Homeland Security Spends $80 Million On Armed Guards for “Civil Disturbances”
October 22, 2013
IRS buildings to be protected; What is the federal government preparing for?
The Department of Homeland Security is set to spend $80 million dollars on hiring a raft of armed guards to protect IRS and other government buildings in upstate New York
during “public demonstrations” and “civil disturbances,” once again
prompting concerns that the federal agency is preparing for food stamp riots, anti-tax demonstrations or some other form of domestic unrest.
According to a solicitation posted on the Federal Business Opportunities website,
the Federal Protective Service (a unit of the DHS), is looking for a
contractor to supply armed Protective Security Officers (PSOs) to guard a
variety of government buildings in the region, including “IRS buildings(s) during tax season.”
“PSOs will be required to
be armed and some posts may require screening of visitors using
x-rays/magnetometers,” states the solicitation.
The armed guards will be
used during “public demonstration(s),” as well as “civil disturbances,
or other unanticipated events on an as-needed basis.”
“This acquisition is for
approximately 380,000 hours of Basic Service, 20,000 hours of Temporary
Additional Services and 3,500 hours of Emergency Security Services per
year. Currently, there are an estimated 205 guards protecting approximately 95 posts at over 55 buildings. The estimated value of this Contract is between $75M and $80M,” states the solicitation.
Why does the DHS feel the need to blow $80 million dollars at a time of cutbacks on yet more armed guards to protect government buildings during “public demonstrations”? What is the federal agency preparing for? Food stamp riots? Anti-IRS demonstrations? Or some other form of civil disorder?
In June, it emerged
that the DHS was purchasing top of the range body armor and helmets for
FPS guards as part of preparations for “riot control situations.” This
followed a controversial drill last year
dubbed “Operation Shield,” during which FPS agents armed with
semiautomatic guns were posted outside a Social Security office in
Florida. The unannounced exercise centered around “detecting the presence of unauthorized persons and potentially disruptive or dangerous activities.” Residents were forced to show identification papers to the guards during the drill.
Could the increased security around IRS buildings
be related to the introduction of Obamacare? The federal government has
consistently denied that any fines pertaining to Obamacare
non-compliance could be seized from bank accounts, despite reports last year that the IRS had hired 16,500 new agents to harass citizens who attempt to evade the new law.
As we reported earlier this year,
Federal Protective Service officers were hired to guard an IRS building
in St. Louis during a Tea Party protest against the federal agency’s
discrimination targeting conservative groups. The FPS has previously
been used to spy on protesters. In 2011, the DHS asserted
that it had every right to spy on peaceful protest groups and had been
using Federal Protective Service (FPS) agents to do so since at least
2006.
In March, Arkansas State Fusion Center Director Richard Davis admitted
that the federal agency spies on Americans deemed to be
“anti-government,” noting that the DHS concentrates on, “domestic
terrorism and certain groups that are anti-government. We want to kind
of take a look at that and receive that information,” so-called threats
which included people, “putting political stickers in public bathrooms or participating in movements against the death penalty.”
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