miller is not the fall guy. The other clowns, yes, but not him. He's the most hard-core fascist in the bunch.

    • lenerdenator 5 days ago

      I don't know if I'd classify Noem as a patsy or fall gal, either.

      When you mention an anecdote about shooting a hunting dog in your autobiography, that shows something beyond just being a "true believer" or stooge. That is willingly pointing out that you are willing to act out your lack of empathy through violence towards an animal.

      I'm not a clinician (and haven't met Noem) but that just seems to me to be something indicative of a personality disorder.

      • xmcp123 5 days ago

        Noem strikes me as a loyalist and a team player through and through, so probably a fall gal.

        Miller is different. He has his own agenda, a lot of which has becomes trumps agenda. But trumps agenda changing does not change what Miller’s agenda is.

      • anigbrowl 5 days ago

        She's complaining (via 'sources') that she's 'being hung to try' for parroting Stephen Miller's approved line, so I have a hunch she'll bite their ankles on the way out.

      • spprashant 5 days ago

        She's an opportunist. For someone like her to be nationally relevant they have to latch onto MAGA and embrace the crazy. See MTG, Lauren Boebert, Matt Gaetz.

        • lenerdenator 5 days ago

          To me, those people you list are absolutely opportunists, but there's just something different about Noem. Like they're hedonists who are engaging in a grift and know that they have to sling arrows that will own the libs in order to keep the gravy train rolling. MTG seems to have, at least for a while a few months ago, found her limit on what she'll put up with. Gaetz had at least enough shame/self-awareness to realize that his continued career was untenable at the time he was being considered for AG. Boebert's the girl who told your science teacher to go fuck himself when he caught her smoking behind the high school gym with her age-inappropriate boyfriend.

          Maybe I'm just really hung up on the dog thing, but that is the crux of it. There's basically no one who hears a story of shooting a dog for misbehaving and thinks, "yeah, that'll show the libs". That's not a story out of a politician's biography as much as it is a story out of a book profiling a serial killer's childhood.

          71% of American households have pets [0] and there's a good chance that those who don't have had at least one in the past. There was absolutely no benefit to including that in the book, and I'd be stunned if the publisher didn't at least try to talk her out of putting it in there, given her political ambitions. If they didn't try to get it cut, they didn't do their jobs; if she ignored them, then she really does display a tendency to take pride in behavior that is recognized across the political spectrum in American society as cruel and antisocial.

          She genuinely gives me the creeps.

          [0] https://worldanimalfoundation.org/advocate/pet-ownership-sta...

    • IncreasePosts 5 days ago

      That's because miller is the only "smart" one to never defy trump. Of course, that means being his lap dog, but that's the position he chose.

    • JumpCrisscross 5 days ago

      > Miller is not the fall guy. The other clowns, yes, but not him

      He’s going to jail in a way Trump isn’t. That’s ultimately a fall guy.

      • metalliqaz 4 days ago

        I no longer have any reason to think that justice will prevail.

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bilekas 5 days ago

> “As soon as Higby put that post out, I opened an investigation on it,”

So when a right wing 'reporter' highlights people are doing things within their legal right, there's an investigation straight away.

But they can release the Epstien files when the victims themselves are asking them to.

> if that leads to a break in the federal statute or a violation of some law, then we are going to arrest people

That's not how the justice system works, you can't just go on fishing expeditions to find a crime.

BonoboIO 5 days ago

Perspective from Central Europe (Austria): I can tell you that essentially nobody here has any doubt that bad faith is at play.

Our mainstream news outlets are openly calling the "official" versions from the Trump administration what they are – lies. The video evidence is clear to anyone watching: this was murder. No amount of spin changes what the footage shows.

As citizens of a country that knows firsthand how fascism begins, we recognize the patterns: the brazen lying in the face of obvious evidence, the dehumanization, the paramilitarized enforcement without accountability. We've seen this playbook before.

What Americans might not fully grasp is how catastrophically the US has damaged its standing abroad. The sentiment here has shifted from "trusted ally" to "unreliable partner we need to become independent from as quickly as possible." The only thing most Europeans still find relevant about the US at this point is Wall Street.

The fact that the FBI is investigating citizens documenting government violence rather than the government agents committing violence tells you everything about where this is heading.

volemo 5 days ago

Look, there’s little I can do about my government. Maybe I can help you fight yours? They can’t harm me and you can bet I’m not visiting.

Can we help somehow?

hypeatei 5 days ago

I'm convinced all this talk around Signal, including Hegseths fuckup, is to discourage "normies" (for lack of a better term) from using it. Even in this very HN thread, where you'd expect technical nuance, there are people spreading FUD around the phone number requirement as if that'd be your downfall... a timestamp and a phone number? How would that get someone convicted in court?

  • pjc50 5 days ago

    They don't have to get a conviction if they know your address and have a gun.

flumpcakes 4 days ago

I can't believe there are so many boot licking fascist-lovers on hacker news. ICE are executing Americans on the streets and a bunch of people here are defending that. The US is cooked.

  • mangodrunk 4 days ago

    Maybe your understanding of things is wrong? Maybe the information you are getting on the situation is misleading?

    I am a democrat who does support ICE. If there are any issues, as there are given the numbers, they should be investigated. There have been many instances where an “execution” is claimed but they, the agents, were reasonable to assume imminent harm and self defense.

  • mycodendral 4 days ago

    Are you capable of accurately describing the other sides argument?

dyauspitr 5 days ago

So more nonsense. How about tracking down the murderer first.

modzu 5 days ago

an old lady and a fucking nurse shot by goons in masks and tactical gear... and they are labelling who as terrorists??? ffs america

quercus 5 days ago

[flagged]

  • tencentshill 5 days ago

    Yeah! Signal has nothing to do with technology. The government trying to snoop on a private E2EE service is not worth discussion.

    • zahlman 4 days ago

      > trying to snoop on a private E2EE service

      They are not trying to break encryption. They got a tip-off from a private citizen who got past vetting and infiltrated the group.

  • hobs 5 days ago

    Many people on hacker news have a reason to care about the united states government's position on signal and their evolving efforts relating to civil rights.

dayyan 5 days ago

[flagged]

  • hackyhacky 5 days ago

    Sounds good, until you realize that they've now murdered two peaceful protesters, who they post facto smear as terrorists to justify their murder.

    • spiderice 5 days ago

      [flagged]

      • hackyhacky 5 days ago

        That's not what happened. Watch the video. What you'll see is an undertrained bully with no accountability who was looking for an excuse to use violence. That's why the victim was shot from the side, and why the administration refuses to allow a serious investigation.

      • oceansky 5 days ago

        putting them at risk by trying to dodge them? What?

  • xrd 5 days ago

    He just misspoke slightly. What he meant to say:

    "What we will defend: using chaos, riots, and volatility as cover to escalate violence against peaceful protesters."

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dominicrose 5 days ago

Why is it so hard for someone like Trump to admit that a mistake was made by one of his agents, put him in jail and leave Minnesota alone at least for a while? It was predictable that things would get worse if he didn't back off and tell the truth.

mrandish 5 days ago

I suspect they're going to find it challenging to turn protected speech into something prosecutable like obstruction - assuming activists exercise even a modicum of care in their wording. Seems like just another intimidation tactic but in doing that, they've also given a heads-up to their targets.

  • elicash 5 days ago

    For all the complaints about the previous DOJ, one thing nobody ever argued was that they weren't intending to get convictions. They only brought cases they thought they could win.

    To see DOJ use its power the way we've seen (and I know the original story here is only with FBI at this point), it makes me think there should be some equivalent of anti-SLAPP laws but aimed at federal prosecutions. Some way to fast track baseless charges that will obviously never result in anything and that are just meant to either (a) punish someone into paying a ton of lawyer fees, (b) to intimidate others, or (c) grab some short-term headlines.

  • nextlevelwizard 5 days ago

    Considering ICE is executing people in the streets and were already breaking laws before this something little like free speech won’t help

    • jatora 5 days ago

      [flagged]

      • germinalphrase 5 days ago

        Your causality is reversed.

        The dude was literally just standing there on a public sidewalk with his hands up. He never initiated the altercation or otherwise impeded any lawful investigation.

        The agent chose to initiate the altercation during which the victim was pepper sprayed, pinned to the ground by six people, disarmed, and then shot ten times.

Ms-J 5 days ago

People need to investigate the FBI. They would be shocked at their crimes. The recent Epstein news comes to mind but that is only the smallest tip of it.

Always use encryption for anything. Encrypted messengers are great, but I would never trust Signal. It requires phone numbers to register among other issues, has intelligence funding from places such as the OTF, and their dev asset Rosenfeld is a whole other issue.

EchoReflection 5 days ago

https://mediabiasfactcheck.com/nbc-news/

and what is NBC "news"'s motive/agenda for framing this info the way they are?

"LEFT-CENTER BIAS These media sources have a slight to moderate liberal bias. They often publish factual information that utilizes loaded words (wording that attempts to influence an audience by appeals to emotion or stereotypes) to favor liberal causes. These sources are generally trustworthy for information but may require further investigation

NBC News is what some call a mainstream media source. They typically publish/report factual news that uses moderately loaded words in headlines such as this: 'Trump threatens border security shutdown, GOP cool to idea.'

Story selection tends to favor the left through both wording and bias by omission, where they underreport some news stories that are favorable to the right. NBC always sources its information to credible sources that are either low biased or high for factual reporting.

A 2014 Pew Research Survey found that 42% of NBC News’ audience is consistently or primarily liberal, 39% Mixed, and 19% consistently or mostly conservative. A more liberal audience prefers NBC. Further, a Reuters institute survey found that 46% of respondents trust their news coverage and 35% do not, ranking them #5 in trust of the major USA news providers."

  • tclancy 5 days ago

    What are you getting at? The idea of any of the major news outlets in the US being left-leaning is risible nowadays.

    • zahlman 5 days ago

      [flagged]

      • nisegami 4 days ago

        Recognizing the US federal government is behaving in a way consistent with facism is no longer a left leaning position.

      • foldr 5 days ago

        Hmm? These are mostly news reports of one person calling another person a fascist. Notably, one of the people doing the calling is Donald Trump!

        >Last week, after being found guilty of falsifying business records, former President Donald Trump said Americans today live in a “fascist state,” building on his unfounded conspiracy theory that somehow President Joe Biden is behind his prosecution in Manhattan.

        https://edition.cnn.com/2024/06/06/politics/fascism-trump-bi...