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Social activist, organizer ... and FBI informant:(RNC CONVENTION ALMOST FIREBOMBED!!)
Statesman.com ^ | Jan 3, 2009 | By David Hanners

Posted on 01/04/2009 4:05:57 PM PST by RaceBannon

Social activist, organizer ... and FBI informant It was all about stopping violence, says Austin man who revealed alleged firebomb plot at GOP convention. By David Hanners

ST. PAUL PIONEER PRESS

Saturday, January 03, 2009

ST. PAUL, Minn. — In a federal courtroom in Minneapolis this month, the public transformation of Brandon Darby of Austin will become complete.

In four years, he has gone from a never-trust-the-government activist to the confidential informant who helped the FBI arrest two Austin men on suspicion of building firebombs during the Republican National Convention in St. Paul in September.

"I feel like, as an activist, I played a direct role in stopping violence," Darby, 32, said in his first interview on his role.

Darby was the government's chief informant in the case against David McKay and Bradley Crowder. The two are scheduled to go on trial in U.S. District Court on Jan. 26 on accusations they built Molotov cocktails during the convention. They are being held without bail.

Prosecutors say the two men built the firebombs because they were angry that police had seized a trailer filled with riot shields they had built and hauled to Minnesota.

In a conversation recorded by the FBI, McKay told Darby he planned to use the explosives on law-enforcement cars parked in a lot near the convention site, officials said.

"What if there's a cop sleeping in the car?" Darby asked McKay, according to an affidavit by Christopher Langert, a special agent in the FBI's Minneapolis office. "He'll wake up," McKay allegedly replied.

McKay also told Darby, "It's worth it if an officer gets burned or maimed," the affidavit said.

Darby had been working as an informant since November 2007, almost a year before the GOP convention , and in an e-mail sent to friends Monday, he said he was comfortable with that.

"Like many of you, I do my best to act in good conscience and to do what I believe to be most helpful to the world," he wrote.

Darby's admission shocked Austin's activist community, which includes people who have worked with him on a variety of grass roots organizing efforts for years.

"Everyone that knew Brandon has gone through a whole range of emotions. Clearly, he's betrayed the trust of the community, and all the communities he's worked with," said Lisa Fithian, a social-justice activist who worked with Darby in Austin.

A spokesman for prosecutor Frank Magill, the U.S. attorney for Minnesota, declined to comment.

McKay, Crowder and nine other people riding in a van with Darby had little reason to suspect he was a government informant. Darby long had been known for having a strong mistrust of authority, particularly police.

"He and I faced the cops with arms, 'law enforcement' (and some within our communities) view him as very antagonistic toward the cops and all their flavors," friend Scott Crow wrote of Darby on an online independent site in November.

"He often tried to inflame situations," Crow said in an interview.

It was in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina that Darby made a name for himself as an activist, organizer and, as he calls it, proponent of "service-oriented direct action."

After Katrina hit the Gulf Coast in August 2005, Darby and others started the Common Ground Collective, which began by delivering supplies to people in the ravaged city.

Darby said he saw firsthand what happens when government fails to protect its citizens. "When I showed up in New Orleans, I was very angry at my government," he said.

But he said that while working there, he concluded that some activists seemed more intent on promoting radical agendas than helping people.

As for why he got involved with the FBI, Darby said it was because he discovered that people he knew were planning violence.

"Somebody had asked me to do something that would've resulted in hurting people, and I said no," he said. "So they started asking other people. At that point, that's when I went forward and contacted somebody in law enforcement."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Front Page News; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Minnesota
KEYWORDS: 2008electionviolence; 2008rncconvention; bombersforobama; civilwar2; convention; dncbrownshirts; electionviolence; fbi; firebomb; howtostealanelection; informant; mediablackout; proterrorist; radicalleft; rnc


1 posted on 01/04/2009 4:05:57 PM PST by RaceBannon
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To: RaceBannon

Considering that Obama refers to Bill Ayers as a distinguished educator I imagine that these chaps can conjure up a decent defence and if need be-a presidential pardon. They can look forward to a distinguished career in academia.


2 posted on 01/04/2009 4:12:16 PM PST by purplelobster
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To: RaceBannon
"When I showed up in New Orleans, I was very angry at my government"

Did he not consider that many of those people did NOTHING for themselves? Of course socialists aren't wired to think that way. Hell, this discussion regarding Katrina has happened time and time again....

3 posted on 01/04/2009 4:13:23 PM PST by KoRn
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To: purplelobster
Won't need a pardon if tried in Minn. They will not be convicted by that bunch, St Paul city government supported these terrorists. Lucky the FBI was on the ball.
4 posted on 01/04/2009 4:22:21 PM PST by We Dare Defend Our Rights
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To: RaceBannon

“Clearly, he’s betrayed the trust of the community, and all the communities he’s worked with,”

This is why you cannot trust a leftist. They care only about their “community” of fellow leftists, and not the community in general. They have no sympathy for anyone who isn’t in agreement with them.


5 posted on 01/04/2009 4:30:59 PM PST by popdonnelly (Don't lose sight of your conservative principles.)
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To: RaceBannon; SunkenCiv; null and void

This article is so sympathetic to the poor betrayed terrorists that it made my skin crawl.

The newspapers in Austin carry help wanted advertising for activists to demonstrate for pay. Hired leftists. Mercenaries in the war against the establishment. But they are “shocked” that someone among them may not be 100% sincere and loyal to the cause?


6 posted on 01/04/2009 4:41:09 PM PST by ValerieTexas
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To: popdonnelly
Darby's admission shocked Austin's activist community, which includes people who have worked with him on a variety of grass roots organizing efforts for years.

"Everyone that knew Brandon has gone through a whole range of emotions. Clearly, he's betrayed the trust of the community, and all the communities he's worked with," said Lisa Fithian, a social-justice activist who worked with Darby in Austin.

Waa-waa-waa...

7 posted on 01/04/2009 4:41:44 PM PST by CedarDave (Under Obama, yesterday's pork-laden earmarks have become tomorrow's economic stimulus projects)
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To: popdonnelly
"This is why you cannot trust a leftist. They care only about their “community” of fellow leftists, and not the community in general. They have no sympathy for anyone who isn’t in agreement with them."

As a former leftist (long ago) I can't agree with you more. They are smug, arrogant and know loyalty only to an evil ideology.

8 posted on 01/04/2009 4:52:45 PM PST by VR-21
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To: RaceBannon

The firebomber pled GUILTY back DURING the 2008 campaign. The story was supressed by the MSM.

It happened the same week as that girl carved a backwards B on her cheek.

Wonder why the media didn’t give a sh!t about activists bombing the RNC. If it’d been an anti-abortionist, it would’ve led the news for weeks.


9 posted on 01/04/2009 5:20:41 PM PST by weegee (Obamunism, just another word for the policies of a NeoCom.)
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To: RaceBannon
"Everyone that knew Brandon has gone through a whole range of emotions. Clearly, he's betrayed the trust of the community, and all the communities he's worked with," said Lisa Fithian, a social-justice activist who worked with Darby in Austin.

Has he informed on any of these 'communities he's worked with'? If not, then he's not betrayed the trust of anyone except those two men who are alleged to have intended to do harm to police officers in St. Paul.

Since Columbine, we have encouraged young people to let their parents or other authority figures know if someone they know is planning an attack on their schools. I don't see anything different in what this man did.

10 posted on 01/04/2009 6:15:59 PM PST by SuziQ
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To: SuziQ; SunkenCiv

Makes ya proud to know our next President is an experienced “community activist”.


11 posted on 01/04/2009 6:43:02 PM PST by ValerieTexas
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To: RaceBannon
"Everyone that knew Brandon has gone through a whole range of emotions. Clearly, he's betrayed the trust of the community,

Shows that the Austin communist community needs to be anally probed for more antiAmerican terrorists. He "betrayed" the community NOT because he went violent, but because he spilled the beans to The Man about what was ABOUT to go down.

12 posted on 01/05/2009 6:18:09 AM PST by weegee (Obamunism, just another word for the policies of a NeoCom.)
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To: weegee
I see that this is a separate RNC terrorist case, here is the one I was referring to:

Man admits plotting to bomb RNC ((Red)StarTribune 10-22-2008 PAUL WALSH)

A 23-year-old Michigan man (Matthew DePalma) has admitted to plotting to set off a homemade bomb in the tunnels near the Xcel Energy Center, hoping it would cause a power failure and prompt cancellation of the Republican National Convention.

13 posted on 01/05/2009 6:22:00 AM PST by weegee (Obamunism, just another word for the policies of a NeoCom.)
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To: VR-21

Apparently the word “community” is now interchangeable with “cult.”


14 posted on 01/05/2009 2:54:39 PM PST by ValerieTexas
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To: ValerieTexas; AdmSmith; Berosus; Convert from ECUSA; dervish; Ernest_at_the_Beach; Fred Nerks; ...

Thanks Val (and for that other one, I think I forgot to t you).


15 posted on 01/05/2009 8:51:00 PM PST by SunkenCiv (https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/_______Profile finally updated Saturday, December 6, 2008 !!!)
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