By Paul Joseph Watson
Residents of Leesburg, Florida were shocked to see their
local Social Security office turned into a random Homeland Security
checkpoint Tuesday morning, as DHS officers armed with semiautomatic
rifles and accompanied by sniffer dogs checked identifications of
locals.
“With their blue and white SUVs circled around the Main
Street office, at least one official was posted on the door with a
semiautomatic rifle, randomly checking identifications. And other
officers, some with K-9s, sifted through the building,” reports the Daily Commercial.
The activity was part of Operation Shield, an
unannounced drill conducted by the DHS’ Federal Protective Service
centered around “detecting the presence of unauthorized persons and
potentially disruptive or dangerous activities.”
Thomas Milligan, district manager for the Social
Security Administration office, said staff were not informed their
offices were about to be stormed by armed FPS officers. DHS officials
refused to answer questions asked by local media and left with no
explanation at noon.
“Part of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, FPS
is the federal law enforcement agency that provides integrated security
and law enforcement services to over 9,000 federally-owned and leased
buildings, facilities, properties and other assets,” states the report.
Indeed, the FPS is used for a variety of roles, not just limited to setting up unannounced ID checkpoints.
As part of the reinvention of the Department of Homeland
Security to serve as a tool of political repression, the Federal
Protective Service is used by the DHS to track the political activities of peaceful advocacy groups. The FPS was seen arresting photographers in Portland last November during an OWS rally.
In 2004, the FPS arrested a veteran for the crime of complaining to his local VA office in Des Moines.
A separate component of Homeland Security, VIPR (Visible Intermodal Prevention and Response), recently received an expansion in funding from Congress
that will see 2011′s figure of around 9,300 checkpoints increased with
the addition of 12 new VIPR teams, who will be used to carry out
security checks at bus depots, train stations, ferry ports and highways.
The extra money is being demanded despite the fact that
there is “no proof that the roving viper teams have foiled any terrorist
plots or thwarted any major threat to public safety,” according to an L.A. Times report.
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