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Report: APD asked DEA to go undercover at summer protests

.... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... Marchers protesting the death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police officers block Central in Downtown on May 31. (Adolphe Pierre-Louis/Albuquerque Journal) ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. Last summer, as the movement against racial injustice swept the country, officials in the Albuquerque Police Department asked the Drug Enforcement Administration for the assistance of special agents to do undercover operations and surveillance at protests, according to an investigative report from the nonprofit Citizens for Responsibility & Ethics in Washington published on Friday. The government watchdog group published emails from Kyle Williamson, the DEA’s special agent in charge at the El Paso division, to officials with the Department of Justice. It also published similar requests from police departments in Chicago and Philadelphia.

Activist arrests end in settlements, good food

Copyright © 2021 Albuquerque Journal La’Quonte Barry takes a break from work at his food truck in a Northeast Albuquerque park Saturday afternoon. He started the business with money he received from a settlement with the city. (Roberto E. Rosales/Albuquerque Journal) In July, at the height of the protests in Albuquerque for racial justice, two Black men were the only people charged after the city banned guns on Civic Plaza. La’Quonte Barry, 32, and Francisco “Frankie” Grady, 40, leaders of the Black New Mexico Movement, had taken guns to a rally they were holding one Sunday and were promptly detained by officers. They were charged with unlawful carrying of a deadly weapon on school premises – a fourth-degree felony.

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