By Stefen Styrsky
Published: April 27, 2006
Federal Judge Rosemary A. Collyer of the D.C. District has ordered three government agencies to turn over by the end of May all documents they have regarding covert surveillance of domestic LGBT groups. The order is the culmination of a months-long struggle by the Service Members Legal Defense Network to force the Departments of Justice and Defense to release any information they possess regarding the matter.
In December, NBC News reported that the Pentagon had been monitoring college student groups opposed to the military’s “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy which forbids open service by gay and lesbian personnel. According to NBC News, and later confirmed by a partial release of documents from the Defense Department, the LGBT law student group at NYU, OUTLaw, was labeled “potentially violent” by Pentagon officials, who believed “the term Outlaws is a backhanded way of saying it is alright to commit possible violence and serve as vigilantes...”
The Pentagon began an investigation of OUTLaw when it was learned that the group would be participating in a February 2005 student protest against military recruiters on the NYU campus. Defense intelligence officials reported that the event “may involve Outlaws” a possible security threat to the recruiters. <snip>
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