The Daily - The Sunday Read: ‘The Rise and Fall of America’s Environmentalist Underground’
Episode Date: July 10, 2022Warning of imminent ecological catastrophe, the Earth Liberation Front became notorious in the late 1990s for setting fire to symbols of ecological destruction, including timber mills, an S.U.V. deale...rship and a ski resort. The group was widely demonized. Its exploits were condemned by mainstream environmental groups, ridiculed by the media and inspired a furious crackdown from law enforcement.But in 2022 the group is more relevant than ever. These days even America’s mainstream environmental movement has begun to take a more confrontational approach, having previously confined its activities largely to rallies, marches and other lawful forms of protest. Even the “staid” environmental groups based in Washington have slowly started to embrace more radical tactics. Climate activists are starting to abandon their dogmatic attachment to pacifism, choosing instead to work toward destroying the “machines” inflicting the damage — but will such a radical idea prove effective?The journalist Matthew Wolfe delves into the world of the activists, and questions the future of environmental activism.This story was written by Matthew Wolfe and recorded by Audm. To hear more audio stories from publications like The New York Times, download Audm for iPhone or Android.
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My name is Matthew Wolfe. This week's Sunday Read is my article from the New York Times
Magazine, The Rise and Fall of America's Environmentalist Underground.
Okay, so this story is about a group of environmental activists in the Pacific Northwest who banded
together in the 1990s and called themselves the Earth Liberation Front.
Members of the Earth Liberation Front, or ELF, were concerned with the ways in which the planet
was being harmed, from deforestation to climate change, which they believed were placing us on
a slow path to ecological catastrophe. They believed that the people in power simply weren't doing enough
to address the problem. So the ELF decided to try a new tactic. And that new tactic was
arson. They began burning down buildings of institutions they said were complicit in
destroying the environment, like a timber mill or a slaughterhouse or a ski resort
that was going to expand into an old-growth forest.
So over the next decade, the ELF carried out a massive campaign of eco-sabotage.
And by the early 2000s, their activities led to the FBI
describing them as the most wanted domestic terrorist group in
the country, even though they'd never killed anyone. The 1970s were a sort of golden age of
environmentalism. At the time, there was this political consensus around protecting the
environment. The Clean Air Act, the Clean Water Act, and the Endangered Species Act all
passed Congress with huge bipartisan majorities. And there was also the growth of big environmental
groups like the Sierra Club, Environmental Defense, and Greenpeace. But by the 1980s,
as the right wing began to push back against environmental protections, a lot of activists
felt that the larger, more mainstream environmental groups
were compromising too much. So they pushed for more aggressive goals and tactics. This was the
birth of the radical environmental movement. In American politics, people haven't always
followed the law. There's a long history of civil disobedience, including by environmentalists.
There's a long history of civil disobedience, including by environmentalists.
Civil disobedience is where you're protesting something by breaking the laws, but peacefully, without violence, like a sit-in or a blockade.
But destroying property is a little different.
Within the radical environmental movement, there's actually been a whole history of sort of small-scale sabotage.
actually been a whole history of sort of small-scale sabotage. This could be pouring sugar in the tank of bulldozers or placing spikes in trees to make it difficult to log them.
But the ELF's actions using these big fires were on a whole other level.
One of the things that's been animating our political discourse recently has been this
question of, when you're fighting for change,
when is it okay to break the law? This is a question we're seeing within the climate movement
right now. Newer groups like Extinction Rebellion and the Sunrise Movement have tried blocking roads
and occupying lawmakers' offices to protest carbon emissions. But the U.S. still hasn't passed comprehensive climate
legislation. So if what you're doing isn't working and you think the situation is desperate,
what do you do? After 9-11, the FBI began focusing really intensely on counterterrorism.
And the FBI certainly considered the ELF terrorists. Eventually,
a lot of ELF members were indicted and arrested, but some avoided arrests and fled,
and many of them remained on the lam for years. Meanwhile, the looming ecological catastrophe
facing our planet has gotten less abstract and much, much worse.
And it got me wondering, how should we think about the ELF?
So here's my article, read by Robert Fass.
This was recorded by Autumn.
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Late one summer evening in 2018, an American citizen named Joseph Mahmoud Dibe was sitting in José Martí International Airport in Havana, Cuba,
trying unsuccessfully to sleep, when he was approached by three men.
Dibe, a civil engineer, was in Havana on a layover.
After a long business trip in Ecuador, he was heading home to Russia, where he lived with his wife and stepson.
The men demanded his passport, then led him out of the terminal and into a waiting sedan.
Dibe asked where they were going, but got no response.
Sandwiched between his captors, he was driven miles through the night, before finally arriving at what appeared to be a jail.
the night before finally arriving at what appeared to be a jail.
For the next three days, Dibé would claim in a subsequent court filing, he was imprisoned without explanation and, in effect, tortured.
His small concrete cell was open to the elements.
During the day, the cage baked.
As Dibé, who was then 50, sweat through his clothes, the jail's guards gave him little to drink.
He soon became nauseated and began to repeatedly pass out.
With no way of contacting his family, Dibe worried that if he died, they would never learn what happened to him.
On his fourth day of confinement, weak from dehydration, Dibe was dragged to an air-conditioned trailer in another
part of the facility. He was met by a middle-aged man in fatigues who identified himself as an
officer in Cuba's state intelligence service. Smiling, the officer held up a bottle of water.
But first, he said, tell us about the fires.
Tell us about the fires.
Several days later, on August 9th, 2018,
Cuban authorities handed Dibe, in shackles,
over to agents from the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
To the FBI, Dibe's arrest marked the end of a decade-long manhunt for one of the agency's most wanted domestic terrorists.
long manhunt for one of the agency's most wanted domestic terrorists. In 2006, Dibe was indicted on a charge of participation in a series of arsons carried out by a shadowy band of environmental
activists known as the Earth Liberation Front. In the late 1990s, the ELF became notorious for
setting fire to symbols of ecological destruction, including timber mills,
an SUV dealership, and a ski resort. The group, which warned of imminent ecological catastrophe,
was widely demonized. Its exploits were condemned by mainstream environmental groups,
ridiculed by the media, and inspired a furious crackdown from law enforcement.
and inspired a furious crackdown from law enforcement.
Fleeing before he could be arrested,
Dibe had spent years as a fugitive in Syria, Russia, and Mexico until he was picked up passing through Havana.
After his interrogation by the Cuban authorities,
the FBI flew him in a Gulfstream jet to Portland, Oregon,
where he was arraigned for charges relating to his role in the attacks.
This April, Dibé pleaded guilty to arson and conspiracy to commit arson.
The plea comes at a moment when the story of the Earth Liberation Front seems more relevant than ever.
After decades in which America's environmental movement confined its activities largely to rallies,
marches, and other lawful forms of protest, frustrated activists have begun taking a more
confrontational approach. Younger groups like the Sunrise Movement and Extinction Rebellion
have blockaded roads and occupied the offices of lawmakers. During the Standing Rock protests of
2016, thousands of demonstrators sought to physically impede construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline.
Tim DeChristopher, a founder of the Climate Disobedience Center, which supports protesters who engage in nonviolent resistance, told me that, in the 2000s, such direct action was championed mostly by a fringe group of anarchists.
DeChristopher himself was sent to prison after placing winning bids at public auctions for oil and gas leases and then refusing to pay.
Now, even staid Washington-based environmental groups, sensing an increasingly unruly mood among their base,
have slowly started to embrace more radical tactics.
In 2017, the Sierra Club formally lifted its 120-year ban on civil disobedience
after its executive director and other senior members were arrested
for strapping themselves to a gate outside the White House.
Recently, some climate activists have begun to openly contemplate the possibility,
in their eyes the necessity, of directly sabotaging the infrastructure of the carbon
economy. Foremost among them is the academic Andreas Malm, whose recent book, How to Blow
Up a Pipeline, calls for smashing the tools of fossil fuel extraction as a last-ditch means of averting ecological collapse.
In interviews with mainstream outlets such as Vox and The New Yorker,
Malm contends that climate activists should give up their dogmatic attachment to pacifism
and start to destroy the machines that actually produce carbon.
While acknowledging that such attacks might fail, Malm nevertheless argues
that the urgency of global warming, in the 16 years since Dibe's indictment, the world has
collectively pumped about 500 billion more tons of carbon into the atmosphere, demands new tactics.
I think that the situation is so dire, so extreme, he told Vox, that we have to experiment.
This summer in Oregon, Dibé will be sentenced by Judge Ann Aiken.
The prosecution is recommending a sentence of more than seven years,
as well as a yet-to-be-determined amount of financial restitution.
When Dibé and his lawyers plead for leniency,
Aiken may hear some of the largely
forgotten history of the elf, how a small group of activists, fueled by idealism and rage, brought
the entire weight of the federal government down upon themselves, severely curtailing what remained
of the radical environmental movement in this country. As climate change, no longer an abstraction,
has begun to transform American life
in the form of heat, fire, floods, and smoke,
it is a story that may sound different to some listeners now
than when prosecutors first told it.
The series of events that would ultimately lead to Dibe's capture by federal authorities
began 30-odd years ago, when a bookish teenager named Kevin Tubbs was leafing through the
Utney Reader and came across an ad for the National Anti-Vivisection Society.
Curious, he wrote away requesting a pamphlet.
When it arrived a few weeks later, Tubbs was horrified.
Animals, he learned, were being routinely tortured in the name of science.
The photos he was able to find, dogs with their faces sliced open,
rats butchered alive, monkeys screaming at the electrodes implanted in their
abdomens, seemed like windows into hell.
Tubbs' family lived on the outskirts of Omaha, a few miles from the stockyards.
On some nights when the wind drifted south, he could smell the cattle,
their dung giving off a lush, loamy scent.
He read that mother cows sobbed when separated from their calves, and
it occurred to him that he was living next to the infrastructure of atrocity.
Tubbs went vegetarian, then vegan, and was soon a full-time activist, getting regularly arrested at protests.
But Tubbs wasn't naive about what such demonstrations could realistically accomplish.
what such demonstrations could realistically accomplish.
Seeking a new approach, he applied for an editor position at the Earth First Journal,
an environmental newsletter in Eugene, Oregon.
His application included a copy of his rap sheet.
He was hired immediately.
The organization that ran the journal was founded a decade and a half earlier, in 1980, by a group of activists who became disaffected with
the professionalized, incrementalist approach of the environmental establishment embodied by
groups like the Sierra Club. They were, in other words, radical environmentalists.
The radicals believed the modest reforms pursued through traditional legislative channels
simply weren't sufficient to save the planet from ecological annihilation.
By the mid-90s, the city of Eugene had become an incubator of political dissent
and a gathering place for radical and militant environmentalists.
In the working-class Whitaker neighborhood, anarchists had regular battles with cops.
To the east, the land turned primeval,
with millions of acres of ancient forest
spread across the vast Cascade Mountain range.
While some Eugene residents earned their incomes off timber,
others were drawn by the song of the trees.
In Eugene, Tubbs met a man named Jacob Ferguson.
Ferguson wore all black and was covered in piercings and tattoos,
including an ornate pentagram on his head.
A vagabond, freshly sober from heroin,
Ferguson had recently settled in Eugene with his pregnant girlfriend.
Tubbs detected something gentle beneath Ferguson's piratical exterior,
and the two men soon became inseparable.
In 1991, an unknown arsonist set fire to a portion of the vast Willamette National Forest,
not far outside town. The blaze burned for two weeks, destroying about 9,000 acres,
much of it old-growth firs, in the Warner Creek watershed. There were no suspects, but among activists,
suspicion fell on the local timber industry.
While most old-growth forest was protected from logging,
a loophole in federal law meant partly burned sections were fair game.
After the fire, the U.S. Forest Service,
the agency that coordinates the sale of national forests to industry,
prepared to sell the scorched acreage to logging companies who would salvage the remaining trees.
Activists persuaded a court to grant an injunction against the sale.
But then, in 1995, President Bill Clinton signed a bill suspending protection for Willamette and hundreds of other forests, opening them to logging.
Dozens of incensed activists, including Tubbs and Ferguson,
took to the mountains in hopes of physically defending the wilderness.
Whenever logging trucks tried to approach the old growth trees,
the protesters jumped into the road and handcuffed themselves to barrels filled with
concrete. As the campaign stretched on, the activists built a small settlement near Warner
Creek, digging trenches and erecting a fort with a working drawbridge. Tubbs occasionally occupied
a towering 20-foot structure ingeniously constructed by a fellow protester who had also found his way to the
Cascades, Joseph Dibe. Like Tubbs's, Dibe's environmentalism was rooted in an adolescent
wounding. Dibe had been a shy child who suffered from asthma. His parents moved to the United
States from Syria before he was born, and until he was eight he spoke only Arabic. His father, an avid outdoorsman,
would lead him into the mountains where they'd forage for mushrooms. On one of these trips,
Dibé's father took him to a small sunlit meadow with a creek secreted away in an obscure corner
of the forest. He began hiking up to the spot by himself for the tranquility, a sensitive boy's inviolable retreat.
And then, one day, when Dibe arrived at his sanctuary, he saw it was gone.
A vast plot of trees had been felled for timber, leaving the scalp of the ancient
forest with a bald patch as if shaved by a colossal razor.
Surviving on donated food and braving a glacial winter
that buried their tents in snow,
the occupiers lasted almost a year.
It ended when the Clinton administration
issued new restrictions on logging in national forests,
saving Warner Creek.
While most local activists took the occupation
as an unmitigated success, to Tubbs,
the victory felt empty. At that point, he was 26 and had been trying to make substantive change
for nearly a decade. Letter writing, leafleting, canvassing, tabling, teach-ins, lawsuits,
blockades, boycotts, vigils, pickets, rallies, even guerrilla street theater.
And yet nothing seemed to be getting better.
A few months after Warner Creek wrapped up,
the Earth First Journal received and published a mysterious message.
It was from an entity calling itself the Earth Liberation Front.
The ELF was said to be a clandestine, leaderless group
dedicated to aggressive vandalism in the name of the environment.
The first cell of ELFs had recently popped up in Britain,
followed by others on the European continent.
The missive to the journal was a call to arms,
inviting its American readers to allow those who are destroying this planet
to be witness to some of the most destructive eco-sabotage and criminal damage ever seen,
persuading them to either give up their practices or suffer the consequences.
In the pre-dawn hours of October 28, 1996,
a newspaper carrier for the Salem Statesman Journal was making his rounds when he passed a federal ranger station
in the forest near the town of Detroit, Oregon,
and noticed that a truck in the parking lot was on fire.
The blaze was easily contained,
but a worker later discovered on the station's roof
a milk jug filled with fuel that had failed to ignite.
On one of the station's walls,
someone had spray-painted the phrase
Earth Liberation Front.
Two nights later, a group consisting of Tubbs, Ferguson, and federal prosecutors claim
a midwife named Josephine Overacre drove to a second ranger station near a town called Oakridge.
At the station, Ferguson placed a gasoline canister inside a dumpster and a second canister
next to its eastern wall before igniting them with incense sticks.
Sprinting back to his borrowed Subaru,
he scattered nails in the driveway to slow down firefighters.
Before returning the car to his friend, Ferguson changed the tires,
throwing away the old ones to prevent the treads from being traced.
By daybreak, the Oak Ridge Ranger Station had burned to the ground.
The arson threw Eugene's environmental community into an uproar.
Small-scale sabotage, like pouring sugar into a bulldozer's gas tank,
had always been part of radical environmentalist culture.
But arson was something different.
Besides destroying the structure itself, an estimated $5 million loss, the fire also consumed decades of forest-related data collected by naturalists and biologists.
The fire blazed so hot that weeks after the attack,
when the staff opened a safe admitting oxygen,
papers stored inside burst into flames.
safe, admitting oxygen, papers stored inside burst into flames.
Many activists felt that while the US Forest Service might be complicit with the timber industry, the arson squandered much of the goodwill generated by the
Warner Creek victory.
The Sierra Club offered a reward for
information that led to the arsonist's capture.
Committing himself completely to ecological sabotage, Tubbs quit his above-ground
activism and took a job at a market research company. Many of Tubbs' companions in elf actions
were veterans of Warner Creek, including Joseph Debe, whose technical expertise made him an
invaluable ally. After months of planning, on July 21, 1997,
the elves gathered in the Oregon desert
several miles from the Cavell West horse-rendering plant.
Every year, under a little-known federal program,
thousands of wild horses were rounded up
by the Bureau of Land Management and purchased,
sometimes by buyers who would go on to sell them for slaughter.
Cavell West killed as many as 500 horses a week, shipping the meat to Europe. For years,
locals had complained about the plant, its sickening smell, the screams of the horses,
and the vast amount of blood it generated, which would sometimes overwhelm the sewer system
and burble up through storm drains.
While Tubbs manned a police scanner in their getaway van,
the rest of the team trudged through the night toward the plant,
dressed in dark clothing and communicating with two-way radios.
According to a court filing by the prosecution,
D-Bed drilled holes in the facility's walls,
filled the hollows with a mixture of glycerin soap, diesel, and gasoline,
the group called this vegan jello, and set timed igniters.
After the plant was in flames and before going their separate ways,
everyone threw their clothes in a hole and doused them in acid.
A week later, Craig Rosebrough, a vegan baker in Portland,
found an odd-looking note in the mailbox of an activist group where he volunteered.
The letter, which appeared to have been written with deliberate sloppiness, denounced the Cavell West plant's role in horse slaughter and claimed its destruction was the work of a new group of radical environmentalists.
Believing the group wanted their message shared with the world, Rosebrow released it to the media. For years, he would receive regular communications from the elf, eventually
becoming a kind of spokesman for the group. In subsequent communiques, which mixed doom-laden
prophecies of ecological disaster with furious demands for change, the group described its ethos in greater detail.
We are the burning rage of this dying planet, began one which was posted to the internet.
The war of greed ravages the earth and species die out every day.
Elf works to speed up the collapse of industry,
to scare the rich and undermine the foundations of the state.
of industry to scare the rich and undermine the foundations of the state. Property destruction,
they explain, was a way of levying a kind of fine on despoiling nature, of, in effect,
removing the profit motive from killing the planet, and arson was the simplest, cheapest method of extracting this tax. Elf cells would eventually spread all over the country, but the Eugene group was the
first and easily the most prolific. The group's methods were low-tech, but the precautions they
took to avoid being caught were exhaustive. Security culture was big in Eugene, where
activists were well-versed in the government's infiltration of older radical movements.
activists were well-versed in the government's infiltration of older radical movements.
The group used email dead drops,
a system that involved exchanging coded messages in the drafts folder.
Arsons were called barbecues, timing devices hamburgers,
supplies were purchased in cash or shoplifted, and before every action, tools were scrubbed with ammonia to remove any genetic
material. The elves intentionally avoided socializing. Many members, in fact, never met
each other. The Eugene cell took pains to be less a formal organization than a loose collection of
actions with an overlapping cast of activists. The elves also adopted aliases to keep their identities secret. A couple of members
had a romantic relationship that lasted years, during which they never learned each other's real
names. In the fall of 1998, the elf took on its largest target. A resort in the mountains of
Vail, Colorado was planning to clear more than 800 acres of forest to make way for new
ski runs and roads, threatening the habitat of the Canada Lynx. A coalition of environmental groups,
including the Sierra Club, had fought the expansion in court, but were denied an injunction to stop
the logging. With the help of a young woman named Chelsea Gerlach, another elf named William Rogers devised a plan.
On the night of October 18th, 1998,
just before the logging was scheduled to begin,
Rogers ran across the mountain ridge,
setting fire to the resort's buildings and ski lifts one by one.
Soon, eight structures were aflame.
There would have been nine, but Rogers skipped a cabin
after peeking inside and finding two sleeping hunters. Rogers and Gerlach then drove to a
library in Denver, where Gerlach emailed Rosebrough an anonymous communique.
The resort had been destroyed, she explained, on behalf of the Lynx.
she explained, on behalf of the Lynx.
Detective Greg Harvey's first day with the Eugene Police Department's Special Investigations Unit ended with a riot.
It was June 18, 1999, and a march through downtown Eugene,
led by hundreds of anarchists, escalated into mayhem
when protesters began smashing windows and police
officers responded with tear gas. The SIU was founded specifically to address the threats
posed by radical groups, whose crimes often required complex investigations. Since its
inception in the 1970s, the SIU had pursued student leftists, outlaw motorcycle gangs, and white supremacists.
In the 1990s, its focus shifted to crimes committed by the anarchist and radical environmental movements.
When the arsons in Oregon began, the SIU joined a working group with a half-dozen other law enforcement agencies,
including the FBI and the Bureau of Alcohol,
Tobacco, and Firearms, to crack the case. Authorities were convinced it was only a matter
of time before the fires accidentally killed someone or the perpetrators escalated to deadly
violence. Harvey and his colleagues began by establishing a network of confidential informants
among the radical environmentalists.
But who was behind the elf was just as much a mystery to the activist community as it was to
the police, so Harvey decided to go undercover. As he attended gatherings of college students and
crust punks in the Whitaker neighborhood, wearing a dirty wig from a Halloween costume of Jesus, he gradually assembled a map of
the activist community. He scoured anarchist zines trying to learn everything he could about the
tenets of radical environmentalism. The FBI had promised swift justice for Vail, but a year on,
the case had stalled. Agency analysts had tried monitoring the phone traffic of activists,
seeing who was calling whom, on the assumption the elf could be taken down like a drug gang.
But as Harvey, who had grudgingly come to admire the elves' discipline, expected,
this yielded next to nothing. Harvey's counterpart at the FBI, Special Agent John Ferreira, was also getting frustrated.
A minor legend within the Bureau, Ferreira had worked cases involving the Bonanno crime family and the Japanese Yakuza.
And from the beginning, Ferreira had been fixated on one suspect, Josephine Overacre.
During a routine canvas after the Detroit arson, police had discovered Overacre's address book in a nearby phone booth.
Further suspicion fell on Overacre after she was arrested in Tacoma for shoplifting sponges,
an ingredient in several of the elf's devices, shortly before a nearby fire.
Investigators had noticed Overacre at protests, and Ferreira became convinced she was involved in Vail
Yet all his evidence was still circumstantial
And after several years, the elf was beginning to look uncatchable
As Ferreira put it to one reporter
They kicked our butts
The Elf, meanwhile, was facing its own setbacks.
Vale had made them a household name.
The attack even became a plot point on the West Wing.
But a feeling was simmering within the group that they weren't accomplishing much.
The fires failed to spark a larger social movement.
While the media focused on the spectacle of the fires,
it mostly ignored
the reasons they were lit.
Some targets were being rebuilt
with insurance money.
More than that,
the arsons didn't seem
to have had an impact
on the financial calculations
of the industries
they had targeted.
William Rogers,
who was a particularly outspoken and influential member of the industries they had targeted. William Rogers, who was a particularly outspoken
and influential member of the group, decided the elf needed to scale up. He set about recruiting
more members, and the Eugene cell soon doubled in size. Rogers also started to hold meetings
called book clubs intended to spread the group's methods. Rogers, along with a quiet man named Stan Meyerhoff,
wrote and published a manual for building incendiary devices
and posted it to the Internet.
But as the cell expanded and took on more actions,
it began to lose some of its original discipline.
In May 1999, during an attack on a meat company in Eugene, someone placed
an incendiary device next to a natural gas line, risking an immense explosion. In September 2000,
several members of the group tried, unsuccessfully, to set fire to a Eugene police substation,
a target bearing little obvious connection to the environment. A few months later, a team
torched Superior Lumber in Glendale, Oregon, issuing a communique that labeled the timber
company a typical earth-raper. The arson gave some elves pause. Superior was a small, family-owned
business and its town's biggest employer. Such an action seemed unlikely to win much sympathy.
These disagreements underscored a contradiction in the elf's approach,
namely that the group saw itself as the vanguard of a revolution,
when in fact it was all alone.
As Andreas Malm notes,
many largely peaceful social movements have in the past
included a radical flank that
engaged in more aggressive tactics. Indeed, some movements that are now all but universally admired
involved more violence and property destruction than we like to remember. Suffragists smashed
windows. During the civil rights era, black residents of segregated northern cities burned
down buildings. Even Nelson Mandela,
as head of the militant wing of the African National Congress, took part in a campaign of
bombing unoccupied government buildings. Yet all were wedded to larger political movements with
specific aims, for which sabotage was but one form of pressure. The elf's fires, Malm has observed,
was but one form of pressure.
The elf's fires, Malm has observed, existed in a political void.
The elf disdained the mainstream Washington-based environmental groups,
and the feeling seemed to be mutual.
Many, including Greenpeace, the World Wildlife Fund, and the Sierra Club,
which offered cash rewards on several occasions for information leading to the capture of eco-saboteurs,
made statements denouncing property destruction.
The executive director of Greenpeace USA declared that
peaceful civil disobedience was a cornerstone of the organization's philosophy,
citing Nelson Mandela as a model.
On June 16, 2000, two activists, Jeffrey Lures and Craig Marshall, set fire to
three pickup trucks at the Romania Chevrolet dealership in Eugene, unaware they were being
tailed by Detective Greg Harvey. The two men were arrested, with Marshall pleading guilty
and Lures going to trial. As a show of solidarity, the elves decided to strike Romania a second time.
On March 30th, 2001, a small crew crept into the dealership in the middle of the night.
While Rogers waited in a van and Tubbs stood lookout,
Stan Meyerhoff and another elf member placed kitty litter pans under the vehicles
and filled them with fuel,
linking them together
with gasoline-soaked linens
scored from thrift stores.
By dawn,
35 SUVs had been torched.
A communique dedicated
the action to Lourdes.
The elf's arson
seemed to have
an unforeseen effect.
Lourdes was found guilty
and for the crime of setting fire to three trucks and another attempted arson seemed to have an unforeseen effect. Lourdes was found guilty and, for the crime of setting
fire to three trucks and another attempted arson, received a sentence of more than 22 years,
the longest ever handed down for what was then a relatively new concept, eco-terrorism.
For years, the phrase eco-terrorism had more often been used to describe violence against the natural world than vandalism committed in its name.
When Saddam Hussein dumped millions of gallons of oil into the Persian Gulf, President George H.W. Bush denounced it as an act of environmental terrorism.
Yet by the mid-90s, conservatives had begun warning of the eco-terrorism perpetrated by radical environmentalists.
News outlets, including the New York Times, regularly described the elf as terrorists,
despite the fact, as activists pointed out, that the elf had never killed anyone.
Some members of the Eugene cell wanting retribution doubled down.
Early on May 21, 2001, elves torched two structures and 18 vehicles on a tree farm in Klatskenai, Oregon.
That same night, 150 miles north, flames devoured an office building on the University of Washington's campus in Seattle.
an office building on the University of Washington's campus in Seattle.
The Elf's communique explained that the motive for the twin attacks was the ecological nightmare of genetic engineering. But the arsons were based on false information. Neither target
was nearly as involved in GMO research as the Elves believed. These misadventures widened rifts, ideological and personal,
that had been slowly growing within the group. With early idealism wearing off, it became clear
that not everyone in the group believed the same things about why they were setting fires.
The elves had initially agreed on the necessity of a new tactic, but when it became clear the tactic wasn't working,
their philosophical differences
became insurmountable.
At a book club meeting
soon after the double arson,
one attendee raised the possibility
of escalating to physical violence,
even assassinations.
Others who had joined the elf
because of its commitment
to preserving life were repulsed.
On September 5th, 2001, after a disagreement with an elf over an unapproved edit to a communique,
Rosebrough stepped down as the group's putative spokesman.
A week later, Chelsea Gerlach was sitting in a hotel room preparing to reconnoiter a potential target
when she saw on TV that a pair of planes had crashed into the World Trade Center.
Hours after the towers fell, Representative Don Young, a Republican from Alaska,
suggested there was a strong possibility that radical environmentalists were behind the hijackings.
The attacks transformed the FBI overnight.
The Bureau had been founded in the early 20th century
as a law enforcement agency,
but after September 11th,
its central mission,
underwritten by expansive new congressional funding,
became counterterrorism.
Over the next few years,
the FBI turned ever more attention
to property destruction committed by environmental activists.
While most of this pressure was directed toward radical environmentalists, it also opened terrorism investigations into members of mainstream groups like Greenpeace and PETA for their potential involvement in ecological sabotage.
potential involvement in ecological sabotage.
In 2002, James Jarboe, chief of the FBI's Domestic Terrorism Division, declared to Congress that the investigation of animal rights extremists and eco-terrorists
was the Bureau's highest domestic terrorism priority.
This period in the environmental movement, marked by aggressive police tactics
and tough new punishments for
crimes ostensibly committed in defense of the earth, was one that some activists would come
to call the Green Scare. Exactly why the FBI made eco-terrorism a central concern remains a subject
of debate. Some have speculated it was because of corporate pressure. According to the reporting by The Intercept,
industry trade groups had been directly pushing the Justice Department
to pursue eco-sabotage cases since the 1980s.
Yet FBI officials contend that the fixation on the elf
stemmed in part from the trauma of September 11th.
Fearful of being blindsided a second time,
the Bureau sought to make up for the failure of imagination of September 11th. Fearful of being blindsided a second time,
the Bureau sought to make up for the failure of imagination
that had led them to miss signs
of an imminent attack from Al-Qaeda.
There was a conviction that
even if the elf had so far
only targeted buildings,
it was just a matter of time
before the group began
attacking people.
The question after September 11th, James Jarboe told me,
was who else wants body bags?
By early 2003, the leads had dried up in the elf investigation.
The group had been quiet for almost two years,
and the main person of interest, Overacre, was off the grid.
It was then that Kirk Engdahl, a federal prosecutor in Eugene, decided to try a new strategy.
Engdahl, who was assigned to the Justice Department's domestic terrorism squad,
had been obsessed with the Elf case for years. On his wall, he kept a poster of the burning Oak Ridge Ranger station.
Instead of casting a wide net, Engdahl suggested, why not take a meticulous cold case approach to
a single arson, one that occurred just blocks from his office, Romania Chevrolet.
For the next six months, investigators turned over every clue related to the SUV fires,
looking for anything they had missed.
Finally, they noticed something unusual.
The day after the Romania fire, an activist known as Sparrow had walked into a Eugene police station
and asked for an incident report about the arson.
Told it was confidential, she then asked for a second report
concerning a stolen truck
taken on the night of the fire.
This was a red flag.
Investigators assumed a truck
had been used to haul fuel for the arson.
The second report
about the stolen truck
had been filed by a woman
who suggested that the theft
had been committed by her neighbor,
a man named Jacob Ferguson.
Investigators believed that Sparrow requested the reports in order to figure out how much
the police knew.
John Ferreira, meanwhile, had long been interested in Ferguson because of a woman he had dated,
Josephine Overacre.
With Ferguson now their main suspect, investigators sought
evidence linking him to Romania. For the next six months, Harvey, still in his Jesus wig disguise,
followed Ferguson constantly, up to 14 hours a day. Ferreira and Engdahl brought Ferguson in
for questioning and presented him with evidence that he had perjured himself
when speaking to federal investigators he'd claimed not to know Overacre, which carried a
five-year penalty. According to Harvey, they also bluffed, hinting they had enough evidence to
charge him for arson and sent him to prison for a long time. Still, Ferguson resisted.
The investigators knew that Ferguson had a son born during the Warner Creek occupation,
and they knew that his father had spent time in prison when Ferguson was a child.
Did he really want his own son to grow up without a dad?
In 2004, Ferguson made a plea deal, little to no jail time in exchange for full cooperation.
The government also agreed to pay for heroin addiction treatment.
At the time, investigators still didn't know the extent of Ferguson's involvement in the
elf.
When Ferguson told them he had participated in over a dozen arsons, they were stunned.
The Romania SUV arson, in fact, was one of the few in which Ferguson
played no role. Investigators were surprised again when Ferguson started naming his associates,
most of whom they had never heard of. Harvey assumed Ferguson's colleagues would be like him,
in a word, punks, not college-educated people with jobs.
punks, not college-educated people with jobs.
After Ferguson came on board, the FBI designated the Elf investigation a major case,
branding it Operation Backfire, freeing up more money and resources.
Dozens of agents were soon working the case,
with President Bush said to be receiving regular briefings on their progress.
Ferguson also reluctantly agreed to wear a wire,
and the agency started flying him around the country, arranging for him to bump into his former elf colleagues, most of whom had moved away. Ferguson soon showed up in Portland,
where Chelsea Gerlach worked as a DJ, and a college in Virginia, where Stan Meyerhoff was taking engineering classes.
The one person who Ferguson refused to tape at first was Kevin Tubbs.
It would be, he told investigators, like betraying a sibling.
Harvey and Ferreira tried to assure Ferguson he was doing the right thing.
They also reminded him he'd only received immunity in exchange for full cooperation.
The arrests happened in two main waves, the first in December 2005, the second a month later.
In total, 19 elves were charged in connection with 20 incidents, causing over $40 million in damage.
In the indictments, prosecutors referred to the group ominously as the family, a name with its mobbish and Mansonian connotations that was seldom, if ever, used by the elf. The FBI director
Robert Mueller announced the arrests at a televised news conference. Terrorism is terrorism,
Mueller said, no matter what the motive. The backlash against environmental
sabotage, meanwhile, was continuing to intensify. In 2006, the House of Representatives passed a
bill that meant environmental activists could spend up to 20 years in prison for property
destruction, based on language provided by the American Legislative Exchange Council,
or ALEC, a group known for drafting laws with the input of major industries and lobbying for them
in Congress. Later that year, a version of the bill passed the Senate with bipartisan support.
By 2007, 30 state legislatures had passed statutes specifically addressing eco-terrorism, many also drafted by ALEC.
Republicans used the attacks to scold and chasten mainstream environmentalists.
At his sentencing in 2007, Tubbs began by apologizing for his role in the fires.
He had come to realize, he told the court, that arson was both reckless and
politically ineffective. But, Tubbs continued, the elf was born of desperation. Mass extinction,
deforestation, eroding soils and melting ice shelves, climate change, he said, would soon
bring with it an Old Testament plague of droughts and floods.
The actions he had taken, Tubbs acknowledged, were wrong,
but they were also a reprieve from overwhelming feelings of hopelessness, despair, and cynicism.
More than that, though, the fires, he said, were lit to raise an alarm about the state of the world.
It's as if the ecological destruction and the cataclysmic events that follow it are a huge train bearing down on us
and we are asleep on the tracks, Tubbs said in tears.
I was just trying to do my part to help wake us up.
Tubbs was sentenced to 12 years, 7 months in prison.
Chelsea Gerlach was sentenced to 12 years, 7 months in prison. Chelsea Gerlach was sentenced to 9 years.
William Rogers, meanwhile, ended his life while awaiting trial.
Despite being the second person to cooperate,
Stan Meyerhoff received the longest sentence, 13 years.
The indictments also tore apart Eugene's tight-knit environmentalist community.
Activists had screaming fights about whether the elves who spoke to investigators merited sympathy or shunning.
The Earth First Journal started, and still maintains, a website listing the case's informants, including Tubbs, a former editor.
The radical environmental movement slowly disintegrated.
Operation Backfire was a resounding success.
On the day of the arrests in 2005,
Joseph DeBe was served with a grand jury subpoena.
The FBI asked him to come in,
outlined the case they were mounting against him,
and asked him to help with their outlined the case they were mounting against him, and asked him to help with
their investigation. Dibe declined. Instead, prosecutors claim, Dibe enlisted a friend to
drive him to Mexico. From there, Dibe flew to Beirut, then on to Syria. Several other elves
also fled the country before they could be arrested. For more than a decade, Dibe was listed as one of the FBI's
most wanted domestic terrorists.
Yet even in hiding,
he continued with his environmental advocacy.
In Syria, Dibe taught environmental engineering
at a university while helping plan
a national project on renewable energy.
As the Syrian civil war escalated,
Dibe fled to Russia, where he married
and started a business recycling used fuels into biodiesel. When Dibe was finally arrested,
he was coming home from the jungles of Ecuador, where he had agreed to build an ecologically
friendly device for mining gold. By then, most of his fellow fugitives had already been caught.
Even Jacob Ferguson ended up in prison
for heroin possession.
Only Josephine Overacre remains at large.
Through his lawyer,
D.B. first agreed to speak with me
about his case,
but later changed his mind.
By way of explanation,
he forwarded a link
to a short New York Times story
from 2009
with the headline, Fugitive Still Licensed to Fly by the FAA.
The Times article noted that, although the FBI had accused DeBay of being a domestic terrorist
and was offering a $50,000 reward for information leading to his capture,
he still held a valid U.S. pilot's license. After the story
ran, the FAA revoked it. Last year, after catching COVID while in federal custody, DeBay was
conditionally released on house arrest. When I knocked on his door in Seattle, DeBay stepped
briefly outside and again politely but firmly declined to talk. Standing on his porch, DeBay stepped briefly outside and again politely but firmly declined to talk.
Standing on his porch, DeBay looked worn down. His two years in jail had overlapped with the
summer of 2020, and the protests over George Floyd's murder had come right to his front door.
One day, as DeBay was taken to the federal courthouse in downtown Portland to review documents for his case,
the clashes outside became so intense that police deployed tear gas.
Whether the demonstrations and the vast amount of property destroyed in Floyd's name
led to any substantive political change is a question that will be debated for decades.
For Dibé, the immediate effect was
that the tear gas triggered his asthma.
That same summer, while DeBay was in lockup,
3,000 square miles of Oregon and Washington
were burned by wildfires.
The infernos consumed over 4,000 homes and other structures,
including a cattle ranch, a gas station, and a timber mill,
precisely the kind of symbols of environmental degradation
that the Earth Liberation Front had targeted.
Now, though, there was no one to take credit,
no one to hunt down,
no one to put behind bars.