PROTESTERS MEET POLICE AT THE GATES OF THE CIA

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000402750001-6
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
2
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
January 11, 2012
Sequence Number: 
1
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
April 28, 1987
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00965R000402750001-6.pdf160.74 KB
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STAT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/11: CIA-RDP90-00965R000402750001-6 WASHINGTON POST CA ?A ? _A 28 April 1987 Protesters Meet Police At the Gates of the CIA Encounter Proceeds in Orderly Fashion J By John F. Harris W.i.hmkton Peat Stale Writcr If there were doubts, this was the moment they would be resolved. The time for decision had arrived, just as all the protesters had known it would. Capt. M.L. Barrett of the U.S. Park Police shouted to the crowd: "I'm here to tell you, if you don't leave now you will be subject to ar- rest." On the George Washington Park- !way ramp to the Central Intelli- gence Agency's north entrance, about 50 protesters were greeted ,by Barrett and a handful of police officers. Just down the road, 100 officers with sticks and helmets awaited those who ignored the warning and continued walking toward the gate. Many of the protesters had come from across the nation to. be ar- rested. Others were there to show sup- port, but had no intention of break- ing the law. "We're here-let's do it," a wo- man implored a group of friends. Others shuffled uncertainly. Then about 30 protesters de- cided to walk the final stretch, eas- ily walking through the out- stretched arms of the first line of police officers. When the reached the second line, however, it was a different sto- ry, and 20 minutes later, the pro- testers were sitting on a grassy me- dian strip, their hands cuffed behind them. Some of. yesterday's protesters had long hair and beards and wore ponchos. There were chants and banners and an occasional whiff of marijuana in the air. However, some conventional- looking characters also walked on this stage. Bill Ericson dressed for the pro- test in a pin-striped suit and a red tie adorned with Republican Party elephants. "I'm one of those who is conser- vative about their country and don't want to see a secret CIA,".: said Ericson, who said he is an electrical engineer. "The CIA is taking, over foreign policy. "It says in the Constitution that only Congress can declare war." If most of the protesters had nothing good to say about the CIA yesterday, many found the agency's initials good to lampoon. Over the CIA exit sign on the parkway, the protesters hung a sheet saying, "Cocaine Import Agency." Some of the other placards and banners read: "Criminals in Action," "Cutthroats in Angola," and "Covert Illegal Agency." The protesters cheered when one of their leaders announced that their demonstration had brought traffic to a standstill around the CIA headquarters. They didn't realize that in just a few minutes they would be victims of their own success. A bus carrying the first wave of demonstrators from the protest's starting point near the CIA's south gate to the north gate four miles away was mired in traffic. "Let's go bus driver, MOVE!" one protester yelled to the driver. They weren't the only ones ir- ritated by the delays. "I think it stinks," said Boris Petro, a con- struction worker who was delayed by traffic from getting to a CIA building site. "We don't work, we don't eat," he said. For the most part, the protesters played their part and the police played theirs, and few words were exchanged. Once in a while, however, a di- alogae took place, and as often as not it was strained. "Maybe this will help people un- derstand . . . , " protester josh Nes- sen told a mounted park policeman, explaining why he chose to be ar- rested at the north gate demonstra- tion. "Maybe next timd you'll re- spect what we're trying to say." "I've got just as much respect for you as you've got- for` me," re- sponded the officer, looking down from his horse to where Nessen was standing, handcuffed. The two continued their discus- sion; trading verbal volleys in a minidebate about.. the propriety and effectiveness of the Protest. Minutes later Nessen was bused away for booking. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/11: CIA-RDP90-00965R000402750001-6 STAT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/11: CIA-RDP90-00965R000402750001-6 r APr~~aaR~ED WASHINGTON POST WAGE _.f21s 16 May 1987 The Antenna That Came In From the Cold Star-Crossed CIA Communications Tower to Be Dismantled ~- By John F. Harris Waahindten Pmt Staff Writer The CIA's proposed microwave communications tow- er, rebuffed by Reston last fall, has run into new trou- bles atop Bull Run Mountain in western Prince William County. A CIA contractor agreed yesterday to dismantle a 60-foot tower in the midst of construction after county officials issued two notices claiming that the firm built the tower without proper permits. Overseas Telecommunications Inc., an Alexandria firm, voluntarily sought and later received a county de- molition permit after the Prince William officials or- dered work stopped on the tower Wednesday. County officials said the firm began construction on the tower without receiving a building permit or a special-use per- mit. John DePodesta, counsel for Overseas, said the firm mistakenly began the construction because of a "mis- understanding." If the tower is ever built anywhere, it would be part of the Foreign Broadcast Information Service, a branch of the CIA that monitors foreign radio and television broadcasts, according to documents on file with the county. Construction workers at the remote Bull Run Moun- tain site near the Prince William-Fauquier county line were incorrectly notified by Overseas' attorney in Manassas that a building permit had been issued, Po- desta said. Further, he said, Overseas incorrectly be- lieved that no special-use permit was required for construction until the tower's height exceeded 35 feet. Prince William Planning Director Roger D. Snyder spoke with Over- seas officials yesterday and said afterward, "They can be described as contrite but very reasonable peo- ple " The first known attempt to build the tower failed in October when Overseas voluntarily withdrew an application for a 197-foot structure in Reston that appeared headed for defeat at the hands of the Fairfax County Planning Commission. Reston residents near the site complained that the tower would mar the skyline, and some county officials said they were irritated by "the cloak-and-dagger" secrecy sur- rounding the proposal. Nonetheless, CIA officials appear eager for Overseas to overcome the governmental obstacles and com- plete the project at the new Prince William site. In a letter on file with Prince Wil- liam County, CIA official Harry R. Wood wrote to Overseas: "In view of the amount of governmental funds already committed, the ur- gency associated with the success- ful completion, and the importance of the overall mission to be accom- plished, I consider it important that you, as the government's system contractor, pursue this on an abso- lute priority basis." In official documents, Overseas said the tower is needed to "connect c ,toltita earth station at Quantico with facilities at Langley, Va., and ultimately the White House." The CIA's location is often listed as Langley, although its mailing ad- dress is Washington. Because microwave communica. tion requires a "line-of-sight" path from station to station, high towers are often required. A commercial communications tower is already in place near the proposed Bull Run site, county officials said. Overseas officials told Prince William they hope to continue with the project after receiving the prop- er permits, according to Snyder. In addition to a building permit from the county, Overseas also must receive a permit from the Prince William Planning Commis- sion and the county supervisors. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/01/11: CIA-RDP90-00965R000402750001-6