Difference between revisions of "Marco Jacobs (alias)"
(Created page with "cc") |
|||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | + | {{Undercover_Police_Officer_sidebar|Name=Unknown|Alias=Mark ‘Marco’ Jacobs|Series=undercover police officers|Image=Marco_Jacobs.png|Unit=National Public Order Intelligence Unit|DatesDeployed=2004-09|Targets=Anarchist direct action networks}} | |
+ | |||
+ | '''‘Mark Jacobs’''', more commonly known as '''‘Marco Jacobs’''', was the assumed identity of an undercover police officer who infiltrated activist groups within the anti-authoritarian political movement. He was active between the years of 2004 and 2009, at first in the Brighton area of southern England, and then Cardiff, south Wales. | ||
+ | |||
+ | It is believed that he worked for the [[National Public Order Intelligence Unit]],<ref name="ABK085p226">Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, ''Undercover: The True Story of Britain's Secret Police'', Faber & Faber, 2013, p226.</ref> and that after the end of his deployment, he was subsequently deployed undercover elsewhere, until publicity surrounding this and other spy operations caused him to be “moved for security reasons” after his “identity was compromised”.<ref name="TS3.001">Sean O'Neill, [http://www.thetimes.co.uk/tto/news/uk/crime/article2992340.ece ‘Police infiltrator in fear for her life after gang cover is blown’], ''The Times'', 20/04/11 (accessed 10 May 2014).</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | The role of ‘Jacobs’ as a long-term undercover police spy was brought to public attention in January 2011 in the wake of the unmasking of fellow NPOIU spy Mark Kennedy.<ref name="BG4.002">Really Fit, [https://web.archive.org/web/20110504052846/http://www.fitwatch.org.uk/2011/01/18/more-pictures-of-undercover-cop-marco/ ‘More pictures of undercover cop 'Marco'’], ''FITwatch'' blog, 18 January 2011 (accessed via 4 May 2011 archive.org cache, 27 August 2014).</ref><ref name="GN4.002"></ref><ref name="IM4.001">Fitwatch, [http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2011/01/472122.html ‘Officer 'B' confirmed as Cardiff based 'Marco' Jacobs’], ''Indymedia UK'', 15 January 2011 (accessed 11 May 2014).</ref><ref name="GN4.001">Paul Lewis, Matthew Taylor & Rajeev Syal, [http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2011/jan/14/third-undercover-police-spy-cardiff ‘Third undercover police spy unmasked as scale of network emerges’], ''The Guardian'', 15 January 2011 (accessed 11 May 2014).</ref><ref name="IM4.003">Dick Tracy, [http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2011/01/472391.html ‘An account of Marco Jacobs' time in Brighton’], ''Indymedia UK'', 19 January 2011 (accessed 11 May 2014).</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | However, both South Wales and Metropolitan police have maintened a [https://policespiesoutoflives.potager.org/the-case-overview/legal-battles/neither-confirm-nor-deny/ 'Neither Confirm Nor Deny'] defence of all aspects of Jacobs' deployment. On Wednesday [http://policespiesoutoflives.org.uk/solidarity-pickets-in-cardiff-london/ 25th March 2015] activists spied upon by Jacobs are in the Royal Courts of Justice in London attempting to strike out these NCND defence. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Jacobs' current whereabouts and status are unknown. Likewise nothing is known of his true identity or history as a police officer. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ''N.B. This is a preliminary profile, published to provide some background for the hearing. While the current profile is based on published material only, we will now talk to people who knew Marco Jacobs. If you think you have anything to add or to correct, [mailto:contact@undercoverresearch.not do get in touch] (ask for our PGP key).'' | ||
+ | |||
+ | Also see: | ||
+ | * [[Marco Jacobs (alias) Undercover Timeline]] | ||
+ | * [[Marco Jacobs (alias) Biblography]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | ==Overview of undercover tour as ‘Marco Jacobs’== | ||
+ | The man known as ‘Marco Jacobs’ first appeared in Brighton in late 2004, and quickly made attempts to inveigle his way into political groups, primarily those of a direct action-oriented anarchist or anti-authoritarian nature. He attended local protests, travelled to demonstrations in other parts of the country, took part in meetings, and socialised with activists. | ||
+ | |||
+ | However, it appears that he was never entirely trusted within the Brighton activist community<ref name="IM4.003">Dick Tracy, [http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2011/01/472391.html ‘An account of Marco Jacobs' time in Brighton’], ''IndyMedia UK'', 19 January 2011 (accessed 11 May 2014).</ref>, and so in 2005 he moved to Cardiff, where he repeated the same repertoire of behaviour, but, it seems, more successfully. Cardiff activist Tom Fowler, pointed at the different character of that city's activist scene compared to Brighton's: “he was a normal working class bloke and the activist scene in Brighton was maybe not somewhere ‘Jacobs’ was fitting in.”<ref name="AUD020">Oliver Hides, [https://a.tumblr.com/tumblr_mw8csfITIP1qcw2azo1_r1.mp3 ‘Interview with Tom Fowler about police infiltration of Cardiff Anarchist Network (package)’], ''Good Morning Wales'', BBC Radio Wales, 6 November 2013 (accessed via Tumblr 13 August 2014) ([http://issuu.com/bristlekrs/docs/avt024_ts-aud020_bbcrw_2013_tom_fow transcript AVT024 by BristleKRS]).</ref> Fellow Cardiff Anarchist Network (CAN) activist ‘Verity Smith’ concurred with this view in her account: | ||
+ | |||
+ | ::He moved to Cardiff claiming that he’d come from Brighton but that (activists in) Brighton had been hostile to him, had not accepted him and that he’d felt excluded. He said he’d come to Cardiff because we were more open and more tolerant of new people becoming involved and that there was a lot going on in Cardiff in terms of activism and that he wanted to be where things were happening.<ref name="ABK118ch17pp276">Tom Anderson, ‘Infiltrated, Intimidated and Undermined: How Police Infiltration Can Mute Political Dissent - An Interview with Verity Smith, from Cardiff Anarchist Network’ in Rebecca Fisher (ed.), [http://www.corporatewatch.org/sites/default/files/MDMD%20Master%20PDF.pdf ''Managing Democracy Managing Dissent''], Corporate Watch, 2013 (accessed 17 June 2014), p276.</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Whilst in Cardiff he became more involved in international protest organising networks, and developed close, sometimes sexual, relationships with a number of activists.<ref name="RELATIONSHIPS">See section on [[Marco Jacobs (alias)#Relationships|relationships]] for more on this.</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | He disappeared in late 2009, having said he was moving to Corfu for a job.<ref name="BG4.004">Cardiff Anarchist Network, [http://southwalesanarchists.wordpress.com/2011/01/19/statement-from-cardiff-anarchist-network-can-on-the-infiltration-by-mark-%E2%80%98marco%E2%80%99-jacobs/ ‘Statement on the infiltration by Mark ‘Marco ’ Jacobs’], South Wales Anarchists website, 19 January 2011 (accessed 27 August 2014).</ref><ref name="IM4.002">Cardiff Anarchist Network, [http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2011/01/472388.html ‘Statement from Cardiff Anarchist Network (CAN) on the infiltration by Mark 'Marco' Jacobs’], ''IndyMedia UK'', 19 January 2011 (accessed 11 May 2014).</ref><ref name="GN4.001">Paul Lewis, Matthew Taylor & Rajeev Syal, [http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2011/jan/14/third-undercover-police-spy-cardiff ‘Third undercover police spy unmasked as scale of network emerges’], ''The Guardian'', 15 January 2011 (accessed 11 May 2014).</ref><ref name="GN4.002">Rajeev Syal, [http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2011/jan/19/undercover-police-officer-mark-jacobs ‘Undercover police: Officer B identified as Mark Jacobs’], ''The Guardian'', 19 January 2011 (accessed 11 May 2014).</ref><ref name="ABK085p234">Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, ''Undercover: The True Story of Britain's Secret Police'', Faber & Faber, 2013, p234.</ref><ref name="CYPRUS">It should be noted that one published source has ‘Jacobs’' job as being on Cyprus rather than Corfu - see Tom Anderson, ‘Infiltrated, Intimidated and Undermined: How Police Infiltration Can Mute Political Dissent - An Interview with Verity Smith, from Cardiff Anarchist Network’ in Rebecca Fisher (ed.), [http://www.corporatewatch.org/sites/default/files/MDMD%20Master%20PDF.pdf ''Managing Democracy Managing Dissent''], Corporate Watch, 2013 (accessed 17 June 2014), p281.</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Though suspicions about him grew in his absence, nothing more was heard about him until January 2011, when the furore over the [[Mark Kennedy]] affair led to him being acknowledged as a police spy shortly after the public exposure of [[Lynn Watson (alias)|‘Lynn Watson’]].<ref name="GN3.001">Paul Lewis, Rob Evans & Martin Wainwright, [http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2011/jan/10/mark-kennedy-second-undercover-ecoactivist ‘Mark Kennedy knew of second undercover eco-activist’], ''The Guardian'', 10/01/11 (accessed 10 May 2014).</ref><ref name="GN3.002">Paul Lewis, Rob Evans & Martin Wainwright, [http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2011/jan/12/second-undercover-police-officer-unmasked ‘Second police officer to infiltrate environmental activists unmasked’], ''The Guardian'', 12/01/11 (accessed 10 May 2014).</ref><ref name="GN3.003">Paul Lewis, Rob Evans & Vikram Dodd, [http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2011/jan/12/second-undercover-police-officer ‘Revealed: Second undercover police officer who posed as activist’], ''The Guardian'', 13/01/11 (accessed 10 May 2014).</ref><ref name="IM3.001">quiteliketheguardianactually, [http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2011/01/471994.html ‘Officer A’], ''Indymedia UK'', 13/01/11 (accessed 10 May 2014).</ref><ref name="IM3.002">ABC Anarres, [http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2011/01/472363.html ‘Three undercover political Police unmasked as infiltrators into UK Anarchist, Anti-Fascist and Climate Justice movements’], ''Indymedia UK'', 19/01/11 (accessed 10 May 2014).</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Timeline=== | ||
+ | For a better overview, a timeline is in the making. The current version collates previously published (though sometimes as yet uncorroborated) claims and privately confirmed details of what ‘Jacobs’ did, and where and when he did it. We still need to talk to people who knew Jacobs, if you have any details to add about his activites and behaviour, do [mailto:contact@undercoverresearch.net get in touch]. | ||
+ | |||
+ | :''See main article: [[Marco Jacobs Undercover Timeline]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Personal details== | ||
+ | |||
+ | ‘Jacobs’ was a heavy-set, hirsute man with a Midlands accent with a wry (or sometimes dark) sense of humour, and a propensity for drinking large volumes of alcohol. It appears he presented somewhat different versions of himself depending on the audience, with a noticeable change in his behaviour and appearance by the time he had moved from Brighton to Cardiff. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Age=== | ||
+ | At the outset of his deployment he was in his mid-to-late thirties. On exposure in January 2011, his age was said to be 44, suggesting a birth year of 1966 or 1967.<ref name="GN4.002"></ref><ref name="GN4.001"></ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Physical appearance=== | ||
+ | Several accounts note him to be a physically large man (“carrying a little too much weight around the middle”<ref name="BG4.002"></ref>), typically describing him as approximately fifteen stone (210 pounds, or 95kg)<ref name="ABK085p226"></ref><ref name="BG4.002"></ref><ref name="GN4.002">Rajeev Syal, [http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2011/jan/19/undercover-police-officer-mark-jacobs ‘Undercover police: Officer B identified as Mark Jacobs’], ''The Guardian'', 19 January 2011 (accessed 11 May 2014).</ref><ref name="ReallyFITw">Really Fit in the FITwatch article (see note #3) puts his weight at approximately “15/16 stone”.</ref>, and about six foot (183cm) in height.<ref name="BG4.002"></ref><ref name="GN4.002"></ref><ref name="ReallyFITh">Really Fit in the FITwatch article (see note #3) puts his height at “around 5'11"”.</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | His hair - brown and slightly curly - varied in length and style over the years, from a shaggy mullet to a neater ponytail. He tended to be unshaven, sometimes wearing a beard.<ref name="Hair Notes">See [[Marco Jacobs (alias)#Gallery|gallery of photographs]] above.</ref> ''Guardian'' reporters Evans and Lewis suggest that between his deployment in Brighton and the move to Cardiff, ‘Jacobs’ “had the chance to learn from mistakes in Brighton. He became a vegan and changed his appearance, growing his hair to his shoulders and dying it purple.”<ref name="ABK085p227">Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, ''Undercover: The True Story of Britain's Secret Police'', Faber & Faber, 2013, p227.</ref> He was also bestowed with large amounts of body hair.<ref name="ABK085p226"></ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | He had ear piercings and tattoos, including the name ‘Sam’ on his lower back (which he claimed was a tribute to his by then ex-wife), subsequently covered up with a black star, and a piece of Celtic knotwork on one shoulder, which he said he had got when he was in a bike gang as an 18 year old.<ref name="ABK085p227">Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, ''Undercover: The True Story of Britain's Secret Police'', Faber & Faber, 2013, p227.</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Background=== | ||
+ | |||
+ | On arriving in Brighton, he claimed to have come from Reading, a city in the Thames Valley area, close to London.<ref name="IM4.003"></ref> To activists in Cardiff he presented himself as from Northampton, a supporter of the Northampton Town football club, and moving away from Northampton due to a “messy break-up with a woman” there.<ref name="ABK118ch17p277">Tom Anderson, ‘Infiltrated, Intimidated and Undermined: How Police Infiltration Can Mute Political Dissent - An Interview with Verity Smith, from Cardiff Anarchist Network’ in Rebecca Fisher (ed.), [http://www.corporatewatch.org/sites/default/files/MDMD%20Master%20PDF.pdf ''Managing Democracy Managing Dissent''], Corporate Watch, 2013 (accessed 17 June 2014), p277.</ref> Accounts generally suggest - based on his accent and on claims made by ‘Jacobs’ himself - that he originally hailed from the English Midlands, possibly Northampton<ref name="ABK118ch17p277"></ref><ref name="AUD020">Oliver Hides, [https://a.tumblr.com/tumblr_mw8csfITIP1qcw2azo1_r1.mp3 ‘Interview with Tom Fowler about police infiltration of Cardiff Anarchist Network (package)’], ''Good Morning Wales'', BBC Radio Wales, 6 November 2013 (accessed via Tumblr 13 August 2014) ([http://issuu.com/bristlekrs/docs/avt024_ts-aud020_bbcrw_2013_tom_fow transcript AVT024 by BristleKRS]).</ref><ref name="IM4.008">Courtnee Brantley, [http://indymedia.org.uk/en/2011/01/472363.html?c=on#c263675 ‘Marco information’], ''Indymedia UK'', 24 January 2011 (accessed 18 August 2014)</ref> or Derby<ref name="BG4.002"></ref>. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Occupation=== | ||
+ | |||
+ | On appearing in Brighton early on in his undercover deployment, ‘Jacobs’ claimed to be “a landscape artist [who] also drove trucks”.<ref name="ABK085p226"></ref> In Brighton, he presented an elaborated story on how he would do the front of corporate head quarters of companies that would want exactly the same design at their offices, for instance in Edinburgh and Bristol. He would use this as an explanation for the periods of time he was away. However, as he befriended an activist who was in landscaping too, he changed his said-occupation into truck driver and gave away his tools.<ref name = brighton>interview with group of activists in Brighton, 2 October 2014</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | Following his relocation to Cardiff, he had refined his legend and presented himself as a truck driver who spent his time “hauling boxes of shopping catalogues around the country”.<ref name="ABK085p228">Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, ''Undercover: The True Story of Britain's Secret Police'', Faber & Faber, 2013, p228.</ref> This part of his cover seems to have been meticulously prepared: | ||
+ | |||
+ | :He would spend hours explaining how he had executed complicated reversing manoeuvres, parking HGV trucks in parking bays ‘designed for Tonka cars’. He had a permanently suntanned right forearm, which friends noticed was noticeably browner than the left, even during the winter. It was, he said, the result of having one arm constantly rested on the truck door by the window...Jacobs talked so much about truck driving he became annoying.<ref name="ABK085p228"></ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Domicile=== | ||
+ | |||
+ | Whilst in Brighton, he lived in “a house close to Elm Grove,”<ref name="IM4.003"></ref> a high density neighbourhood within the city with a large transient population due to large numbers of houses of multiple occupancy (HMOs) and popularity with students.<ref name="Elm Grove HMOs">Planning & Public Protection, Information & Mapping, [http://present.brighton-hove.gov.uk/Published/C00000120/M00003230/AI00026371/$20120306163530_001865_0006177_Appendix2HanoverandElmGroveHMOandStudentHousingDensity.pdfA.ps.pdf ‘HMO & Student Housing Density: Hanover & Elm Grove Ward’], Brighton & Hove City Council website, November 2011 (accessed 27 August 2014).</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Activists in Brighton remember the flat as 'sparse' and 'clean', with just a Bob Marley poster on the wall. "Looks like the place of a copper" someone said, but by the time that was a running gag - activists say in hindsight.<ref name = brighton/> | ||
+ | |||
+ | In Cardiff ‘Jacobs’ rented a first floor apartment “near Roath Park, on the fringe of the student area.” According to CAN activist ‘Janine’ the flat was barely furnished and “entirely without personality,” with “no photographs or anything else that you would have by the time you were in your 40s.”<ref name="ABK085p228"></ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Personality=== | ||
+ | |||
+ | Cardiff activist ‘Janine’ describes ‘Jacobs’ as “Big, burly, brash and blokey,”<ref name="ABK085p226"></ref>, an assessment echoed elsewhere, including the Cardiff Anarchist Network statement about him, which described the by-now exposed undercover policeman as “likeable, personally supportive, funny and very useful to have around”.<ref name="BG4.004">Cardiff Anarchist Network, [http://southwalesanarchists.wordpress.com/2011/01/19/statement-from-cardiff-anarchist-network-can-on-the-infiltration-by-mark-%E2%80%98marco%E2%80%99-jacobs/ ‘Statement on the infiltration by Mark ‘Marco ’ Jacobs’], South Wales Anarchists website, 19 January 2011 (accessed 27 August 2014).</ref><ref name="IM4.002">Cardiff Anarchist Network, [http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2011/01/472388.html ‘Statement from Cardiff Anarchist Network (CAN) on the infiltration by Mark 'Marco' Jacobs’], ''IndyMedia UK'', 19 January 2011 (accessed 11 May 2014).</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Several people have noted his use of humour. ‘Verity Smith’ has suggested that “he hid behind this sort of amiable clown thing, he made a joke of everything, deflected everything”.<ref name="ABK118ch17pp280">Tom Anderson, ‘Infiltrated, Intimidated and Undermined: How Police Infiltration Can Mute Political Dissent - An Interview with Verity Smith, from Cardiff Anarchist Network’ in Rebecca Fisher (ed.), [http://www.corporatewatch.org/sites/default/files/MDMD%20Master%20PDF.pdf ''Managing Democracy Managing Dissent''], Corporate Watch, 2013 (accessed 17 June 2014), p280.</ref> Another unnamed source posed a rhetorical question to regional newspaper ''Wales On Sunday'': “If they can send a bloke cracking jokes into your life, who will they send next time?”<ref name="WO4.001">unknown author, [http://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales-news/welsh-protest-groups-infiltrated-police-1859796 ‘Welsh protest groups infiltrated by police undercover officers talk of their feeling of bitterness and betrayal’], ''Wales On Sunday'', 23 January 2011 (accessed 29 August 2014).</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | His legend included a messy breakup from a relationship with a woman who abused him. At the time this seemed a believable story, but some people had questions about Jacobs' claims - merely his size and weight made it not very likely that he would end up as the beaten one. In general, his attempt to position himself as a vulnerable person did not really work.<ref name = brighton/> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Publicly available accounts of his time in Brighton suggest that despite his best efforts he remained something of an outsider to the city's activist scene.<ref name="IM4.003"></ref> Evans and Lewis claim that he had “few friends” there; their book contains recollections about ‘Jacobs’ from one of these, called ‘Terry’.<ref name="ABK085pp226-227">Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, ''Undercover: The True Story of Britain's Secret Police'', Faber & Faber, 2013, pp226-227.</ref> Some people even felt sorry for him, he was trying so hard to fit in, but failed.<ref name = brighton/> | ||
+ | ====Changing the mood at meetings==== | ||
+ | Several accounts note that ‘Jacobs’ regularly used a number of idiosyncratic phrases. | ||
+ | |||
+ | The pen portrait of his time in Brighton by ‘Dick Tracy’ notes that ‘Jacobs’ was in the habit of “making sarcastic comments in social situations and meetings,” adding that this “may have been an attempt to disrupt activist organising”.<ref name="IM4.003"></ref> The Cardiff Anarchist Network monograph appears to echo this last supposition, stating that he “changed the culture of the organisation, encouraging a lot of drinking, gossip and back-stabbing.”<ref name="BG4.004">Cardiff Anarchist Network, [http://southwalesanarchists.wordpress.com/2011/01/19/statement-from-cardiff-anarchist-network-can-on-the-infiltration-by-mark-%E2%80%98marco%E2%80%99-jacobs/ ‘Statement on the infiltration by Mark ‘Marco ’ Jacobs’], South Wales Anarchists website, 19 January 2011 (accessed 27 August 2014).</ref><ref name="IM4.002">Cardiff Anarchist Network, [http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2011/01/472388.html ‘Statement from Cardiff Anarchist Network (CAN) on the infiltration by Mark 'Marco' Jacobs’], ''Indymedia UK'', 19 January 2011 (accessed 11 May 2014).</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | An otherwise brief FITwatch blog post<ref name="BG4.002">Really Fit, [https://web.archive.org/web/20110504052846/http://www.fitwatch.org.uk/2011/01/18/more-pictures-of-undercover-cop-marco/ ‘More pictures of undercover cop 'Marco'’], ''FITwatch'' blog, 18 January 2011 (accessed via 4 May 2011 archive.org cache, 27 August 2014).</ref> lists a number of the catchphrases often used by ‘Jacobs’: | ||
+ | ::little phrases that were used frequently to deflect question or discussion, or to lighten situations. "Dear diary..." he'd say when we'd be discussing the days/weeks happenings. "And relax..." at the end of meetings or stressful conversations. Everything was "dinky do". He'd do a "welfare check" to see how you were, and generally things were ridic/hillar/bloody marv. Other people's witticisms were greeted with "did you see what he did there?". And that's a "negadive" (negative) or "check". | ||
+ | |||
+ | Based on their interviews with activists who knew ‘Jacobs’, Evans and Lewis claim that he “liked to adopt the persona of a Northern [English] comedian.”<ref name="ABK085p226"></ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | In a similar vein, he would produce spoof minutes from meetings (mentioned in the context of Jacobs taking minutes of Dissent meetings before the G8 summit in Glenneagles).<ref name = brighton/> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ====Attitudes towards and promotion of violence==== | ||
+ | According to Evans and Lewis, during his time in Brighton ‘Jacobs’ “boasted about getting into pub brawls”<ref name="ABK085p226"></ref>. One story is a bit more specific, Jacobs claimed to have gone back to Northampton to meet and old mate, and end up receiving a beaten in a pub fight. In hindsight this story did not add up with Jacobs' claims of coming to Brighton because he needed a clean break from his old life.<ref name = brighton/> | ||
+ | |||
+ | By the time he surfaced in Cardiff he claimed that he had been to prison on remand, but was vague about why or what for, preferring instead to allude to a past as “a bit of a fighter.”<ref name="ABK085p227">Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, ''Undercover: The True Story of Britain's Secret Police'', Faber & Faber, 2013, p227.</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | One commenter on CAN's statement on Indymedia, ‘stroppyoldgit’, claimed ‘Jacobs’ repeatedly attempted to stir up more militant or violent activity amongst activists at protests, regardless of the circumstances. In particular at a No Borders camp near Gatwick:<ref name="IM4.012">Stroppyoldgit, [http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2011/01/472388.html?c=on#c264207 ‘@ @rchie’], ''Indymedia UK'', 3 February 2011 (accessed 18 August 2014).</ref> | ||
+ | ::He made a couple of ridiculous interventions in the big meeting before the main march through Crawley to the detention centre, urging us to make the next day a big fight with the cops...He tried to start a gormless violence-obsessed conversation. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Relationships=== | ||
+ | |||
+ | Part of the back story given by ‘Jacobs’ is that “he was separated from his former partner, who used to physically abuse him”.<ref name="AEV040">The Hon. Mr Justice Tugendhat, [http://www.judiciary.gov.uk/judgments/akj-others-commissioner-police-metropolis-judgment-17012013/ ''AKJ and others -v- Commissioner of Police for the Metropolis and others''], High Court of Justice, Queen's Bench Division, 17 January 2013 (accessed 23 April 2014).</ref> The version put forward by Evans and Lewis is slightly different; they present it as a messy divorce from an abusive ex-wife called ‘Sam’ (“who beat him up”) before appearing on the activist scene. Given that he had this name (or at least the letters S A M) tattooed on his back - subsequently covered up with a black star - it seems likely that there was a real person by this name in the life of the police officer playing the part of ‘Jacobs’.<ref name="ABK085p227"></ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Whilst he is not known to have developed many close bonds with activists in Brighton, an anonymous Indymedia posting claims that during his time there he “slept with at least one woman who was close to the activist scene”.<ref name="IM4.013">a source, [http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2011/01/472391.html?c=on#c264095 ‘Another under-the-covers-cop’], ''Indymedia UK'', 30 January 2011 (accessed 18 August 2014).</ref> Activists in Brighton said it was a friend of a friend, and not somebody close to the scene.<ref name = brighton/> | ||
+ | |||
+ | In Brighton, he confided to a friend that he had once kissed a man, but asked for this to remain confidential.<ref name = brighton/> | ||
+ | |||
+ | In contrast he was able to “befriend people from the [south Wales] area around the country at different protests”<ref name="AUD020">Oliver Hides, [https://a.tumblr.com/tumblr_mw8csfITIP1qcw2azo1_r1.mp3 ‘Interview with Tom Fowler about police infiltration of Cardiff Anarchist Network (package)’], ''Good Morning Wales'', BBC Radio Wales, 6 November 2013 (accessed via Tumblr 13 August 2014) ([http://issuu.com/bristlekrs/docs/avt024_ts-aud020_bbcrw_2013_tom_fow transcript AVT024 by BristleKRS]).</ref> - first meeting CAN activists in 2004<ref name="AEV040"></ref><ref name="AEV067">Lord Justice Maurice Kay & Lady Justice Sharp, [http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/1342.html ''In the Court of Appeal (Civil Division) on Appeal from the High Court, QBD - Mr Justice Tugendhat HQ12X00132 before LJ Maurice Kay & LJ Sharp - AJA, ARB & Thomas Fowler -v- Chief Constable South Wales Police & ACPO + AKJ, KAW & SUR -v- Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis & ACPO''], Court of Appeal (Civil Division), Royal Courts of Justice, 5 November 2013 (accessed 28 August 2014).</ref> - and so decided to move to Cardiff. Here ‘Jacobs’ was able to ingratiate himself into several close friendships. These included: | ||
+ | |||
+ | :*'''Tom Fowler''': an activist involved in, amongst other groups, Cardiff Anarchist Network and South Wales Anarchists, and “then at the centre of Cardiff activism”<ref name="ABK085p228"></ref> He says Jacobs “became a very close friend of mine, became more than a close friend of some members of our group.”<ref name="AUD020"></ref> Fowler described ‘Jacobs’ as “privy to all of my decision-making around activism and personal relationships to a really deep level...He was like my best mate. He was the most reliable person in my life.”<ref name="ABK085p231">Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, ''Undercover: The True Story of Britain's Secret Police'', Faber & Faber, 2013, p231.</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | :*'''Fran Ryan''': A vegan baker introduced to ‘Jacobs’ by Tom Fowler, Fran Ryan was then 50 and “not herself politically active”, but she “quickly formed a rapport with the undercover police officer.” ‘Jacobs’ even tried (unsuccessfully) to get her to accompany him to a “meeting of European animal rights activists in Vienna”, before she agreed instead to go with him to an animal rights gathering in Essex.<ref name="ABK085p232-233">Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, ''Undercover: The True Story of Britain's Secret Police'', Faber & Faber, 2013, p232-233.</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ‘Jacobs’ is also known to have had sexual relationships with at least two activists amongst the groups he spied upon. | ||
+ | |||
+ | :*'''‘Sarah’''': In the summer of 2007, ‘Jacobs’ began a sexual relationship with ‘Sarah’, then 26 years old, and well-connected in activist circles, after they returned from Germany where they had taken part in the anti-G8 Heiligendamm summit protests. The relationship, which only lasted “a few weeks”, was built on a close friendship the two had developed over the previous few years, and began at the prompting of ‘Jacobs’, who had initially suggested that they “take their relationship further” two months before the G8.<ref name="ABK085p231-232">Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, ''Undercover: The True Story of Britain's Secret Police'', Faber & Faber, 2013, p231-232.</ref> (Note that previously ''The Guardian'' had reported that this relationship had taken place in 2008 and lasted three months.<ref name="GN4.001"></ref>) | ||
+ | |||
+ | :*'''‘Deborah’''': In 2009, when she was in a relationship with Tom Fowler, ‘Deborah’ father was terminally ill with cancer. In Fowler's words, ‘Jacobs’ “put himself in the middle of that [relationship]...[and] acted as a father figure to her.” Simultaneously he behaved as a confidant to Fowler, who told him about his and ‘Deborah’'s relationship troubles. When her father died, ‘Jacobs’ attended the funeral. According to Evans and Lewis he “offered her a shoulder to cry on...[then] tried to seduce her”. Initially ‘Deborah’ turned him down, but eventually they embarked on a brief sexual relationship after ‘Jacobs’ told her that he loved her. Then, “believing she was about to begin a serious relationship with the truck driver,” she broke up with Fowler, only for ‘Jacobs’ to suddenly lose interest. <ref name="ABK085p231">Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, ''Undercover: The True Story of Britain's Secret Police'', Faber & Faber, 2013, p231.</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | The circumstances of the efforts by ‘Jacobs’ to interpose himself into the lives of activists in Cardiff, and to pursue intimate sexual relationships with targets, has subsequently been the focus of legal action taken by Fowler, ‘Sarah’ and ‘Deborah’ (see [[Marco Jacobs (alias)#Court_cases|court cases section]] below). | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Habits, tastes and interests=== | ||
+ | This section is pieced together from details noted in the various accounts of ‘Jacobs’' activities, and as such cannot be considered to be either comprehensive or definitive. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ====Music==== | ||
+ | ‘Jacobs’ professed a passion for rock music, and used going to out-of-town gigs - purportedly with friends not from the activist scene - as a pretext for absences from Cardiff.<ref name="BG4.004"></ref><ref name="IM4.002"></ref> A “heavy metal CD collection” is said to have filled the floor of his otherwise spartan Cardiff flat.<ref name="ABK085p229">Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, ''Undercover: The True Story of Britain's Secret Police'', Faber & Faber, 2013, p229.</ref> Activist Tom Fowler recalled how the two of them would go to punk gigs in Newport.<ref name="WO4.003">James McCarthy, [http://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales-news/spying-case-against-met-police-2497533 ‘‘Spying’ case against Met Police to be heard in secret’], ''Wales On Sunday'', 17 January 2013 (accessed 29 August 2014).</ref><ref name="WO4.004">James McCarthy, [http://www.thefreelibrary.com/%27An+outrage+that+case+will+be+held+in+secret%27.-a0315293456 ‘‘An outrage that case will be held in secret’’], ''South Wales Echo'', 18 January 2013 (accessed via TheFreeLibrary 29 August 2014).</ref><ref name="WO4.005">James McCarthy, [http://www.thefreelibrary.com/Anarchist+slams+court+ruling+on+secret+trial%3B+CLAIMS+WOMEN+WERE...-a0315297029 ‘Anarchist slams court ruling on secret trial: Claims women were tricked into sex with police’], ''Western Mail'', 18 January 2013 (accessed via TheFreeLibrary 29 August 2014).</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | His MySpace page<ref name="PRO092">Mark Jacobs, [https://myspace.com/cardiffmarco/ ‘Mark Jacobs MySpace profile’], MySpace.com, 2009(?) (accessed 28 August 2014).</ref> indicates that he was a fan of the following bands and artists, predominantly heavy metal or hard rock: | ||
+ | {| class="wikitable" | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |AC/DC | ||
+ | |Alice Cooper | ||
+ | |Annihilator | ||
+ | |Big Linda | ||
+ | |Chris Broderick | ||
+ | |Crawler | ||
+ | |Def Leppard | ||
+ | |Evile | ||
+ | |Fathom Down | ||
+ | |Gojira | ||
+ | |Hawkwind | ||
+ | |Hot Leg | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |The Hush | ||
+ | |Judas Priest | ||
+ | |Led Zeppelin | ||
+ | |Lovecraaft | ||
+ | |Megadeth | ||
+ | |Metallica | ||
+ | |Motörhead | ||
+ | |Mutant | ||
+ | |Nuclear Theatre | ||
+ | |Onslaught | ||
+ | |Pink Floyd | ||
+ | |Privateer | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |Reb Beach | ||
+ | |Sanctity | ||
+ | |Savage Messiah | ||
+ | |Saxon | ||
+ | |Slipknot | ||
+ | |Stone Gods | ||
+ | |Tony Iommi | ||
+ | |Trivium | ||
+ | |V-Twin | ||
+ | |Venom | ||
+ | |Warpath | ||
+ | |Whitesnake | ||
+ | |} | ||
+ | |||
+ | ====Alcohol & Drugs==== | ||
+ | Both in Brighton and Cardiff ‘Jacobs’ developed a reputation for being able to consume prodigious quantities of alcohol (“a notorious ability to drink huge quantities of alcohol without becoming drunk,” say Evans and Lewis).<ref name="ABK085p226"></ref> Cardiff activist Tom Fowler notes that one catchphrase of ‘Jacobs’ was “Strong European lager is my drug of choice.”<ref name="GN4.002">Rajeev Syal, [http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2011/jan/19/undercover-police-officer-mark-jacobs ‘Undercover police: Officer B identified as Mark Jacobs’], ''The Guardian'', 19 January 2011 (accessed 11 May 2014).</ref><ref name="ABK085p229">Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, ''Undercover: The True Story of Britain's Secret Police'', Faber & Faber, 2013, p229.</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | In Brighton, he regularly attended the Cowley Club, an anarchist social centre. He is said to “treated the Cowley bar as his regular,” boasting how much he could drink and was “often generous in buying rounds,”.<ref name="IM4.003"></ref><ref name="ASL219">unknown author, [http://www.roughmusic.org/rm25.html ‘Undercover cop: Brighton's very own pig in a blanket’], ''Rough Music'' #25, February/March 2011 (accessed 27 August 2014).</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | In Cardiff his reputation for heavy drinking continued, something noted in the CAN account of his time there, which points towards him “encouraging a lot of drinking”.<ref name="BG4.004"></ref><ref name="IM4.002"></ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Activist ‘Verity Smith’ commented on this aspect of him:<ref name="ABK118ch17p278">Tom Anderson, ‘Infiltrated, Intimidated and Undermined: How Police Infiltration Can Mute Political Dissent - An Interview with Verity Smith, from Cardiff Anarchist Network’ in Rebecca Fisher (ed.), [http://www.corporatewatch.org/sites/default/files/MDMD%20Master%20PDF.pdf ''Managing Democracy Managing Dissent''], Corporate Watch, 2013 (accessed 17 June 2014), p278.</ref> | ||
+ | : He would be down the pub all the time, he would always have money for drinks, he would be very keen to encourage people to go out drinking with him and used that time to really probe people on what they thought and what their attitudes were and what their opinions were, what their vulnerabilities were. I also think he wanted to instil a drinking culture that automatically excluded those people who were not part of that party scene - because they were working or because they had children or because they were not of that age group or whatever. | ||
+ | |||
+ | His capacity for drink was even noticed overseas, such as at the 2007 anti-G8 Heiligendamm protests in Germany.<ref name="ASL194">Veit Medick, Sven Röbel & Marcel Rosenbach, [http://www.spiegel.de/spiegel/print/d-78602546.html ‘Maulwürfe im Milieu’], ''Der Spiegel'', 23 May 2011 (accessed 18 August 2014): the article notes that “At Heiligendamm [G8 summit in June 2007] about ten foreign police officers were deployed besides Kennedy, including a Welsh colleague with the alias ‘Marco Jacobs’, a supposed truck driver from Cardiff who attracted attention at the Baltic Sea activist camp with his drinking ability. In return, German authorities also sent their undercover officers around the world. The Berlin State Criminal Police Office alone sent five officers to the 2005 G8 protests in Gleneagles, each of whom was accompanied by a liaison officer, who served as a contact person to receive reports from the moles in the movement.” (Translation: BristleKRS)</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | The main accounts detailing his activities suggest that ‘Jacobs’ did not consume (illegal) drugs.<ref name="UNDERCOVER">Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, ''Undercover: The True Story of Britain's Secret Police'', Faber & Faber, 2013.</ref><ref name="IM4.003"></ref><ref name="BG4.004"></ref><ref name="IM4.002"></ref><ref name="GN4.002">Rajeev Syal, [http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2011/jan/19/undercover-police-officer-mark-jacobs ‘Undercover police: Officer B identified as Mark Jacobs’], ''The Guardian'', 19 January 2011 (accessed 11 May 2014).</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ====Food & diet==== | ||
+ | It is perhaps of note that whilst trying to infiltrate the activist milieu in Brighton - where it is received wisdom that he was less successful in penetrating networks - ‘Jacobs’ remained a meat-eating outsider<ref name="ABK085p226"/>, but that by the time he more successfully worked his way into the Cardiff scene he had become vegan<ref name="ABK085p227"/>. | ||
+ | |||
+ | <!---He liked Chinese food.<ref name="ABK085p229"/>---> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Activist modus operandi, undercover tradecraft== | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Target groups=== | ||
+ | Whilst undercover, ‘Marco Jacobs’ infiltrated (or attempted to infiltrate) a considerable number of political campaigns. He is known to have involved (or attempted to involve) himself in the following networks, groups, issues or tactics: | ||
+ | |||
+ | *Animal rights networks<ref name="ABK118ch17pp280">Tom Anderson, ‘Infiltrated, Intimidated and Undermined: How Police Infiltration Can Mute Political Dissent - An Interview with Verity Smith, from Cardiff Anarchist Network’ in Rebecca Fisher (ed.), [http://www.corporatewatch.org/sites/default/files/MDMD%20Master%20PDF.pdf ''Managing Democracy Managing Dissent''], Corporate Watch, 2013 (accessed 17 June 2014), pp280.</ref>, including Swansea Animal Rights<ref name="WO4.001">unknown author, [http://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales-news/welsh-protest-groups-infiltrated-police-1859796 ‘Welsh protest groups infiltrated by police undercover officers talk of their feeling of bitterness and betrayal’], ''Wales On Sunday'', 23 January 2011 (accessed 29 August 2014).</ref><ref name="WO4.002">James McCarthy, [http://www.thefreelibrary.com/BETRAYED+BY+AN+UNDERCOVER+COP.-a0247258248 ‘Betrayed by an undercover cop’], ''Wales On Sunday'', 23 January 2011 (accessed via TheFreeLibrary 29 August 2014).</ref><ref name="WO4.003">James McCarthy, [http://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales-news/spying-case-against-met-police-2497533 ‘‘Spying’ case against Met Police to be heard in secret’], ''Wales On Sunday'', 17 January 2013 (accessed 29 August 2014).</ref><ref name="WO4.004">James McCarthy, [http://www.thefreelibrary.com/%27An+outrage+that+case+will+be+held+in+secret%27.-a0315293456 ‘‘An outrage that case will be held in secret’’], ''South Wales Echo'', 18 January 2013 (accessed via TheFreeLibrary 29 August 2014).</ref><ref name="WO4.005">James McCarthy, [http://www.thefreelibrary.com/Anarchist+slams+court+ruling+on+secret+trial%3B+CLAIMS+WOMEN+WERE...-a0315297029 ‘Anarchist slams court ruling on secret trial: Claims women were tricked into sex with police’], ''Western Mail'', 18 January 2013 (accessed via TheFreeLibrary 29 August 2014).</ref><ref name="WO4.006">James McCarthy, [http://www.thefreelibrary.com/UNDERCOVER+COP%27S+%27SEX+BETRAYAL%27.-a0340709999 ‘Undercover cop's ‘sex betrayal’], ''Wales On Sunday'', 25 August 2013 (accessed via TheFreeLibrary 29 August 2014).</ref> | ||
+ | *Anti-Metrix/RAF St Athan Defence Academy<ref name="BG4.004"></ref><ref name="IM4.002"></ref><ref name="ABK118ch17pp278">Tom Anderson, ‘Infiltrated, Intimidated and Undermined: How Police Infiltration Can Mute Political Dissent - An Interview with Verity Smith, from Cardiff Anarchist Network’ in Rebecca Fisher (ed.), [http://www.corporatewatch.org/sites/default/files/MDMD%20Master%20PDF.pdf ''Managing Democracy Managing Dissent''], Corporate Watch, 2013 (accessed 17 June 2014), pp278.</ref> | ||
+ | *Black Bloc<ref name="IM4.003"></ref><ref name="BG4.004"></ref><ref name="IM4.002"></ref> | ||
+ | *Camp Bling<ref name="IM4.003"></ref> | ||
+ | *Camp for Climate Action<ref name="IM4.003"></ref><ref name="ABK118ch17pp278">Tom Anderson, ‘Infiltrated, Intimidated and Undermined: How Police Infiltration Can Mute Political Dissent - An Interview with Verity Smith, from Cardiff Anarchist Network’ in Rebecca Fisher (ed.), [http://www.corporatewatch.org/sites/default/files/MDMD%20Master%20PDF.pdf ''Managing Democracy Managing Dissent''], Corporate Watch, 2013 (accessed 17 June 2014), pp278.</ref> | ||
+ | *Cardiff Anarchist Network<ref name="BG4.004"></ref><ref name="IM4.002"></ref><ref name="WO4.001">unknown author, [http://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales-news/welsh-protest-groups-infiltrated-police-1859796 ‘Welsh protest groups infiltrated by police undercover officers talk of their feeling of bitterness and betrayal’], ''Wales On Sunday'', 23 January 2011 (accessed 29 August 2014).</ref><ref name="WO4.002">James McCarthy, [http://www.thefreelibrary.com/BETRAYED+BY+AN+UNDERCOVER+COP.-a0247258248 ‘Betrayed by an undercover cop’], ''Wales On Sunday'', 23 January 2011 (accessed via TheFreeLibrary 29 August 2014).</ref><ref name="WO4.003">James McCarthy, [http://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales-news/spying-case-against-met-police-2497533 ‘‘Spying’ case against Met Police to be heard in secret’], ''Wales On Sunday'', 17 January 2013 (accessed 29 August 2014).</ref><ref name="WO4.004">James McCarthy, [http://www.thefreelibrary.com/%27An+outrage+that+case+will+be+held+in+secret%27.-a0315293456 ‘‘An outrage that case will be held in secret’’], ''South Wales Echo'', 18 January 2013 (accessed via TheFreeLibrary 29 August 2014).</ref><ref name="WO4.005">James McCarthy, [http://www.thefreelibrary.com/Anarchist+slams+court+ruling+on+secret+trial%3B+CLAIMS+WOMEN+WERE...-a0315297029 ‘Anarchist slams court ruling on secret trial: Claims women were tricked into sex with police’], ''Western Mail'', 18 January 2013 (accessed via TheFreeLibrary 29 August 2014).</ref><ref name="WO4.006">James McCarthy, [http://www.thefreelibrary.com/UNDERCOVER+COP%27S+%27SEX+BETRAYAL%27.-a0340709999 ‘Undercover cop's ‘sex betrayal’], ''Wales On Sunday'', 25 August 2013 (accessed via TheFreeLibrary 29 August 2014).</ref> | ||
+ | *Cowley Club<ref name="IM4.003"></ref><ref name="ABK085p226">Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, ''Undercover: The True Story of Britain's Secret Police'', Faber & Faber, 2013, p226.</ref><ref name="ABK085p243">Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, ''Undercover: The True Story of Britain's Secret Police'', Faber & Faber, 2013, p243.</ref> | ||
+ | *Dissent! Network<ref name="BG4.004"></ref><ref name="IM4.002"></ref> | ||
+ | *Eat Out Vegan Wales<ref name="AWB063">Eat Out Vegan Wales, [http://www.eatoutveganwales.org/ ‘Home page’], ''Eat Out Vegan Wales'' website, accessed 30 August 2014.</ref><ref name="WO4.001">unknown author, [http://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales-news/welsh-protest-groups-infiltrated-police-1859796 ‘Welsh protest groups infiltrated by police undercover officers talk of their feeling of bitterness and betrayal’], ''Wales On Sunday'', 23 January 2011 (accessed 29 August 2014).</ref><ref name="WO4.002">James McCarthy, [http://www.thefreelibrary.com/BETRAYED+BY+AN+UNDERCOVER+COP.-a0247258248 ‘Betrayed by an undercover cop’], ''Wales On Sunday'', 23 January 2011 (accessed via TheFreeLibrary 29 August 2014).</ref><ref name="WO4.003">James McCarthy, [http://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales-news/spying-case-against-met-police-2497533 ‘‘Spying’ case against Met Police to be heard in secret’], ''Wales On Sunday'', 17 January 2013 (accessed 29 August 2014).</ref><ref name="WO4.004">James McCarthy, [http://www.thefreelibrary.com/%27An+outrage+that+case+will+be+held+in+secret%27.-a0315293456 ‘‘An outrage that case will be held in secret’’], ''South Wales Echo'', 18 January 2013 (accessed via TheFreeLibrary 29 August 2014).</ref><ref name="WO4.005">James McCarthy, [http://www.thefreelibrary.com/Anarchist+slams+court+ruling+on+secret+trial%3B+CLAIMS+WOMEN+WERE...-a0315297029 ‘Anarchist slams court ruling on secret trial: Claims women were tricked into sex with police’], ''Western Mail'', 18 January 2013 (accessed via TheFreeLibrary 29 August 2014).</ref><ref name="WO4.006">James McCarthy, [http://www.thefreelibrary.com/UNDERCOVER+COP%27S+%27SEX+BETRAYAL%27.-a0340709999 ‘Undercover cop's ‘sex betrayal’], ''Wales On Sunday'', 25 August 2013 (accessed via TheFreeLibrary 29 August 2014).</ref><ref name="ABK085p232">Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, ''Undercover: The True Story of Britain's Secret Police'', Faber & Faber, 2013, p232.</ref> | ||
+ | *Gwent Anarchists<ref name="BG4.004"></ref><ref name="IM4.002"></ref><ref name="WO4.001">unknown author, [http://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales-news/welsh-protest-groups-infiltrated-police-1859796 ‘Welsh protest groups infiltrated by police undercover officers talk of their feeling of bitterness and betrayal’], ''Wales On Sunday'', 23 January 2011 (accessed 29 August 2014).</ref><ref name="WO4.002">James McCarthy, [http://www.thefreelibrary.com/BETRAYED+BY+AN+UNDERCOVER+COP.-a0247258248 ‘Betrayed by an undercover cop’], ''Wales On Sunday'', 23 January 2011 (accessed via TheFreeLibrary 29 August 2014).</ref><ref name="WO4.003">James McCarthy, [http://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales-news/spying-case-against-met-police-2497533 ‘‘Spying’ case against Met Police to be heard in secret’], ''Wales On Sunday'', 17 January 2013 (accessed 29 August 2014).</ref><ref name="WO4.004">James McCarthy, [http://www.thefreelibrary.com/%27An+outrage+that+case+will+be+held+in+secret%27.-a0315293456 ‘‘An outrage that case will be held in secret’’], ''South Wales Echo'', 18 January 2013 (accessed via TheFreeLibrary 29 August 2014).</ref><ref name="WO4.005">James McCarthy, [http://www.thefreelibrary.com/Anarchist+slams+court+ruling+on+secret+trial%3B+CLAIMS+WOMEN+WERE...-a0315297029 ‘Anarchist slams court ruling on secret trial: Claims women were tricked into sex with police’], ''Western Mail'', 18 January 2013 (accessed via TheFreeLibrary 29 August 2014).</ref><ref name="WO4.006">James McCarthy, [http://www.thefreelibrary.com/UNDERCOVER+COP%27S+%27SEX+BETRAYAL%27.-a0340709999 ‘Undercover cop's ‘sex betrayal’], ''Wales On Sunday'', 25 August 2013 (accessed via TheFreeLibrary 29 August 2014).</ref> | ||
+ | *Heiligendamm G8 protests<ref name="IM4.003"></ref><ref name="ASL194"></ref><ref name="AEV064"></ref><ref name="ABK085p232">Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, ''Undercover: The True Story of Britain's Secret Police'', Faber & Faber, 2013, p232.</ref><ref name="IM4.005"> @rchie, [http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2011/01/472388.html?c=on#c263319 ‘Hey stroppygit and folk from brighton.’], ''Indymedia UK'', 20 January 2011 (accessed 18 August 2014).</ref><ref name="ABK118ch17pp277">Tom Anderson, ‘Infiltrated, Intimidated and Undermined: How Police Infiltration Can Mute Political Dissent - An Interview with Verity Smith, from Cardiff Anarchist Network’ in Rebecca Fisher (ed.), [http://www.corporatewatch.org/sites/default/files/MDMD%20Master%20PDF.pdf ''Managing Democracy Managing Dissent''], Corporate Watch, 2013 (accessed 17 June 2014), p277.</ref> | ||
+ | *KTS Autonomous Centre<ref name="IM4.009">Nachtermittlungen, [http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2011/01/472122.html ‘Schweine in zivii’], ''Indymedia UK'', 15 January 2011 (accessed 18 August 2014).</ref> | ||
+ | *Milford Haven anti-LNG pipeline<ref name="BG4.004"></ref><ref name="IM4.002"></ref> | ||
+ | *No Borders<ref name="IM4.003"></ref><ref name="IM4.012">Stroppyoldgit, [http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2011/01/472388.html?c=on#c264207 ‘@ @rchie’], ''Indymedia UK'', 3 February 2011 (accessed 18 August 2014).</ref><ref name="ABK118ch17pp278">Tom Anderson, ‘Infiltrated, Intimidated and Undermined: How Police Infiltration Can Mute Political Dissent - An Interview with Verity Smith, from Cardiff Anarchist Network’ in Rebecca Fisher (ed.), [http://www.corporatewatch.org/sites/default/files/MDMD%20Master%20PDF.pdf ''Managing Democracy Managing Dissent''], Corporate Watch, 2013 (accessed 17 June 2014), pp278.</ref> and in particular No Borders South Wales<ref name="WO4.001">unknown author, [http://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales-news/welsh-protest-groups-infiltrated-police-1859796 ‘Welsh protest groups infiltrated by police undercover officers talk of their feeling of bitterness and betrayal’], ''Wales On Sunday'', 23 January 2011 (accessed 29 August 2014).</ref><ref name="WO4.002">James McCarthy, [http://www.thefreelibrary.com/BETRAYED+BY+AN+UNDERCOVER+COP.-a0247258248 ‘Betrayed by an undercover cop’], ''Wales On Sunday'', 23 January 2011 (accessed via TheFreeLibrary 29 August 2014).</ref><ref name="WO4.003">James McCarthy, [http://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales-news/spying-case-against-met-police-2497533 ‘‘Spying’ case against Met Police to be heard in secret’], ''Wales On Sunday'', 17 January 2013 (accessed 29 August 2014).</ref><ref name="WO4.004">James McCarthy, [http://www.thefreelibrary.com/%27An+outrage+that+case+will+be+held+in+secret%27.-a0315293456 ‘‘An outrage that case will be held in secret’’], ''South Wales Echo'', 18 January 2013 (accessed via TheFreeLibrary 29 August 2014).</ref><ref name="WO4.005">James McCarthy, [http://www.thefreelibrary.com/Anarchist+slams+court+ruling+on+secret+trial%3B+CLAIMS+WOMEN+WERE...-a0315297029 ‘Anarchist slams court ruling on secret trial: Claims women were tricked into sex with police’], ''Western Mail'', 18 January 2013 (accessed via TheFreeLibrary 29 August 2014).</ref><ref name="WO4.006">James McCarthy, [http://www.thefreelibrary.com/UNDERCOVER+COP%27S+%27SEX+BETRAYAL%27.-a0340709999 ‘Undercover cop's ‘sex betrayal’], ''Wales On Sunday'', 25 August 2013 (accessed via TheFreeLibrary 29 August 2014).</ref> | ||
+ | *No To NATO<ref name="IM4.005">@rchie, [http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2011/01/472388.html?c=on#c263319 ‘Hey stroppyoldgit and folk from brighton.’], ''Indymedia UK'', 20 January 2011 (accessed 13 June 2014).</ref> | ||
+ | *Pembrokeshire Anarchists<ref name="WO4.001">unknown author, [http://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales-news/welsh-protest-groups-infiltrated-police-1859796 ‘Welsh protest groups infiltrated by police undercover officers talk of their feeling of bitterness and betrayal’], ''Wales On Sunday'', 23 January 2011 (accessed 29 August 2014).</ref><ref name="WO4.002">James McCarthy, [http://www.thefreelibrary.com/BETRAYED+BY+AN+UNDERCOVER+COP.-a0247258248 ‘Betrayed by an undercover cop’], ''Wales On Sunday'', 23 January 2011 (accessed via TheFreeLibrary 29 August 2014).</ref><ref name="WO4.003">James McCarthy, [http://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales-news/spying-case-against-met-police-2497533 ‘‘Spying’ case against Met Police to be heard in secret’], ''Wales On Sunday'', 17 January 2013 (accessed 29 August 2014).</ref><ref name="WO4.004">James McCarthy, [http://www.thefreelibrary.com/%27An+outrage+that+case+will+be+held+in+secret%27.-a0315293456 ‘‘An outrage that case will be held in secret’’], ''South Wales Echo'', 18 January 2013 (accessed via TheFreeLibrary 29 August 2014).</ref><ref name="WO4.005">James McCarthy, [http://www.thefreelibrary.com/Anarchist+slams+court+ruling+on+secret+trial%3B+CLAIMS+WOMEN+WERE...-a0315297029 ‘Anarchist slams court ruling on secret trial: Claims women were tricked into sex with police’], ''Western Mail'', 18 January 2013 (accessed via TheFreeLibrary 29 August 2014).</ref><ref name="WO4.006">James McCarthy, [http://www.thefreelibrary.com/UNDERCOVER+COP%27S+%27SEX+BETRAYAL%27.-a0340709999 ‘Undercover cop's ‘sex betrayal’], ''Wales On Sunday'', 25 August 2013 (accessed via TheFreeLibrary 29 August 2014).</ref> | ||
+ | *Rising Tide Network<ref name="GN4.002">Rajeev Syal, [http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2011/jan/19/undercover-police-officer-mark-jacobs ‘Undercover police: Officer B identified as Mark Jacobs’], ''The Guardian'', 19 January 2011 (accessed 11 May 2014).</ref><ref name="IM4.004">ABC Anarres, [http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2011/01/472363.html ‘Three undercover political Police unmasked as infiltrators into UK Anarchist, Anti-Fascist and Climate Justice movements’], ''Indymedia UK'', 19 January 2011 (accessed 11 May 2014).</ref> | ||
+ | *St. Petersburg G8 mobilisation and planning<ref name="ABK118ch17pp277">Tom Anderson, ‘Infiltrated, Intimidated and Undermined: How Police Infiltration Can Mute Political Dissent - An Interview with Verity Smith, from Cardiff Anarchist Network’ in Rebecca Fisher (ed.), [http://www.corporatewatch.org/sites/default/files/MDMD%20Master%20PDF.pdf ''Managing Democracy Managing Dissent''], Corporate Watch, 2013 (accessed 17 June 2014), pp277.</ref> | ||
+ | *Smash EDO<ref name="IM4.003"></ref> | ||
+ | *South Wales Anarchists<ref name="AUD020">Oliver Hides, [https://a.tumblr.com/tumblr_mw8csfITIP1qcw2azo1_r1.mp3 ‘Interview with Tom Fowler about police infiltration of Cardiff Anarchist Network (package)’], ''Good Morning Wales'', BBC Radio Wales, 6 November 2013 (accessed via Tumblr 13 August 2014) ([http://issuu.com/bristlekrs/docs/avt024_ts-aud020_bbcrw_2013_tom_fow transcript AVT024 by BristleKRS]).</ref><ref name="BG4.004"></ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Notable activity=== | ||
+ | |||
+ | During his deployment, ‘Marco Jacobs’ engaged in a number of activities which enabled him to get close or closer to other activists and their decision-making processes. These included: | ||
+ | |||
+ | *Attending protests<ref name="BG4.004"></ref><ref name="IM4.002"></ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | *Taking minutes at meetings<ref name="BG4.004"></ref><ref name="IM4.002"></ref><ref name="ABK085p229">Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, ''Undercover: The True Story of Britain's Secret Police'', Faber & Faber, 2013, p229.</ref><ref name = brighton/> | ||
+ | |||
+ | *Writing, editing and distributing newsletters<ref name="BG4.004"></ref><ref name="IM4.002"></ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | *Participating in direct action<ref name="BG4.004"></ref><ref name="IM4.002"></ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | *Use of practical skills such as driving<ref name="IM4.003">Dick Tracy, [http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2011/01/472391.html ‘An account of Marco Jacobs' time in Brighton’], ''Indymedia UK'', 19 January 2011 (accessed 11 May 2014).</ref><ref name="BG4.004"></ref><ref name="IM4.002"></ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | *Being a point of contact for groups, particularly in international networks<ref name="BG4.004"></ref><ref name="IM4.002"></ref><ref name="IM4.010">someone from paris, [http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2011/01/472122.html?c=on#c262826 ‘please forward evidence..’], ''Indymedia UK'', 15 January 2011 (accessed 19 August 2014).</ref><ref name="IM4.006">acrosthechannel, [http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2011/01/472162.html?c=on#c263083 ‘Mark and Marcos were at a dissent meeting in Strasbourg in January 2009’], ''Indymedia UK'', 17 January 2011 (accessed 18 August 2014).</ref><ref name="IM4.007">alsoacrossthechannel, [http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2011/01/472162.html?c=on#c263109 ‘marco was at 2 meetings in strasbourg’], ''Indymedia UK'', 18 January 2011 (accessed 18 August 2014).</ref><ref name="ABK118ch17pp277-280">Tom Anderson, ‘Infiltrated, Intimidated and Undermined: How Police Infiltration Can Mute Political Dissent - An Interview with Verity Smith, from Cardiff Anarchist Network’ in Rebecca Fisher (ed.), [http://www.corporatewatch.org/sites/default/files/MDMD%20Master%20PDF.pdf ''Managing Democracy Managing Dissent''], Corporate Watch, 2013 (accessed 17 June 2014), pp277-280.</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | *Participation in protest and direct action activities overseas (‘summit-hopping’)<ref name="ASL194"></ref><ref name="IM4.006">acrosthechannel, [http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2011/01/472162.html?c=on#c263083 ‘Mark and Marcos were at a dissent meeting in Strasbourg in January 2009’], ''Indymedia UK'', 17 January 2011 (accessed 18 August 2014).</ref><ref name="IM4.007">alsoacrossthechannel, [http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2011/01/472162.html?c=on#c263109 ‘marco was at 2 meetings in strasbourg’], ''Indymedia UK'', 18 January 2011 (accessed 18 August 2014).</ref><ref name="AEV064">Andrej Hunko, [http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm201213/cmselect/cmhaff/837/837we04.htm ‘Information on sexual relationships by British undercover investigators in Germany/information for the individuals affected’], written evidence to Home Affairs Committee, Parliament.uk, February 2013 (accessed 18 August 2014).</ref><ref name="ABK118ch17pp277-280"></ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | * Taking pictures of protest (reportedly brought a camera to the G8 summit in Heiligendamm)<ref name = brighton/> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Suspected police behaviour=== | ||
+ | Based upon an overview of how ‘Marco Jacobs’ behaved throughout his time infiltrating activist groups from 2004 until 2009 - and in the context of police strategy documents and statements<ref name="NPOIU docs">For example, see: unknown author(s), ''Miscellaneous NPOIU documents (via Freedom of Information Act)'', (via source BUTCHER), 1999-2000 (accessed April 2014).</ref>, whistleblower evidence,<ref name="WHISTLEBLOWER">Such as that provided by former [[SDS]] undercover officer [[Peter Francis]].</ref> other spycop cases<ref name="OTHER SPYCOP CASES">Notably - but not limited to - [[Mark Kennedy]], [[Lynn Watson (alias)|‘Lynn Watson’]], [[Jim Boyling]], [[Bob Lambert]], [[Simon Wellings (alias)|‘Simon Wellings’]], [[John Dines]], [[Mark Jenner]], [[Rod Richardson (alias)|‘Rod Richardson’]] and [[Mike Chitty]].</ref>, and previous analyses of the infiltration and disruption of political groups by police or other agencies<ref name="ANALYSES">For example: Kristian Williams, ''Our Enemies In Blue: Police And Power In America'', South End Press, 2007 (2nd edition); Brian Glick, ''War At Home: Covert Action Against US Activists And What We Can Do About It'', South End Press, 1989; Peter Taylor, ''Brits: The War Against The IRA'', Bloomsbury, 2002; Ward Churchill & Jim Vander Wall, ''Agents of Repression: The FBI's Secret Wars Against the Black Panther Party and the American Indian Movement'', South End Press, 1988; Ward Churchill & Jim Vander Wall, ''The COINTELPRO Papers: Documents from the FBI's Secret Wars Against Dissent in the United States'', South End Press, 1990.</ref> - it is reasonable to deduce how such behaviour may have been consciously intended in order to meet specific deployment goals with which his police superiors tasked him. | ||
+ | |||
+ | This section considers what the purpose (in terms of those specific deployment goals) of the actions and behaviour of ‘Marco Jacobs’ may have been during his deployment. | ||
+ | {| class="wikitable" | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | ! Action/behaviour | ||
+ | ! Example | ||
+ | ! Possible objective | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | Initial engagement | ||
+ | | Appearing on the scene first in Brighton, then in Cardiff | ||
+ | | Building on a (false) legend and fleshing out ‘Marco Jacobs’ as a real person | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | Increasing involvement | ||
+ | | Participation in a growing number of campaigns and groups | ||
+ | | Mapping networks; gathering intelligence on numerous targets; corroboration of intelligence from other sources; providing intelligence for police-corporate collusion on protest injunctions<ref name="ASL219">unknown author, [http://www.roughmusic.org/rm25.html ‘Undercover cop: Brighton's very own pig in a blanket’], ''Rough Music'' #25, February/March 2011 (accessed 27 August 2014).</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | Refinement of behaviour | ||
+ | | Becoming vegan | ||
+ | | Conformity to a perceived image of an activist, building rapport with other activists | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | Driving skills and transportation capability | ||
+ | | xxx | ||
+ | | xxx | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | Calls for more militant action | ||
+ | | Calls for violent action at Gatwick No Borders camp. | ||
+ | | To identify those who may feel the same way; to draw others into the use of violence; to develop a reputation as a ‘hard man’ | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | Intimate/sexual relationships with activists | ||
+ | | 'Sarah', 'Deborah' | ||
+ | | To embed ‘Jacobs’ within the real activist community; give depth to him; diminish doubts other may have about him; glean intelligence about activists directly from them | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | Administrative roles | ||
+ | | Minute-taking at meetings; writing email newsletters and reports | ||
+ | | Writing actual notes; controlling or influencing agendas; creating the record-of-note; legitimate access to circulation lists | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | | Alcohol and socialising | ||
+ | | Encouraging a culture of heavy drinking; fostering an atmosphere of gossip; initiating and perpetuating interpersonal arguments | ||
+ | | Undermining a previously active group; developing splits within the group; neutralising an effective group through dysfunction and mistrust | ||
+ | |||
+ | |} | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Offences believed to have been committed=== | ||
+ | |||
+ | 'Jacobs' is known to have been arrested with others on two ocassions following doing actions; both times his house was apparently raided, as were the homes of those arrested with him. The first is circa 2004-2005, in Brighton, when he and two others were arrested for fly-positing in the run up to the G8.<ref name="IM4.003">Dick Tracy, [http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2011/01/472391.html ‘An account of Marco Jacobs' time in Brighton’], ''Indymedia UK'', 19 January 2011 (accessed 11 May 2014).</ref> THe second was circa 2006-2007, when he was arrested during pipeline action at Milford Haven.<ref name="IM4.003"></ref><ref name="BG4.004"></ref><ref name="IM4.002"></ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | There is also an account of him driving with out-of-date insurance.<ref name="ABK085p233">Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, ''Undercover: The True Story of Britain's Secret Police'', Faber & Faber, 2013, p233.</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Exfiltration=== | ||
+ | In common with other undercover officers who have been unmasked, ‘Jacobs’ appears to have had an exit strategy which saw him preparing those around him for his impending departure, albeit one which apparently played out only over a matter of weeks rather than months, as seems to have been the case with others before him. In effect, he announced that he had been offered a job as a gardener in Corfu<ref name="ABK085p234">Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, ''Undercover: The True Story of Britain's Secret Police'', Faber & Faber, 2013, p234.</ref><ref name="BG4.004"></ref><ref name="IM4.002"></ref><ref name="CYPRUS">It should be noted that one published source has ‘Jacobs’' job as being on Cyprus rather than Corfu - see Tom Anderson, ‘Infiltrated, Intimidated and Undermined: How Police Infiltration Can Mute Political Dissent - An Interview with Verity Smith, from Cardiff Anarchist Network’ in Rebecca Fisher (ed.), [http://www.corporatewatch.org/sites/default/files/MDMD%20Master%20PDF.pdf ''Managing Democracy Managing Dissent''], Corporate Watch, 2013 (accessed 17 June 2014), p281.</ref>, and shortly afterwards left from Cardiff. Contact with several activists in Cardiff was maintained for a few weeks, but then dried up.<ref name="BG4.004"/><ref name="IM4.002"/> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Exposure and post-exposure issues== | ||
+ | Accounts of the undercover tour of ‘Marco Jacobs’ have repeatedly made mention of how at various times he was suspected of being, if not necessarily a policeman, then certainly something other than a committed political activist. However, despite such suspicions, he remained able to continue his undercover deployment until - it seems - his tour came to a natural conclusion and he was exfiltrated. He was not fully exposed as a police infiltrator until January 2011 - nearly a year and a half after he left Cardiff in August 2009. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Early suspicions in Brighton=== | ||
+ | ‘Marco Jacobs’ had been suspected of being a police officer by a number of activists at different times. According to the Indymedia account of his time in Brighton, “From the beginning there were suspicions about Marco - In fact he used to joke that everyone thought he was a cop.”<ref name="IM4.003">Dick Tracy, [http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2011/01/472391.html ‘An account of Marco Jacobs' time in Brighton’], ''IndyMedia UK'', 19 January 2011 (accessed 11 May 2014).</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | The ''Guardian Undercover'' book supports this: “activists in Brighton say they became suspicious.” In their account, even ‘Terry’, one of the few to call themselves a friend of ‘Jacobs’ during his Brighton phase, recalls that “The word was, that man is a copper, everyone knows he is a copper...It was something about his deportment that just screamed ‘pig’ to some people.”<ref name="ABK085p226"></ref> According to ‘Terry’, less than a year into his deployment ‘Jacobs’ asked him “‘Everyone thinks I’m a copper, don’t they?”<ref name="ABK085p227">Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, ''Undercover: The True Story of Britain's Secret Police'', Faber & Faber, 2013, p227.</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Considering that he was subsequent outed, activists in Brighton told the Undercover Research Group:<ref name = brighton/> | ||
+ | : There were rumours about Jacobs, but on the other hand: there are rumours about a lot of people. There was someone very much involved in the scene who would stand up for Jacobs, trusting him. Just because someone is different, he is not necessarily a spy - maybe he was just a bit lost in life. This may have kept people from getting together to investigate Jacobs. One reason for serious doubt was the fact that he claimed to have been involved in hunt sabbing [sabotage] - while up north nobody in activist circles knew him. In hindsight this should have rung a bell... now activists ask themselves: how could he have been involved in radical animal activism before he came to Brighton, and arriving there as a meat-eater? | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Suspicions build in Cardiff=== | ||
+ | By the time of his 2009 exfiltration from Cardiff, doubts about him had accrued in that city as well, as ‘Verity Smith’ notes: “By that time a number of us had quite deep suspicions about him but there were such divisions within the group that we hadn’t told each other about them. I didn’t know, for instance, that a number of others in the group shared my suspicions.”<ref name="ABK118ch17pp281">Tom Anderson, ‘Infiltrated, Intimidated and Undermined: How Police Infiltration Can Mute Political Dissent - An Interview with Verity Smith, from Cardiff Anarchist Network’ in Rebecca Fisher (ed.), [http://www.corporatewatch.org/sites/default/files/MDMD%20Master%20PDF.pdf ''Managing Democracy Managing Dissent''], Corporate Watch, 2013 (accessed 17 June 2014), p281.</ref> At a leaving party for ‘Jacobs’ in August, even his closest friend in the city, Tom Fowler, joked to him that “If you disappear in a few months, you do realise that means you’re a cop, don’t you?”<ref name="ABK085p234">Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, ''Undercover: The True Story of Britain's Secret Police'', Faber & Faber, 2013, p234.</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | For a period of time following his putative departure to Corfu he continued to exchange text messages with some of his activist friends, and sent postcards. However, these “dried up” soon after, his UK mobile phone number became no longer recognised, and his Greek mobile phone was reset to not accept incoming calls or texts.<ref name="BG4.004"></ref><ref name="IM4.002"></ref> He also failed to update his social media accounts, such as his MySpace page.<ref name="PRO093">Mark Jacobs, [https://web.archive.org/web/20130508203653/http://www.myspace.com/cardiffmarco ‘Marco MySpace profile’], MySpace.com, 2010 (accessed via 8 May 2013 archive.org cache, 28 August 2014).</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | No more was heard from him, and as a result “suspicions crystallised, but by now he had completely disappeared.”<ref name="BG4.004"></ref><ref name="IM4.002"></ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | By February 2010, the suspicions had grown to the point that the person running the No Borders South Wales MySpace account left a message on that of ‘Jacobs’<ref name="PRO093">Mark Jacobs, [https://web.archive.org/web/20130508203653/http://www.myspace.com/cardiffmarco ‘Marco MySpace profile’], MySpace.com, 2011(?) (accessed via 8 May 2013 archive.org cache, 28 August 2014).</ref> (who had not updated his page in months) which directly referenced the uncertainty. It read: “Yassoo. Kalla? Dear Marco, hope all is well/you're not a cop. Al [sic] the best, Cardiff.”<ref name="IM4.014">Someone, [http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2011/01/472122.html?c=on#c262774 ‘Comment on his myspace page’], ''Indymedia UK'', 15 January 2011 (accessed 30 August 2014).</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | With no word from him for some time, a number of Cardiff Anarchist Network activists began to come to the conclusion that he had been a police spy: “at that point people’s suspicions consolidated and people started to talk to each other and ask whether he was a cop. The group got together and talked about it, there was broad agreement that we thought he probably was but we didn’t know what to do about it. People outside the group were quite dismissive and often we weren’t believed,” says ‘Verity Smith’.<ref name="ABK118ch17pp281"></ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Exposure=== | ||
+ | On 14 January 2011 - five days after ''The Guardian'' exposed [[Mark Kennedy]]<ref name="GN2.002">Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, [http://www.theguardian.com/uk/2011/jan/09/undercover-office-green-activists ‘Undercover officer spied on green activists’], ''The Guardian'', 9 January 2011 (accessed 31 August 2014). This was however more than a fortnight after the ''Sunday Times'' had picked up on the story, Tim Rayment & Jonathan Leake, [http://www.thesundaytimes.co.uk/sto/news/uk_news/Society/article484345.ece ‘7-year snitch: ‘Flash’ the activist is a secret cop’], ''Sunday Times'', 19 December 2010 (accessed 5 June 2014) after reading about [[Mark Kennedy|‘Flash’]] on Indymedia, [http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2010/10/466477.html ‘Mark 'Stone/Kennedy' exposed as undercover police officer’], ''Indymedia UK'', 21 October 2010 (Accessed 31 August 2014).</ref>) - the paper published a piece on its website which whilst not naming or picturing the man known to those he spied upon as ‘Marco Jacobs’, clearly identified him as an undercover police officer.<ref name="GN4.001">Paul Lewis, Matthew Taylor & Rajeev Syal, [http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2011/jan/14/third-undercover-police-spy-cardiff ‘Third undercover police spy unmasked as scale of network emerges’], ''The Guardian'', 15 January 2011 (accessed 11 May 2014).</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | It is thought likely that police sources asked ''The Guardian'' not to identify ‘Jacobs’ by work, name or photograph in the same way they did in regards of [[Lynn Watson (alias)|‘Lynn Watson’]], an [[NPOIU]] spy who was publicly exposed two days prior on 12 January.<ref name="GN3.002">Paul Lewis, Rob Evans & Martin Wainwright, [http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2011/jan/12/second-undercover-police-officer-unmasked ‘Second police officer to infiltrate environmental activists unmasked’], ''The Guardian'', 12/01/11 (accessed 10 May 2014). Some people thought ''The Guardian'' “bowed to pressure from the cops to keep his identity a secret”, see Emily Apple, [http://domesticextremist.wordpress.com/2011/02/13/death-grief-and-undercover-cops/ ‘Death, grief, and undercover cops’], ''Random Reflections of a Domestic Extremist'' blog, 13 February 2011 (accessed 30 August 2014).</ref> Instead the paper initially referred to him only as ‘Officer B’<ref name="GN4.001">Paul Lewis, Matthew Taylor & Rajeev Syal, [http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2011/jan/14/third-undercover-police-spy-cardiff ‘Third undercover police spy unmasked as scale of network emerges’], ''The Guardian'', 15 January 2011 (accessed 11 May 2014).</ref> in the same way that [[Lynn Watson (alias)|‘Watson’]] was at first labelled only as [[Officer A (disambiguation)|‘Officer A’]]. She was confirmed as a serving police officer by “intelligence officials”<ref name="GN3.002"></ref> and “senior police officers”<ref name="GN3.003">Paul Lewis, Rob Evans & Vikram Dodd, [http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2011/jan/12/second-undercover-police-officer ‘Revealed: Second undercover police officer who posed as activist’], ''The Guardian'', 13/01/11 (accessed 10 May 2014).</ref>, with further corroboration coming in April in the ''Times''.<ref name="TS3.001">Sean O'Neill, [http://www.thetimes.co.uk/tto/news/uk/crime/article2992340.ece ‘Police infiltrator in fear for her life after gang cover is blown’], ''The Times'', 20/04/11 (accessed 10 May 2014).</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | However, campaign group FITwatch, immediately published on their website a précis of the ''Guardian'' story the night before the print edition was due to hit the streets, which included naming and publishing photographs of ‘Jacobs’<ref name="BG4.001">Really Fit, [https://web.archive.org/web/20111109091239/http://www.fitwatch.org.uk/2011/01/14/marco-confirmed-as-undercover-cop-in-cardiff/ ‘'Marco' confirmed as undercover cop in Cardiff’], ''FITwatch'' blog, 14 January 2011 (accessed via 9 November 2011 archive.org cache, 11 May 2014).</ref>. The next day - 15 January - they reposted the same article to Indymedia.<ref name="IM4.001">Fitwatch, [http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2011/01/472122.html ‘Officer 'B' revealed as Cardiff based 'Marco' Jacobs’], ''IndyMedia UK'', 15 January 2011 (accessed 11 May 2014).</ref> A further blog post followed on 18 January, with more photographs.<ref name="BG4.002">Really Fit, [https://web.archive.org/web/20110504052846/http://www.fitwatch.org.uk/2011/01/18/more-pictures-of-undercover-cop-marco/ ‘More pictures of undercover cop 'Marco'’], ''FITwatch'' blog, 18 January 2011 (accessed via 4 May 2011 archive.org cache, 27 August 2014).</ref> | ||
+ | ''The Guardian'' followed a few days later, on 19 January, identifying ‘Jacobs’ by name and photograph. That same day activists from Cardiff Anarchist Network released a statement about ‘Jacobs’ which was published on both the South Wales Anarchists website<ref name="BG4.004">Cardiff Anarchist Network, [http://southwalesanarchists.wordpress.com/2011/01/19/statement-from-cardiff-anarchist-network-can-on-the-infiltration-by-mark-%E2%80%98marco%E2%80%99-jacobs/ ‘Statement on the infiltration by Mark ‘Marco ’ Jacobs’], South Wales Anarchists website, 19 January 2011 (accessed 27 August 2014).</ref> and on Indymedia UK.<ref name="IM4.002">Cardiff Anarchist Network, [http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2011/01/472388.html ‘Statement from Cardiff Anarchist Network (CAN) on the infiltration by Mark 'Marco' Jacobs’], ''IndyMedia UK'', 19 January 2011 (accessed 11 May 2014).</ref>; ‘Dick Tracy’ then also posted the account of ‘Jacobs’' Brighton deployment to Indymedia.<ref name="IM4.003">Dick Tracy, [http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2011/01/472391.html ‘An account of Marco Jacobs' time in Brighton’], ''IndyMedia UK'', 19 January 2011 (accessed 11 May 2014).</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Court cases=== | ||
+ | Since his exposure a number of Cardiff activists have initated a court action against the [[Metropolitan Police Service|Metropolitan]] and [[South Wales Police|South Wales]] police forces over the effect of Jacobs' intrusion in their lives and the distress it has caused. However, the police have responded by saying they can [https://policespiesoutoflives.potager.org/the-case-overview/legal-battles/neither-confirm-nor-deny/ 'Neither Confirm Nor Deny'] whether 'Jacobs' was a police officer, mirroring other similiar cases. | ||
+ | |||
+ | In early 2013 Judge Michael Tugendhat, summarised the case around the sexual relationships forme by ‘Jacobs’ in Cardiff as:<ref name="AEV040">The Hon. Mr Justice Tugendhat, [http://www.judiciary.gov.uk/judgments/akj-others-commissioner-police-metropolis-judgment-17012013/ ''AKJ and others -v- Commissioner of Police for the Metropolis and others''], High Court of Justice, Queen's Bench Division, 17 January 2013 (accessed 23 April 2014).</ref> | ||
+ | ::Between 2005 and 2009 MJ [Marco Jacobs] formed (apparently) close relationships with all three Tuckers Claimants, including intimate sexual relationships with AJA [‘Sarah’] and ARB [‘Deborah’]. MJ instigated a sexual relationship with ARB at a time when she was in a relationship with Mr Fowler. During the course of those relationships, MJ purported to be a confidante, empathiser and source of close support to each of the Tuckers Claimants, including in relation to deeply personal aspects of their lives: he attended, for example, the funeral of ARB’s father after his death from cancer. In doing so, he exploited the vulnerabilities of the Tuckers Claimants and sought to encourage them to rely on him emotionally. None of the Tuckers Claimants would have entered into these relationships with MJ had they been aware of his true identity as a police officer. | ||
+ | |||
+ | * For more on the NCND defense of the police, see the [https://policespiesoutoflives.potager.org/the-case-overview/legal-battles/neither-confirm-nor-deny/ 'Neither Confirm Nor Deny'] page at the Police Spies Out of Lives website, by the Support group for women's legal action against undercover policing. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Gallery== | ||
+ | This section brings together all the publicly available photographs of ‘Marco Jacobs’. Where known, any date, location, subject and rights information will be given with a picture. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===FITwatch, 14 January 2011=== | ||
+ | In the wake of the first mainstream reference to ‘Lynn Watson’ on 13 January 2011,<ref name="GN3.003">Paul Lewis, Rob Evans & Vikram Dodd, [http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2011/jan/12/second-undercover-police-officer ‘Revealed: Second undercover police officer who posed as activist’], ''The Guardian'', 13/01/11 (accessed 10 May 2014).</ref> the following day (14 January 2011) FITwatch published the first exposé - including picture - of the man known as ‘Marco Jacobs’, a statement put out in the name of Cardiff Anarchist Network.<ref name="BG4.001">Really Fit, [https://web.archive.org/web/20111109091239/http://www.fitwatch.org.uk/2011/01/14/marco-confirmed-as-undercover-cop-in-cardiff/ ‘'Marco' confirmed as undercover cop in Cardiff’], ''FITwatch'' blog, 14 January 2011 (accessed via 9 November 2011 archive.org cache, 11 May 2014).</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | <gallery> | ||
+ | File:Marco Jacobs.png|Undated Marco Jacobs photo | ||
+ | </gallery> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===FITwatch, 18 January 2011=== | ||
+ | Four days later, FITwatch posted up additional photos of ‘Jacobs’.<ref name="BG4.002">Really Fit, [https://web.archive.org/web/20110504052846/http://www.fitwatch.org.uk/2011/01/18/more-pictures-of-undercover-cop-marco/ ‘More pictures of undercover cop 'Marco'’], ''FITwatch'' blog, 18 January 2011 (accessed via 4 May 2011 archive.org cache, 27 August 2014).</ref> Several of these photographs were subsequently used by mainstream media outlets, such as ''The Guardian'', to illustrate their articles about ‘Jacobs’. | ||
+ | |||
+ | <gallery> | ||
+ | File:marco1.jpg|1. Undated photo - a cropped version of this photo was subsequently used by ''The Guardian'' from 19 January 2011 onwards<ref name="GN4.002">Rajeev Syal, [http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2011/jan/19/undercover-police-officer-mark-jacobs ‘Undercover police: Officer B identified as Mark Jacobs’], ''The Guardian'', 19 January 2011 (accessed 11 May 2014).</ref> | ||
+ | File:marco2.jpg|2. Undated photo | ||
+ | File:marco3.jpg|3. Undated photo - used by ''The Guardian'' from 3 May 2011 onwards<ref name="ASL221">Paul Lewis, Rob Evans, Paddy Allen & Simon Jeffrey, [http://www.theguardian.com/uk/interactive/2011/may/03/undercover-police-environmental-activists-interactive ‘Police spies and corporate infiltrators - an interactive guide to what we know so far’], ''The Guardian'', 3 May 2011 (accessed 27 August 2014).</ref><ref name="ASL220">Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, [http://www.theguardian.com/uk/undercover-with-paul-lewis-and-rob-evans/gallery/2013/jun/24/undercover-police-spies-unmasked-in-pictures/ ‘Undercover police spies unmasked - in pictures’], ''The Guardian'', 24 June 2013 (accessed 27 August 2014).</ref> | ||
+ | File:marco4.jpg|4. Undated photo | ||
+ | File:marco5.jpg|5. Undated photo | ||
+ | </gallery> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===South Wales Anarchists, 19 January 2014=== | ||
+ | The next day, the CAN statement previously posted to the FITwatch blog was also published on the website of Souht Wales Anarchists.<ref name="BG4.004">Cardiff Anarchist Network, [http://southwalesanarchists.wordpress.com/2011/01/19/statement-from-cardiff-anarchist-network-can-on-the-infiltration-by-mark-%E2%80%98marco%E2%80%99-jacobs/ ‘Statement on the infiltration by Mark ‘Marco ’ Jacobs’], South Wales Anarchists website, 19 January 2011 (accessed 27 August 2014).</ref> | ||
+ | <gallery> | ||
+ | File:Marco Jacobs - full.png|Less cropped version of original undated photograph (See above) | ||
+ | </gallery> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Other Undercover Researc sources== | ||
+ | For ease of reference the full list of all known material specifically relating to the undercover police officer known as ‘Marco Jacobs’ has been put onto a separate page in addition to the end notes below. | ||
+ | ::*[[Marco Jacobs Bibliography]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | ::*Also see [[Marco Jacobs Undercover Timeline]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Notes== | ||
+ | <references/> |
Revision as of 14:37, 24 March 2015
This article is part of the Undercover Research Portal at Powerbase - investigating corporate and police spying on activists
‘Mark Jacobs’, more commonly known as ‘Marco Jacobs’, was the assumed identity of an undercover police officer who infiltrated activist groups within the anti-authoritarian political movement. He was active between the years of 2004 and 2009, at first in the Brighton area of southern England, and then Cardiff, south Wales.
It is believed that he worked for the National Public Order Intelligence Unit,[1] and that after the end of his deployment, he was subsequently deployed undercover elsewhere, until publicity surrounding this and other spy operations caused him to be “moved for security reasons” after his “identity was compromised”.[2]
The role of ‘Jacobs’ as a long-term undercover police spy was brought to public attention in January 2011 in the wake of the unmasking of fellow NPOIU spy Mark Kennedy.[3][4][5][6][7]
However, both South Wales and Metropolitan police have maintened a 'Neither Confirm Nor Deny' defence of all aspects of Jacobs' deployment. On Wednesday 25th March 2015 activists spied upon by Jacobs are in the Royal Courts of Justice in London attempting to strike out these NCND defence.
Jacobs' current whereabouts and status are unknown. Likewise nothing is known of his true identity or history as a police officer.
N.B. This is a preliminary profile, published to provide some background for the hearing. While the current profile is based on published material only, we will now talk to people who knew Marco Jacobs. If you think you have anything to add or to correct, do get in touch (ask for our PGP key).
Also see:
Contents
Overview of undercover tour as ‘Marco Jacobs’
The man known as ‘Marco Jacobs’ first appeared in Brighton in late 2004, and quickly made attempts to inveigle his way into political groups, primarily those of a direct action-oriented anarchist or anti-authoritarian nature. He attended local protests, travelled to demonstrations in other parts of the country, took part in meetings, and socialised with activists.
However, it appears that he was never entirely trusted within the Brighton activist community[7], and so in 2005 he moved to Cardiff, where he repeated the same repertoire of behaviour, but, it seems, more successfully. Cardiff activist Tom Fowler, pointed at the different character of that city's activist scene compared to Brighton's: “he was a normal working class bloke and the activist scene in Brighton was maybe not somewhere ‘Jacobs’ was fitting in.”[8] Fellow Cardiff Anarchist Network (CAN) activist ‘Verity Smith’ concurred with this view in her account:
- He moved to Cardiff claiming that he’d come from Brighton but that (activists in) Brighton had been hostile to him, had not accepted him and that he’d felt excluded. He said he’d come to Cardiff because we were more open and more tolerant of new people becoming involved and that there was a lot going on in Cardiff in terms of activism and that he wanted to be where things were happening.[9]
Whilst in Cardiff he became more involved in international protest organising networks, and developed close, sometimes sexual, relationships with a number of activists.[10]
He disappeared in late 2009, having said he was moving to Corfu for a job.[11][12][6][4][13][14]
Though suspicions about him grew in his absence, nothing more was heard about him until January 2011, when the furore over the Mark Kennedy affair led to him being acknowledged as a police spy shortly after the public exposure of ‘Lynn Watson’.[15][16][17][18][19]
Timeline
For a better overview, a timeline is in the making. The current version collates previously published (though sometimes as yet uncorroborated) claims and privately confirmed details of what ‘Jacobs’ did, and where and when he did it. We still need to talk to people who knew Jacobs, if you have any details to add about his activites and behaviour, do get in touch.
- See main article: Marco Jacobs Undercover Timeline
Personal details
‘Jacobs’ was a heavy-set, hirsute man with a Midlands accent with a wry (or sometimes dark) sense of humour, and a propensity for drinking large volumes of alcohol. It appears he presented somewhat different versions of himself depending on the audience, with a noticeable change in his behaviour and appearance by the time he had moved from Brighton to Cardiff.
Age
At the outset of his deployment he was in his mid-to-late thirties. On exposure in January 2011, his age was said to be 44, suggesting a birth year of 1966 or 1967.[4][6]
Physical appearance
Several accounts note him to be a physically large man (“carrying a little too much weight around the middle”[3]), typically describing him as approximately fifteen stone (210 pounds, or 95kg)[1][3][4][20], and about six foot (183cm) in height.[3][4][21]
His hair - brown and slightly curly - varied in length and style over the years, from a shaggy mullet to a neater ponytail. He tended to be unshaven, sometimes wearing a beard.[22] Guardian reporters Evans and Lewis suggest that between his deployment in Brighton and the move to Cardiff, ‘Jacobs’ “had the chance to learn from mistakes in Brighton. He became a vegan and changed his appearance, growing his hair to his shoulders and dying it purple.”[23] He was also bestowed with large amounts of body hair.[1]
He had ear piercings and tattoos, including the name ‘Sam’ on his lower back (which he claimed was a tribute to his by then ex-wife), subsequently covered up with a black star, and a piece of Celtic knotwork on one shoulder, which he said he had got when he was in a bike gang as an 18 year old.[23]
Background
On arriving in Brighton, he claimed to have come from Reading, a city in the Thames Valley area, close to London.[7] To activists in Cardiff he presented himself as from Northampton, a supporter of the Northampton Town football club, and moving away from Northampton due to a “messy break-up with a woman” there.[24] Accounts generally suggest - based on his accent and on claims made by ‘Jacobs’ himself - that he originally hailed from the English Midlands, possibly Northampton[24][8][25] or Derby[3].
Occupation
On appearing in Brighton early on in his undercover deployment, ‘Jacobs’ claimed to be “a landscape artist [who] also drove trucks”.[1] In Brighton, he presented an elaborated story on how he would do the front of corporate head quarters of companies that would want exactly the same design at their offices, for instance in Edinburgh and Bristol. He would use this as an explanation for the periods of time he was away. However, as he befriended an activist who was in landscaping too, he changed his said-occupation into truck driver and gave away his tools.[26]
Following his relocation to Cardiff, he had refined his legend and presented himself as a truck driver who spent his time “hauling boxes of shopping catalogues around the country”.[27] This part of his cover seems to have been meticulously prepared:
- He would spend hours explaining how he had executed complicated reversing manoeuvres, parking HGV trucks in parking bays ‘designed for Tonka cars’. He had a permanently suntanned right forearm, which friends noticed was noticeably browner than the left, even during the winter. It was, he said, the result of having one arm constantly rested on the truck door by the window...Jacobs talked so much about truck driving he became annoying.[27]
Domicile
Whilst in Brighton, he lived in “a house close to Elm Grove,”[7] a high density neighbourhood within the city with a large transient population due to large numbers of houses of multiple occupancy (HMOs) and popularity with students.[28]
Activists in Brighton remember the flat as 'sparse' and 'clean', with just a Bob Marley poster on the wall. "Looks like the place of a copper" someone said, but by the time that was a running gag - activists say in hindsight.[26]
In Cardiff ‘Jacobs’ rented a first floor apartment “near Roath Park, on the fringe of the student area.” According to CAN activist ‘Janine’ the flat was barely furnished and “entirely without personality,” with “no photographs or anything else that you would have by the time you were in your 40s.”[27]
Personality
Cardiff activist ‘Janine’ describes ‘Jacobs’ as “Big, burly, brash and blokey,”[1], an assessment echoed elsewhere, including the Cardiff Anarchist Network statement about him, which described the by-now exposed undercover policeman as “likeable, personally supportive, funny and very useful to have around”.[11][12]
Several people have noted his use of humour. ‘Verity Smith’ has suggested that “he hid behind this sort of amiable clown thing, he made a joke of everything, deflected everything”.[29] Another unnamed source posed a rhetorical question to regional newspaper Wales On Sunday: “If they can send a bloke cracking jokes into your life, who will they send next time?”[30]
His legend included a messy breakup from a relationship with a woman who abused him. At the time this seemed a believable story, but some people had questions about Jacobs' claims - merely his size and weight made it not very likely that he would end up as the beaten one. In general, his attempt to position himself as a vulnerable person did not really work.[26]
Publicly available accounts of his time in Brighton suggest that despite his best efforts he remained something of an outsider to the city's activist scene.[7] Evans and Lewis claim that he had “few friends” there; their book contains recollections about ‘Jacobs’ from one of these, called ‘Terry’.[31] Some people even felt sorry for him, he was trying so hard to fit in, but failed.[26]
Changing the mood at meetings
Several accounts note that ‘Jacobs’ regularly used a number of idiosyncratic phrases.
The pen portrait of his time in Brighton by ‘Dick Tracy’ notes that ‘Jacobs’ was in the habit of “making sarcastic comments in social situations and meetings,” adding that this “may have been an attempt to disrupt activist organising”.[7] The Cardiff Anarchist Network monograph appears to echo this last supposition, stating that he “changed the culture of the organisation, encouraging a lot of drinking, gossip and back-stabbing.”[11][12]
An otherwise brief FITwatch blog post[3] lists a number of the catchphrases often used by ‘Jacobs’:
- little phrases that were used frequently to deflect question or discussion, or to lighten situations. "Dear diary..." he'd say when we'd be discussing the days/weeks happenings. "And relax..." at the end of meetings or stressful conversations. Everything was "dinky do". He'd do a "welfare check" to see how you were, and generally things were ridic/hillar/bloody marv. Other people's witticisms were greeted with "did you see what he did there?". And that's a "negadive" (negative) or "check".
Based on their interviews with activists who knew ‘Jacobs’, Evans and Lewis claim that he “liked to adopt the persona of a Northern [English] comedian.”[1]
In a similar vein, he would produce spoof minutes from meetings (mentioned in the context of Jacobs taking minutes of Dissent meetings before the G8 summit in Glenneagles).[26]
Attitudes towards and promotion of violence
According to Evans and Lewis, during his time in Brighton ‘Jacobs’ “boasted about getting into pub brawls”[1]. One story is a bit more specific, Jacobs claimed to have gone back to Northampton to meet and old mate, and end up receiving a beaten in a pub fight. In hindsight this story did not add up with Jacobs' claims of coming to Brighton because he needed a clean break from his old life.[26]
By the time he surfaced in Cardiff he claimed that he had been to prison on remand, but was vague about why or what for, preferring instead to allude to a past as “a bit of a fighter.”[23]
One commenter on CAN's statement on Indymedia, ‘stroppyoldgit’, claimed ‘Jacobs’ repeatedly attempted to stir up more militant or violent activity amongst activists at protests, regardless of the circumstances. In particular at a No Borders camp near Gatwick:[32]
- He made a couple of ridiculous interventions in the big meeting before the main march through Crawley to the detention centre, urging us to make the next day a big fight with the cops...He tried to start a gormless violence-obsessed conversation.
Relationships
Part of the back story given by ‘Jacobs’ is that “he was separated from his former partner, who used to physically abuse him”.[33] The version put forward by Evans and Lewis is slightly different; they present it as a messy divorce from an abusive ex-wife called ‘Sam’ (“who beat him up”) before appearing on the activist scene. Given that he had this name (or at least the letters S A M) tattooed on his back - subsequently covered up with a black star - it seems likely that there was a real person by this name in the life of the police officer playing the part of ‘Jacobs’.[23]
Whilst he is not known to have developed many close bonds with activists in Brighton, an anonymous Indymedia posting claims that during his time there he “slept with at least one woman who was close to the activist scene”.[34] Activists in Brighton said it was a friend of a friend, and not somebody close to the scene.[26]
In Brighton, he confided to a friend that he had once kissed a man, but asked for this to remain confidential.[26]
In contrast he was able to “befriend people from the [south Wales] area around the country at different protests”[8] - first meeting CAN activists in 2004[33][35] - and so decided to move to Cardiff. Here ‘Jacobs’ was able to ingratiate himself into several close friendships. These included:
- Tom Fowler: an activist involved in, amongst other groups, Cardiff Anarchist Network and South Wales Anarchists, and “then at the centre of Cardiff activism”[27] He says Jacobs “became a very close friend of mine, became more than a close friend of some members of our group.”[8] Fowler described ‘Jacobs’ as “privy to all of my decision-making around activism and personal relationships to a really deep level...He was like my best mate. He was the most reliable person in my life.”[36]
- Fran Ryan: A vegan baker introduced to ‘Jacobs’ by Tom Fowler, Fran Ryan was then 50 and “not herself politically active”, but she “quickly formed a rapport with the undercover police officer.” ‘Jacobs’ even tried (unsuccessfully) to get her to accompany him to a “meeting of European animal rights activists in Vienna”, before she agreed instead to go with him to an animal rights gathering in Essex.[37]
‘Jacobs’ is also known to have had sexual relationships with at least two activists amongst the groups he spied upon.
- ‘Sarah’: In the summer of 2007, ‘Jacobs’ began a sexual relationship with ‘Sarah’, then 26 years old, and well-connected in activist circles, after they returned from Germany where they had taken part in the anti-G8 Heiligendamm summit protests. The relationship, which only lasted “a few weeks”, was built on a close friendship the two had developed over the previous few years, and began at the prompting of ‘Jacobs’, who had initially suggested that they “take their relationship further” two months before the G8.[38] (Note that previously The Guardian had reported that this relationship had taken place in 2008 and lasted three months.[6])
- ‘Deborah’: In 2009, when she was in a relationship with Tom Fowler, ‘Deborah’ father was terminally ill with cancer. In Fowler's words, ‘Jacobs’ “put himself in the middle of that [relationship]...[and] acted as a father figure to her.” Simultaneously he behaved as a confidant to Fowler, who told him about his and ‘Deborah’'s relationship troubles. When her father died, ‘Jacobs’ attended the funeral. According to Evans and Lewis he “offered her a shoulder to cry on...[then] tried to seduce her”. Initially ‘Deborah’ turned him down, but eventually they embarked on a brief sexual relationship after ‘Jacobs’ told her that he loved her. Then, “believing she was about to begin a serious relationship with the truck driver,” she broke up with Fowler, only for ‘Jacobs’ to suddenly lose interest. [36]
The circumstances of the efforts by ‘Jacobs’ to interpose himself into the lives of activists in Cardiff, and to pursue intimate sexual relationships with targets, has subsequently been the focus of legal action taken by Fowler, ‘Sarah’ and ‘Deborah’ (see court cases section below).
Habits, tastes and interests
This section is pieced together from details noted in the various accounts of ‘Jacobs’' activities, and as such cannot be considered to be either comprehensive or definitive.
Music
‘Jacobs’ professed a passion for rock music, and used going to out-of-town gigs - purportedly with friends not from the activist scene - as a pretext for absences from Cardiff.[11][12] A “heavy metal CD collection” is said to have filled the floor of his otherwise spartan Cardiff flat.[39] Activist Tom Fowler recalled how the two of them would go to punk gigs in Newport.[40][41][42]
His MySpace page[43] indicates that he was a fan of the following bands and artists, predominantly heavy metal or hard rock:
AC/DC | Alice Cooper | Annihilator | Big Linda | Chris Broderick | Crawler | Def Leppard | Evile | Fathom Down | Gojira | Hawkwind | Hot Leg |
The Hush | Judas Priest | Led Zeppelin | Lovecraaft | Megadeth | Metallica | Motörhead | Mutant | Nuclear Theatre | Onslaught | Pink Floyd | Privateer |
Reb Beach | Sanctity | Savage Messiah | Saxon | Slipknot | Stone Gods | Tony Iommi | Trivium | V-Twin | Venom | Warpath | Whitesnake |
Alcohol & Drugs
Both in Brighton and Cardiff ‘Jacobs’ developed a reputation for being able to consume prodigious quantities of alcohol (“a notorious ability to drink huge quantities of alcohol without becoming drunk,” say Evans and Lewis).[1] Cardiff activist Tom Fowler notes that one catchphrase of ‘Jacobs’ was “Strong European lager is my drug of choice.”[4][39]
In Brighton, he regularly attended the Cowley Club, an anarchist social centre. He is said to “treated the Cowley bar as his regular,” boasting how much he could drink and was “often generous in buying rounds,”.[7][44]
In Cardiff his reputation for heavy drinking continued, something noted in the CAN account of his time there, which points towards him “encouraging a lot of drinking”.[11][12]
Activist ‘Verity Smith’ commented on this aspect of him:[45]
- He would be down the pub all the time, he would always have money for drinks, he would be very keen to encourage people to go out drinking with him and used that time to really probe people on what they thought and what their attitudes were and what their opinions were, what their vulnerabilities were. I also think he wanted to instil a drinking culture that automatically excluded those people who were not part of that party scene - because they were working or because they had children or because they were not of that age group or whatever.
His capacity for drink was even noticed overseas, such as at the 2007 anti-G8 Heiligendamm protests in Germany.[46]
The main accounts detailing his activities suggest that ‘Jacobs’ did not consume (illegal) drugs.[47][7][11][12][4]
Food & diet
It is perhaps of note that whilst trying to infiltrate the activist milieu in Brighton - where it is received wisdom that he was less successful in penetrating networks - ‘Jacobs’ remained a meat-eating outsider[1], but that by the time he more successfully worked his way into the Cardiff scene he had become vegan[23].
Activist modus operandi, undercover tradecraft
Target groups
Whilst undercover, ‘Marco Jacobs’ infiltrated (or attempted to infiltrate) a considerable number of political campaigns. He is known to have involved (or attempted to involve) himself in the following networks, groups, issues or tactics:
- Animal rights networks[29], including Swansea Animal Rights[30][48][40][41][42][49]
- Anti-Metrix/RAF St Athan Defence Academy[11][12][50]
- Black Bloc[7][11][12]
- Camp Bling[7]
- Camp for Climate Action[7][50]
- Cardiff Anarchist Network[11][12][30][48][40][41][42][49]
- Cowley Club[7][1][51]
- Dissent! Network[11][12]
- Eat Out Vegan Wales[52][30][48][40][41][42][49][53]
- Gwent Anarchists[11][12][30][48][40][41][42][49]
- Heiligendamm G8 protests[7][46][54][53][55][56]
- KTS Autonomous Centre[57]
- Milford Haven anti-LNG pipeline[11][12]
- No Borders[7][32][50] and in particular No Borders South Wales[30][48][40][41][42][49]
- No To NATO[55]
- Pembrokeshire Anarchists[30][48][40][41][42][49]
- Rising Tide Network[4][58]
- St. Petersburg G8 mobilisation and planning[56]
- Smash EDO[7]
- South Wales Anarchists[8][11]
Notable activity
During his deployment, ‘Marco Jacobs’ engaged in a number of activities which enabled him to get close or closer to other activists and their decision-making processes. These included:
- Participation in protest and direct action activities overseas (‘summit-hopping’)[46][60][61][54][62]
- Taking pictures of protest (reportedly brought a camera to the G8 summit in Heiligendamm)[26]
Suspected police behaviour
Based upon an overview of how ‘Marco Jacobs’ behaved throughout his time infiltrating activist groups from 2004 until 2009 - and in the context of police strategy documents and statements[63], whistleblower evidence,[64] other spycop cases[65], and previous analyses of the infiltration and disruption of political groups by police or other agencies[66] - it is reasonable to deduce how such behaviour may have been consciously intended in order to meet specific deployment goals with which his police superiors tasked him.
This section considers what the purpose (in terms of those specific deployment goals) of the actions and behaviour of ‘Marco Jacobs’ may have been during his deployment.
Action/behaviour | Example | Possible objective |
---|---|---|
Initial engagement | Appearing on the scene first in Brighton, then in Cardiff | Building on a (false) legend and fleshing out ‘Marco Jacobs’ as a real person |
Increasing involvement | Participation in a growing number of campaigns and groups | Mapping networks; gathering intelligence on numerous targets; corroboration of intelligence from other sources; providing intelligence for police-corporate collusion on protest injunctions[44] |
Refinement of behaviour | Becoming vegan | Conformity to a perceived image of an activist, building rapport with other activists |
Driving skills and transportation capability | xxx | xxx |
Calls for more militant action | Calls for violent action at Gatwick No Borders camp. | To identify those who may feel the same way; to draw others into the use of violence; to develop a reputation as a ‘hard man’ |
Intimate/sexual relationships with activists | 'Sarah', 'Deborah' | To embed ‘Jacobs’ within the real activist community; give depth to him; diminish doubts other may have about him; glean intelligence about activists directly from them |
Administrative roles | Minute-taking at meetings; writing email newsletters and reports | Writing actual notes; controlling or influencing agendas; creating the record-of-note; legitimate access to circulation lists |
Alcohol and socialising | Encouraging a culture of heavy drinking; fostering an atmosphere of gossip; initiating and perpetuating interpersonal arguments | Undermining a previously active group; developing splits within the group; neutralising an effective group through dysfunction and mistrust |
Offences believed to have been committed
'Jacobs' is known to have been arrested with others on two ocassions following doing actions; both times his house was apparently raided, as were the homes of those arrested with him. The first is circa 2004-2005, in Brighton, when he and two others were arrested for fly-positing in the run up to the G8.[7] THe second was circa 2006-2007, when he was arrested during pipeline action at Milford Haven.[7][11][12]
There is also an account of him driving with out-of-date insurance.[67]
Exfiltration
In common with other undercover officers who have been unmasked, ‘Jacobs’ appears to have had an exit strategy which saw him preparing those around him for his impending departure, albeit one which apparently played out only over a matter of weeks rather than months, as seems to have been the case with others before him. In effect, he announced that he had been offered a job as a gardener in Corfu[13][11][12][14], and shortly afterwards left from Cardiff. Contact with several activists in Cardiff was maintained for a few weeks, but then dried up.[11][12]
Exposure and post-exposure issues
Accounts of the undercover tour of ‘Marco Jacobs’ have repeatedly made mention of how at various times he was suspected of being, if not necessarily a policeman, then certainly something other than a committed political activist. However, despite such suspicions, he remained able to continue his undercover deployment until - it seems - his tour came to a natural conclusion and he was exfiltrated. He was not fully exposed as a police infiltrator until January 2011 - nearly a year and a half after he left Cardiff in August 2009.
Early suspicions in Brighton
‘Marco Jacobs’ had been suspected of being a police officer by a number of activists at different times. According to the Indymedia account of his time in Brighton, “From the beginning there were suspicions about Marco - In fact he used to joke that everyone thought he was a cop.”[7]
The Guardian Undercover book supports this: “activists in Brighton say they became suspicious.” In their account, even ‘Terry’, one of the few to call themselves a friend of ‘Jacobs’ during his Brighton phase, recalls that “The word was, that man is a copper, everyone knows he is a copper...It was something about his deportment that just screamed ‘pig’ to some people.”[1] According to ‘Terry’, less than a year into his deployment ‘Jacobs’ asked him “‘Everyone thinks I’m a copper, don’t they?”[23]
Considering that he was subsequent outed, activists in Brighton told the Undercover Research Group:[26]
- There were rumours about Jacobs, but on the other hand: there are rumours about a lot of people. There was someone very much involved in the scene who would stand up for Jacobs, trusting him. Just because someone is different, he is not necessarily a spy - maybe he was just a bit lost in life. This may have kept people from getting together to investigate Jacobs. One reason for serious doubt was the fact that he claimed to have been involved in hunt sabbing [sabotage] - while up north nobody in activist circles knew him. In hindsight this should have rung a bell... now activists ask themselves: how could he have been involved in radical animal activism before he came to Brighton, and arriving there as a meat-eater?
Suspicions build in Cardiff
By the time of his 2009 exfiltration from Cardiff, doubts about him had accrued in that city as well, as ‘Verity Smith’ notes: “By that time a number of us had quite deep suspicions about him but there were such divisions within the group that we hadn’t told each other about them. I didn’t know, for instance, that a number of others in the group shared my suspicions.”[68] At a leaving party for ‘Jacobs’ in August, even his closest friend in the city, Tom Fowler, joked to him that “If you disappear in a few months, you do realise that means you’re a cop, don’t you?”[13]
For a period of time following his putative departure to Corfu he continued to exchange text messages with some of his activist friends, and sent postcards. However, these “dried up” soon after, his UK mobile phone number became no longer recognised, and his Greek mobile phone was reset to not accept incoming calls or texts.[11][12] He also failed to update his social media accounts, such as his MySpace page.[69]
No more was heard from him, and as a result “suspicions crystallised, but by now he had completely disappeared.”[11][12]
By February 2010, the suspicions had grown to the point that the person running the No Borders South Wales MySpace account left a message on that of ‘Jacobs’[69] (who had not updated his page in months) which directly referenced the uncertainty. It read: “Yassoo. Kalla? Dear Marco, hope all is well/you're not a cop. Al [sic] the best, Cardiff.”[70]
With no word from him for some time, a number of Cardiff Anarchist Network activists began to come to the conclusion that he had been a police spy: “at that point people’s suspicions consolidated and people started to talk to each other and ask whether he was a cop. The group got together and talked about it, there was broad agreement that we thought he probably was but we didn’t know what to do about it. People outside the group were quite dismissive and often we weren’t believed,” says ‘Verity Smith’.[68]
Exposure
On 14 January 2011 - five days after The Guardian exposed Mark Kennedy[71]) - the paper published a piece on its website which whilst not naming or picturing the man known to those he spied upon as ‘Marco Jacobs’, clearly identified him as an undercover police officer.[6]
It is thought likely that police sources asked The Guardian not to identify ‘Jacobs’ by work, name or photograph in the same way they did in regards of ‘Lynn Watson’, an NPOIU spy who was publicly exposed two days prior on 12 January.[16] Instead the paper initially referred to him only as ‘Officer B’[6] in the same way that ‘Watson’ was at first labelled only as ‘Officer A’. She was confirmed as a serving police officer by “intelligence officials”[16] and “senior police officers”[17], with further corroboration coming in April in the Times.[2]
However, campaign group FITwatch, immediately published on their website a précis of the Guardian story the night before the print edition was due to hit the streets, which included naming and publishing photographs of ‘Jacobs’[72]. The next day - 15 January - they reposted the same article to Indymedia.[5] A further blog post followed on 18 January, with more photographs.[3] The Guardian followed a few days later, on 19 January, identifying ‘Jacobs’ by name and photograph. That same day activists from Cardiff Anarchist Network released a statement about ‘Jacobs’ which was published on both the South Wales Anarchists website[11] and on Indymedia UK.[12]; ‘Dick Tracy’ then also posted the account of ‘Jacobs’' Brighton deployment to Indymedia.[7]
Court cases
Since his exposure a number of Cardiff activists have initated a court action against the Metropolitan and South Wales police forces over the effect of Jacobs' intrusion in their lives and the distress it has caused. However, the police have responded by saying they can 'Neither Confirm Nor Deny' whether 'Jacobs' was a police officer, mirroring other similiar cases.
In early 2013 Judge Michael Tugendhat, summarised the case around the sexual relationships forme by ‘Jacobs’ in Cardiff as:[33]
- Between 2005 and 2009 MJ [Marco Jacobs] formed (apparently) close relationships with all three Tuckers Claimants, including intimate sexual relationships with AJA [‘Sarah’] and ARB [‘Deborah’]. MJ instigated a sexual relationship with ARB at a time when she was in a relationship with Mr Fowler. During the course of those relationships, MJ purported to be a confidante, empathiser and source of close support to each of the Tuckers Claimants, including in relation to deeply personal aspects of their lives: he attended, for example, the funeral of ARB’s father after his death from cancer. In doing so, he exploited the vulnerabilities of the Tuckers Claimants and sought to encourage them to rely on him emotionally. None of the Tuckers Claimants would have entered into these relationships with MJ had they been aware of his true identity as a police officer.
- For more on the NCND defense of the police, see the 'Neither Confirm Nor Deny' page at the Police Spies Out of Lives website, by the Support group for women's legal action against undercover policing.
Gallery
This section brings together all the publicly available photographs of ‘Marco Jacobs’. Where known, any date, location, subject and rights information will be given with a picture.
FITwatch, 14 January 2011
In the wake of the first mainstream reference to ‘Lynn Watson’ on 13 January 2011,[17] the following day (14 January 2011) FITwatch published the first exposé - including picture - of the man known as ‘Marco Jacobs’, a statement put out in the name of Cardiff Anarchist Network.[72]
FITwatch, 18 January 2011
Four days later, FITwatch posted up additional photos of ‘Jacobs’.[3] Several of these photographs were subsequently used by mainstream media outlets, such as The Guardian, to illustrate their articles about ‘Jacobs’.
1. Undated photo - a cropped version of this photo was subsequently used by The Guardian from 19 January 2011 onwards[4]
South Wales Anarchists, 19 January 2014
The next day, the CAN statement previously posted to the FITwatch blog was also published on the website of Souht Wales Anarchists.[11]
- Marco Jacobs - full.png
Less cropped version of original undated photograph (See above)
Other Undercover Researc sources
For ease of reference the full list of all known material specifically relating to the undercover police officer known as ‘Marco Jacobs’ has been put onto a separate page in addition to the end notes below.
- Also see Marco Jacobs Undercover Timeline
Notes
- ↑ 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, Undercover: The True Story of Britain's Secret Police, Faber & Faber, 2013, p226.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Sean O'Neill, ‘Police infiltrator in fear for her life after gang cover is blown’, The Times, 20/04/11 (accessed 10 May 2014).
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.7 Really Fit, ‘More pictures of undercover cop 'Marco'’, FITwatch blog, 18 January 2011 (accessed via 4 May 2011 archive.org cache, 27 August 2014).
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 4.7 4.8 Rajeev Syal, ‘Undercover police: Officer B identified as Mark Jacobs’, The Guardian, 19 January 2011 (accessed 11 May 2014).
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Fitwatch, ‘Officer 'B' confirmed as Cardiff based 'Marco' Jacobs’, Indymedia UK, 15 January 2011 (accessed 11 May 2014). Cite error: Invalid
<ref>
tag; name "IM4.001" defined multiple times with different content - ↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 6.5 Paul Lewis, Matthew Taylor & Rajeev Syal, ‘Third undercover police spy unmasked as scale of network emerges’, The Guardian, 15 January 2011 (accessed 11 May 2014).
- ↑ 7.00 7.01 7.02 7.03 7.04 7.05 7.06 7.07 7.08 7.09 7.10 7.11 7.12 7.13 7.14 7.15 7.16 7.17 7.18 7.19 Dick Tracy, ‘An account of Marco Jacobs' time in Brighton’, Indymedia UK, 19 January 2011 (accessed 11 May 2014). Cite error: Invalid
<ref>
tag; name "IM4.003" defined multiple times with different content Cite error: Invalid<ref>
tag; name "IM4.003" defined multiple times with different content Cite error: Invalid<ref>
tag; name "IM4.003" defined multiple times with different content Cite error: Invalid<ref>
tag; name "IM4.003" defined multiple times with different content Cite error: Invalid<ref>
tag; name "IM4.003" defined multiple times with different content - ↑ 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 Oliver Hides, ‘Interview with Tom Fowler about police infiltration of Cardiff Anarchist Network (package)’, Good Morning Wales, BBC Radio Wales, 6 November 2013 (accessed via Tumblr 13 August 2014) (transcript AVT024 by BristleKRS).
- ↑ Tom Anderson, ‘Infiltrated, Intimidated and Undermined: How Police Infiltration Can Mute Political Dissent - An Interview with Verity Smith, from Cardiff Anarchist Network’ in Rebecca Fisher (ed.), Managing Democracy Managing Dissent, Corporate Watch, 2013 (accessed 17 June 2014), p276.
- ↑ See section on relationships for more on this.
- ↑ 11.00 11.01 11.02 11.03 11.04 11.05 11.06 11.07 11.08 11.09 11.10 11.11 11.12 11.13 11.14 11.15 11.16 11.17 11.18 11.19 11.20 11.21 11.22 11.23 11.24 11.25 Cardiff Anarchist Network, ‘Statement on the infiltration by Mark ‘Marco ’ Jacobs’, South Wales Anarchists website, 19 January 2011 (accessed 27 August 2014).
- ↑ 12.00 12.01 12.02 12.03 12.04 12.05 12.06 12.07 12.08 12.09 12.10 12.11 12.12 12.13 12.14 12.15 12.16 12.17 12.18 12.19 12.20 12.21 12.22 12.23 Cardiff Anarchist Network, ‘Statement from Cardiff Anarchist Network (CAN) on the infiltration by Mark 'Marco' Jacobs’, IndyMedia UK, 19 January 2011 (accessed 11 May 2014). Cite error: Invalid
<ref>
tag; name "IM4.002" defined multiple times with different content Cite error: Invalid<ref>
tag; name "IM4.002" defined multiple times with different content - ↑ 13.0 13.1 13.2 Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, Undercover: The True Story of Britain's Secret Police, Faber & Faber, 2013, p234.
- ↑ 14.0 14.1 It should be noted that one published source has ‘Jacobs’' job as being on Cyprus rather than Corfu - see Tom Anderson, ‘Infiltrated, Intimidated and Undermined: How Police Infiltration Can Mute Political Dissent - An Interview with Verity Smith, from Cardiff Anarchist Network’ in Rebecca Fisher (ed.), Managing Democracy Managing Dissent, Corporate Watch, 2013 (accessed 17 June 2014), p281.
- ↑ Paul Lewis, Rob Evans & Martin Wainwright, ‘Mark Kennedy knew of second undercover eco-activist’, The Guardian, 10/01/11 (accessed 10 May 2014).
- ↑ 16.0 16.1 16.2 Paul Lewis, Rob Evans & Martin Wainwright, ‘Second police officer to infiltrate environmental activists unmasked’, The Guardian, 12/01/11 (accessed 10 May 2014). Cite error: Invalid
<ref>
tag; name "GN3.002" defined multiple times with different content - ↑ 17.0 17.1 17.2 Paul Lewis, Rob Evans & Vikram Dodd, ‘Revealed: Second undercover police officer who posed as activist’, The Guardian, 13/01/11 (accessed 10 May 2014).
- ↑ quiteliketheguardianactually, ‘Officer A’, Indymedia UK, 13/01/11 (accessed 10 May 2014).
- ↑ ABC Anarres, ‘Three undercover political Police unmasked as infiltrators into UK Anarchist, Anti-Fascist and Climate Justice movements’, Indymedia UK, 19/01/11 (accessed 10 May 2014).
- ↑ Really Fit in the FITwatch article (see note #3) puts his weight at approximately “15/16 stone”.
- ↑ Really Fit in the FITwatch article (see note #3) puts his height at “around 5'11"”.
- ↑ See gallery of photographs above.
- ↑ 23.0 23.1 23.2 23.3 23.4 23.5 Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, Undercover: The True Story of Britain's Secret Police, Faber & Faber, 2013, p227.
- ↑ 24.0 24.1 Tom Anderson, ‘Infiltrated, Intimidated and Undermined: How Police Infiltration Can Mute Political Dissent - An Interview with Verity Smith, from Cardiff Anarchist Network’ in Rebecca Fisher (ed.), Managing Democracy Managing Dissent, Corporate Watch, 2013 (accessed 17 June 2014), p277.
- ↑ Courtnee Brantley, ‘Marco information’, Indymedia UK, 24 January 2011 (accessed 18 August 2014)
- ↑ 26.00 26.01 26.02 26.03 26.04 26.05 26.06 26.07 26.08 26.09 26.10 interview with group of activists in Brighton, 2 October 2014
- ↑ 27.0 27.1 27.2 27.3 Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, Undercover: The True Story of Britain's Secret Police, Faber & Faber, 2013, p228.
- ↑ Planning & Public Protection, Information & Mapping, ‘HMO & Student Housing Density: Hanover & Elm Grove Ward’, Brighton & Hove City Council website, November 2011 (accessed 27 August 2014).
- ↑ 29.0 29.1 Tom Anderson, ‘Infiltrated, Intimidated and Undermined: How Police Infiltration Can Mute Political Dissent - An Interview with Verity Smith, from Cardiff Anarchist Network’ in Rebecca Fisher (ed.), Managing Democracy Managing Dissent, Corporate Watch, 2013 (accessed 17 June 2014), p280. Cite error: Invalid
<ref>
tag; name "ABK118ch17pp280" defined multiple times with different content - ↑ 30.0 30.1 30.2 30.3 30.4 30.5 30.6 unknown author, ‘Welsh protest groups infiltrated by police undercover officers talk of their feeling of bitterness and betrayal’, Wales On Sunday, 23 January 2011 (accessed 29 August 2014).
- ↑ Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, Undercover: The True Story of Britain's Secret Police, Faber & Faber, 2013, pp226-227.
- ↑ 32.0 32.1 Stroppyoldgit, ‘@ @rchie’, Indymedia UK, 3 February 2011 (accessed 18 August 2014).
- ↑ 33.0 33.1 33.2 The Hon. Mr Justice Tugendhat, AKJ and others -v- Commissioner of Police for the Metropolis and others, High Court of Justice, Queen's Bench Division, 17 January 2013 (accessed 23 April 2014).
- ↑ a source, ‘Another under-the-covers-cop’, Indymedia UK, 30 January 2011 (accessed 18 August 2014).
- ↑ Lord Justice Maurice Kay & Lady Justice Sharp, In the Court of Appeal (Civil Division) on Appeal from the High Court, QBD - Mr Justice Tugendhat HQ12X00132 before LJ Maurice Kay & LJ Sharp - AJA, ARB & Thomas Fowler -v- Chief Constable South Wales Police & ACPO + AKJ, KAW & SUR -v- Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis & ACPO, Court of Appeal (Civil Division), Royal Courts of Justice, 5 November 2013 (accessed 28 August 2014).
- ↑ 36.0 36.1 Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, Undercover: The True Story of Britain's Secret Police, Faber & Faber, 2013, p231.
- ↑ Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, Undercover: The True Story of Britain's Secret Police, Faber & Faber, 2013, p232-233.
- ↑ Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, Undercover: The True Story of Britain's Secret Police, Faber & Faber, 2013, p231-232.
- ↑ 39.0 39.1 39.2 Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, Undercover: The True Story of Britain's Secret Police, Faber & Faber, 2013, p229.
- ↑ 40.0 40.1 40.2 40.3 40.4 40.5 40.6 James McCarthy, ‘‘Spying’ case against Met Police to be heard in secret’, Wales On Sunday, 17 January 2013 (accessed 29 August 2014).
- ↑ 41.0 41.1 41.2 41.3 41.4 41.5 41.6 James McCarthy, ‘‘An outrage that case will be held in secret’’, South Wales Echo, 18 January 2013 (accessed via TheFreeLibrary 29 August 2014).
- ↑ 42.0 42.1 42.2 42.3 42.4 42.5 42.6 James McCarthy, ‘Anarchist slams court ruling on secret trial: Claims women were tricked into sex with police’, Western Mail, 18 January 2013 (accessed via TheFreeLibrary 29 August 2014).
- ↑ Mark Jacobs, ‘Mark Jacobs MySpace profile’, MySpace.com, 2009(?) (accessed 28 August 2014).
- ↑ 44.0 44.1 unknown author, ‘Undercover cop: Brighton's very own pig in a blanket’, Rough Music #25, February/March 2011 (accessed 27 August 2014).
- ↑ Tom Anderson, ‘Infiltrated, Intimidated and Undermined: How Police Infiltration Can Mute Political Dissent - An Interview with Verity Smith, from Cardiff Anarchist Network’ in Rebecca Fisher (ed.), Managing Democracy Managing Dissent, Corporate Watch, 2013 (accessed 17 June 2014), p278.
- ↑ 46.0 46.1 46.2 Veit Medick, Sven Röbel & Marcel Rosenbach, ‘Maulwürfe im Milieu’, Der Spiegel, 23 May 2011 (accessed 18 August 2014): the article notes that “At Heiligendamm [G8 summit in June 2007] about ten foreign police officers were deployed besides Kennedy, including a Welsh colleague with the alias ‘Marco Jacobs’, a supposed truck driver from Cardiff who attracted attention at the Baltic Sea activist camp with his drinking ability. In return, German authorities also sent their undercover officers around the world. The Berlin State Criminal Police Office alone sent five officers to the 2005 G8 protests in Gleneagles, each of whom was accompanied by a liaison officer, who served as a contact person to receive reports from the moles in the movement.” (Translation: BristleKRS)
- ↑ Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, Undercover: The True Story of Britain's Secret Police, Faber & Faber, 2013.
- ↑ 48.0 48.1 48.2 48.3 48.4 48.5 James McCarthy, ‘Betrayed by an undercover cop’, Wales On Sunday, 23 January 2011 (accessed via TheFreeLibrary 29 August 2014).
- ↑ 49.0 49.1 49.2 49.3 49.4 49.5 James McCarthy, ‘Undercover cop's ‘sex betrayal’, Wales On Sunday, 25 August 2013 (accessed via TheFreeLibrary 29 August 2014).
- ↑ 50.0 50.1 50.2 Tom Anderson, ‘Infiltrated, Intimidated and Undermined: How Police Infiltration Can Mute Political Dissent - An Interview with Verity Smith, from Cardiff Anarchist Network’ in Rebecca Fisher (ed.), Managing Democracy Managing Dissent, Corporate Watch, 2013 (accessed 17 June 2014), pp278.
- ↑ Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, Undercover: The True Story of Britain's Secret Police, Faber & Faber, 2013, p243.
- ↑ Eat Out Vegan Wales, ‘Home page’, Eat Out Vegan Wales website, accessed 30 August 2014.
- ↑ 53.0 53.1 Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, Undercover: The True Story of Britain's Secret Police, Faber & Faber, 2013, p232.
- ↑ 54.0 54.1 Andrej Hunko, ‘Information on sexual relationships by British undercover investigators in Germany/information for the individuals affected’, written evidence to Home Affairs Committee, Parliament.uk, February 2013 (accessed 18 August 2014).
- ↑ 55.0 55.1 @rchie, ‘Hey stroppygit and folk from brighton.’, Indymedia UK, 20 January 2011 (accessed 18 August 2014). Cite error: Invalid
<ref>
tag; name "IM4.005" defined multiple times with different content - ↑ 56.0 56.1 Tom Anderson, ‘Infiltrated, Intimidated and Undermined: How Police Infiltration Can Mute Political Dissent - An Interview with Verity Smith, from Cardiff Anarchist Network’ in Rebecca Fisher (ed.), Managing Democracy Managing Dissent, Corporate Watch, 2013 (accessed 17 June 2014), p277. Cite error: Invalid
<ref>
tag; name "ABK118ch17pp277" defined multiple times with different content - ↑ Nachtermittlungen, ‘Schweine in zivii’, Indymedia UK, 15 January 2011 (accessed 18 August 2014).
- ↑ ABC Anarres, ‘Three undercover political Police unmasked as infiltrators into UK Anarchist, Anti-Fascist and Climate Justice movements’, Indymedia UK, 19 January 2011 (accessed 11 May 2014).
- ↑ someone from paris, ‘please forward evidence..’, Indymedia UK, 15 January 2011 (accessed 19 August 2014).
- ↑ 60.0 60.1 acrosthechannel, ‘Mark and Marcos were at a dissent meeting in Strasbourg in January 2009’, Indymedia UK, 17 January 2011 (accessed 18 August 2014).
- ↑ 61.0 61.1 alsoacrossthechannel, ‘marco was at 2 meetings in strasbourg’, Indymedia UK, 18 January 2011 (accessed 18 August 2014).
- ↑ 62.0 62.1 Tom Anderson, ‘Infiltrated, Intimidated and Undermined: How Police Infiltration Can Mute Political Dissent - An Interview with Verity Smith, from Cardiff Anarchist Network’ in Rebecca Fisher (ed.), Managing Democracy Managing Dissent, Corporate Watch, 2013 (accessed 17 June 2014), pp277-280.
- ↑ For example, see: unknown author(s), Miscellaneous NPOIU documents (via Freedom of Information Act), (via source BUTCHER), 1999-2000 (accessed April 2014).
- ↑ Such as that provided by former SDS undercover officer Peter Francis.
- ↑ Notably - but not limited to - Mark Kennedy, ‘Lynn Watson’, Jim Boyling, Bob Lambert, ‘Simon Wellings’, John Dines, Mark Jenner, ‘Rod Richardson’ and Mike Chitty.
- ↑ For example: Kristian Williams, Our Enemies In Blue: Police And Power In America, South End Press, 2007 (2nd edition); Brian Glick, War At Home: Covert Action Against US Activists And What We Can Do About It, South End Press, 1989; Peter Taylor, Brits: The War Against The IRA, Bloomsbury, 2002; Ward Churchill & Jim Vander Wall, Agents of Repression: The FBI's Secret Wars Against the Black Panther Party and the American Indian Movement, South End Press, 1988; Ward Churchill & Jim Vander Wall, The COINTELPRO Papers: Documents from the FBI's Secret Wars Against Dissent in the United States, South End Press, 1990.
- ↑ Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, Undercover: The True Story of Britain's Secret Police, Faber & Faber, 2013, p233.
- ↑ 68.0 68.1 Tom Anderson, ‘Infiltrated, Intimidated and Undermined: How Police Infiltration Can Mute Political Dissent - An Interview with Verity Smith, from Cardiff Anarchist Network’ in Rebecca Fisher (ed.), Managing Democracy Managing Dissent, Corporate Watch, 2013 (accessed 17 June 2014), p281.
- ↑ 69.0 69.1 Mark Jacobs, ‘Marco MySpace profile’, MySpace.com, 2010 (accessed via 8 May 2013 archive.org cache, 28 August 2014). Cite error: Invalid
<ref>
tag; name "PRO093" defined multiple times with different content - ↑ Someone, ‘Comment on his myspace page’, Indymedia UK, 15 January 2011 (accessed 30 August 2014).
- ↑ Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, ‘Undercover officer spied on green activists’, The Guardian, 9 January 2011 (accessed 31 August 2014). This was however more than a fortnight after the Sunday Times had picked up on the story, Tim Rayment & Jonathan Leake, ‘7-year snitch: ‘Flash’ the activist is a secret cop’, Sunday Times, 19 December 2010 (accessed 5 June 2014) after reading about ‘Flash’ on Indymedia, ‘Mark 'Stone/Kennedy' exposed as undercover police officer’, Indymedia UK, 21 October 2010 (Accessed 31 August 2014).
- ↑ 72.0 72.1 Really Fit, ‘'Marco' confirmed as undercover cop in Cardiff’, FITwatch blog, 14 January 2011 (accessed via 9 November 2011 archive.org cache, 11 May 2014).
- ↑ Paul Lewis, Rob Evans, Paddy Allen & Simon Jeffrey, ‘Police spies and corporate infiltrators - an interactive guide to what we know so far’, The Guardian, 3 May 2011 (accessed 27 August 2014).
- ↑ Rob Evans & Paul Lewis, ‘Undercover police spies unmasked - in pictures’, The Guardian, 24 June 2013 (accessed 27 August 2014).