"Under the Microscope": Activists Opposing a Nevada Lithium Mine Were Surveilled for Years, Records Show
Government records later confirmed wide-ranging FBI surveillance of the movement in the 1970s, and now the agency is focused on her and a new generation of Indigenous activists challenging development of a mine in northern Nevada. Farrell-Smith advises the group People of Red Mountain, which opposes a Canadian companys efforts to tap what it says is one of the worlds largest lithium deposits.
Law enforcement agencies, including the FBI, have for years worked alongside private mine security to surveil the largely peaceful protesters who oppose the mine, called Thacker Pass, according to more than 2,000 pages of internal law enforcement communications reviewed by ProPublica. Officers and agents have tracked protesters social media, while the mining company has gathered video from a camera above a campsite protesters set up on public land near the mine. An FBI joint terrorism task force in Reno met in June 2022 with a focus on Thacker Pass, the records also show, and Lithium Americas the main company behind the mine hired a former FBI agent specializing in counterterrorism to develop its security plan.
Were out there doing ceremony and theyre surveilling us, Farrell-Smith said.
They treat us like were domestic terrorists, added Chanda Callao, an organizer with People of Red Mountain.
All told, about 10 agencies have monitored the mines opponents. In addition to the FBI, those agencies include the Bureau of Land Management, Humboldt County Sheriffs Office, Bureau of Indian Affairs, Nevada State Police Highway Patrol, Winnemucca Police Department and Nevada Threat Analysis Center, the records show.
Andrew Ferguson, who studies surveillance technology at the American University Washington College of Law, called the scrutiny of Indigenous and environmental protesters as potential terrorists chilling.
https://www.propublica.org/article/thacker-pass-lithium-mine-nevada-indigenous