WASHINGTON
– In light of the disturbing revelation that the FBI’s Counterterrorism
Division created a “threat tag” based on Attorney General Merrick Garland’s
October 4 memorandum, Ranking Member Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) and every Republican
member of the Senate Judiciary Committee is demanding that Garland finally withdraw
that memo and make clear that the law enforcement arms of the federal
government do not equate concerned parents with domestic terrorists.
“Parents
and other citizens who get impassioned at school-board meetings are not
domestic terrorists. You may believe that, but too many people involved in this
issue seem to think harsh words can be criminalized. Getting the FBI’s
Counterterrorism Division involved in the matter only makes this
worse—dramatically worse,” the senators
wrote.
The demand follows a
letter from the senators sent three days after Garland
issued his controversial memo, calling on the attorney general to make it clear
that parents will not be targeted for exercising their First Amendment rights. Garland
failed to reassure parents either through a new announcement or in
his testimony before the committee.
Signatories of the letter include Grassley and Sens.
Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), John Cornyn (R-Texas), Mike Lee (R-Utah), Ted Cruz
(R-Texas), Ben Sasse (R-Neb.), Josh Hawley (R-Mo.), Tom Cotton (R-Ark.), John
Kennedy (R-La.), Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) and Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.).
Full
text of the letter to Garland follows or can be found
HERE.
December 6, 2021
VIA ELECTRONIC
TRANSMISSION
The
Honorable Merrick B. Garland
Attorney
General
U.S.
Department of Justice
950
Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington,
D.C. 20530
Dear
Attorney General Garland:
Are
concerned parents domestic terrorists or not?
This
letter follows up on our letter to you of October 7 in which we called on you
to make clear to the nation’s parents and educators that it is not the job of
the federal government to silence those who question local school boards. In
light of a disturbing new revelation about the FBI’s Counterterrorism Division
following your directive, we call on you to withdraw your October 4 memorandum
and make abundantly clear through words and actions that no arm of the
government, including the offices under your command, may be used to chill
criticism of local government officials. By involving the FBI’s
Counterterrorism Division in this matter, that is exactly what you have done.
Recently
a whistleblower at the Department of Justice provided to the U.S. House
Judiciary Committee a copy of an internal DOJ email containing “A Joint Message
from Criminal Investigative Division & Counterterrorism Division.”
[1]
That email stated that the FBI’s Counterterrorism and Criminal Divisions
created the threat tag, “EDUOFFICIALS,” to track “instances of related threats”
about school administrators, school board members, teachers, and staff.
[2]
This followed your October 4 memorandum alleging a “disturbing spike in
harassment, intimidation, and threats of violence against school
administrators, board members, teachers, and staff who participate in the vital
work of running our nation’s public schools.”
[3]
In that memo, you directed the FBI and the various United States Attorneys to
hold meetings with “federal, state, local, Tribal, and territorial leaders in
each federal judicial district within 30 days” in order to “facilitate the
discussion of strategies for addressing threats against school administrators,
board members, teachers, and staff….”
[4]
And as you well know by now, you issued this directive in response to a
September 29 letter from the National School Boards Association (NSBA) to
President Biden, which compared impassioned parents to domestic terrorists.
[5]
The NSBA has since apologized for its September 29 letter.
[6]
You
testified on October 27 to the Senate Committee on the Judiciary that your
October 4 memorandum was only about violence and threats of violence, and you
specifically said, “The Constitution protects spirited debate, and I don’t
believe there’s anything in [that memorandum] that could be read to intimidate
mothers and fathers.”
[7]
You confirmed that parents are exercising their Constitutional rights when they
speak before their local school boards and even get upset and yell what they
really believe.
[8] You
testified that it would be unreasonable to read your October 4 memorandum as
chilling those rights.
[9]
However,
it should be abundantly clear to you now that no matter what your claimed
intention was at the time of issuing that memo, the subsequent reaction of
American parents and the public shows it has had a clear chilling effect on
them. Since you issued your October 4 memorandum, all of us have received
hundreds of letters and emails from our constituents who are angry and
concerned about the idea that the FBI will be tracking what they say at local
school board meetings. Despite your testimony to the contrary, these parents
have good reason to be concerned. The attached Joint Message from the FBI’s
Criminal and Counterterrorism divisions naturally leads normal, loving, and
impassioned parents to wonder whether the FBI’s Counterterrorism Division – an eyebrow raising fact that cannot be
emphasized enough – will be reviewing and storing videos of them speaking at
school-board meetings. Speaking in public is a nerve-racking experience for
most people. Undoubtedly many of them will now just skip it. When that happens,
democracy is failing. Other parents will be even more nervous speaking their
minds and will not be as clear as they would like to be when speaking. All of
this is an outrageous tipping of the scales in the marketplace of ideas in
favor of school officials, who just happen to be a major constituency of the
political party that currently controls the White House and the Department of
Justice.
[10] And
you have now enlisted the FBI’s Counterterrorism Division as muscle in that
marketplace of ideas.
No
matter how you might rationalize this, the FBI’s Counterterrorism Division
should never have had anything to do with school-board meetings. Congress has
received multiple whistleblower reports from within the Department of Justice
about the DOJ and FBI processes that have taken place since you issued your
October 4 memorandum. It is not just the public and Congress that are concerned
about introducing national-security tools into local-government debates. It is
also dedicated, career public servants—the very same people you said in your
confirmation hearing that you would listen to when leading the Department.
Make
no mistake about it—there are those who would be perfectly happy with the
federal government, now including the FBI’s Counterterrorism Division, scaring
people out of criticizing local school boards. A big part of this problem,
which you either do not understand or are complicit in, is that too many people
nowadays equate ideas they do not like with violence. Many are effectively
taught that anything or anybody that hurts their feelings with words or ideas
can be sanctioned so as to effectively make those hurt feelings go away. That
is the gist of NSBA’s September 29 letter to President Biden, which neither its
state school-board-association members nor its own board of directors even
approved. Read it again. Read the news stories in the footnotes of that letter
and notice how many of the school-board meetings that the NSBA complained about
did not actually involve any sort of serious criminal activity. When taken as a
whole, that letter was not concerned about actual physical violence and true
threats of violence as much as it was frustrated by people harshly criticizing
school boards.
[11] It
was a shameless request for the federal government to stop people from making
them feel bad in school-board meetings. Its complaint about the group Turning
Point USA “spreading misinformation that [school] boards are adopting critical
race theory curriculum and working to maintain online learning by haphazardly
attributing it to COVID-19”
[12]
was particularly galling in this regard. By now involving the FBI’s
Counterterrorism Division in this effort, even if you personally believe that
division would never cross a line into silencing criticism of local
governments, you have given life to the idea that dissidents are synonymous
with terrorists. This is a common tactic of third-world dictatorships, but it
should never be FBI practice.
Parents
and other citizens who get impassioned at school-board meetings are not
domestic terrorists. You may believe that, but too many people involved in this
issue seem to think harsh words can be criminalized. Getting the FBI’s
Counterterrorism Division involved in the matter only makes this worse—dramatically
worse. Therefore, we call on you to work with us in coming to a resolution on
this matter. We need you to make clear in very simple terms that violence and
true threats of violence are well-defined, discreet ideas in the law and do not
include harsh tones and strong criticisms that might make local school-board
officials feel disrespected or uncomfortable. There is no other way to
communicate this to the American people other than by unequivocally withdrawing
your October 4 memorandum.
You
may contact John Schoenecker on Ranking Member Grassley’s staff at (202)
224-5225 with any questions you may have about this letter and its request.
Sincerely,
-30-
[1]
Email from Carlton Peeples, Acting Deputy Assistant Director, Criminal
Investigative Division, Federal Bureau of Investigation, to FBI_SACS et al.
(Oct. 20, 2021, 10:02 EDT), hereinafter and attached hereto as Exhibit 1.
[3]
Memorandum from Attorney Gen. Merrick Garland, Partnership Among Federal,
State, Local, Tribal, and Territorial Law Enforcement to Address Threats
Against School Administrators, Board Members, Teachers, and Staff (Oct. 4,
2021), at https://www.justice.gov/ag/page/file/1438986/download.
[5] Letter
from Viola M. Garcia, President, and Chip Slaven, Interim Executive Director
& CEO, National School Boards Association, to Joseph R. Biden, President of
the United States (September 29, 2021),
at https://nsba.org/-/media/NSBA/File/nsba-letter-to-president-biden-concerning-threats-to-public-schools-and-school-board-members-92921.pdf
(hereinafter September 29 NSBA letter).
[6]
Letter from NSBA Board of Directors to NSBA Members (Oct. 22, 2021), at https://www.nsba.org/-/media/letter-to-nsba-membership-oct-22-2021.pdf?la=en&hash=F1B1348E2B4071132A992687120409BF0D72C3C7
(hereinafter October 22 NSBA letter).
[7] Department
of Justice Oversight Hearing before the Senate Committee on the Judiciary
(testimony of Attorney General Merrick Garland), at https://www.c-span.org/video/?515521-1/attorney-general-garland-testifies-senate-judiciary-committee-oversight-hearing
(3:41:45).
[10] See Teachers Unions, Open Secrets, at https://www.opensecrets.org/industries/indus.php?ind=l1300
(“Teachers unions have steadily amped up their political involvement: From 2004
to 2016, their donations grew from $4.3 million to more than $32 million -- an
all-time high. Even more than most labor unions, they have little use for
Republicans, giving Democrats at least 94 percent of the funds they contributed
to candidates and parties since as far back as 1990, where our data begins.”)
[11] See generally Letter from Republican
Members of the Senate Committee on the Judiciary to Merrick Garland, Attorney
General, U.S. Department of Justice (Oct. 7, 2021), at https://www.grassley.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/2021-10-07_sjc_to_doj_school_boards.pdf.
[12]
September 29 NSBA letter at 5.