The ACLU accuses Harvard of maintaining a political intelligence unit within their police department according to this interesting article by the Crimson:
"The nation’s preeminent civil liberties group is accusing the
University of maintaining a political intelligence unit within the
Harvard University Police Department (HUPD), an allegation that comes
after two protesters were arrested during a demonstration in the
Square.
The
protesters allege that undercover HUPD officers were photographing the
demonstration, according to John Reinstein, the legal director of the
Massachusetts division of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU).
“What
we found really quite surprising and disturbing is that the Harvard
police department has an undercover, plainclothes, political
intelligence unit which so far as I know has never been acknowledged by
them before,” Reinstein said.
HUPD spokesman Steven G. Catalano declined to comment, and a University spokesman did not comment as well.
The
protesters, Patrick Keaney and Lisa Nieves, were arrested March 3 in
front of the Holyoke Center according to the HUPD’s police log. The log
said that “officers were monitoring a demonstration” prior to the
arrest."
The arrest came when one of the demonstrators took her own picture of one of the "undercover" officers.
"Reinstein said that Nieves noticed a bystander in plainclothes
taking photos of the protest and decided to go photograph him. When she
did, the man informed her that he was an undercover police officer with
HUPD and placed her under arrest for refusing to delete the photos."
Cambridge Common also notes some examples of apparent surveillance:
"I have heard stories from people who were involved in the 2001 Living Wage Campaign
that corroborate such activity. During the time of the sit-in,
campaigners had planned an action that was coordinated partially over
email but not advertised publicly at all. When they showed up to the
location of the action, HUPD was waiting for them. It seemed that the
only way that HUPD could have known the action was taking place was if
the authorities had been spying on the group, either electronically or
by other means.
More shadiness of this kind took place during the Stand For Security Campaign
last year. During the hunger strike and the daily actions that
accompanied it, a plainclothes man with a nice camera was taking
pictures of us almost every day. I went up to him one day to see what
he was taking the pictures for and he told me that they were for the
Harvard Gazette. I am sure the Harvard Gazette has photographers, but
this guy was there almost every day and he was not taking pictures of
things that you would really put into a magazine."
(via Cambridge Common)