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After Spokane anti-ICE protest, FBI reportedly extracted data from demonstrators' phones

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Last summer, hundreds of people protested outside of an ICE facility in Spokane. They were trying to stop agents from taking two asylum seekers to an ICE detention center in Tacoma. 

As the day wore on and the protest grew in size, law enforcement ordered demonstrators to disperse… and then deployed pepper balls and smoke grenades on the crowd. The mayor issued a curfew. 

By the end of the evening, around 30 people were arrested.

But the government’s response didn't end there: A month later, federal prosecutors indicted nine Spokane protesters on felony conspiracy charges.   

In May, three of those protesters were found guilty of charges related to “conspiracy to impede” federal officers. They face up to six years in prison.

It’s an example of the escalating legal strategy the Trump Administration has been using to charge anti-ICE protesters across the country, most recently in Minnesota.  

And, according to new reporting, federal law enforcement turned to an atypical surveillance tactic to fuel the Spokane case.   

An investigation from Mother Jones found that the FBI secretly extracted data from protesters’ cellphones confiscated during last year’s protest. 

Guest: Schuyler Mitchell, an assistant editor at Mother Jones

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