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Infiltration: The Secret World of Police Surveillance

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Undercover lifts the lid on police surveillance, and a programme to covertly monitor political activists that has been one of the government's best-kept secrets since 1968. It exposes the world of wire taps, private investigators, surveillance units, vehicle tracking devices, and secret government databases that list forensic details about all citizens who take part in peaceful protests. It tells the gripping human stories of six police spies, part of a covert team of agents that for four decades have had license to break the law and sleep with the enemy. Chief among them is PC Mark Kennedy, whose audacious seven years living a double-life as an environmental activist were made public in January 2011, in the worst scandal concerning undercover policing in British history.

This is the definitive account of Mark Kennedy and undercover policing, written by the award-winning investigative journalists who brought the scandal to the world's attention. They are the only people to have spoken extensively with Kennedy while he was in hiding in the United States, as well as to his close friends and lovers. Between them, they have uncovered secret databases of 'domestic extremists', getting hold of files that reveal the seemingly banal information about protesters being accumulated by police. Their investigations have spanned the use of private investigators and attempts to recruit informants. The journalists' knowledge and expertise will be deepened with the assistance of Pete Black, who -- in contrast to Kennedy -- will give an authentic insider account of the trials and tribulations of an undercover officer at the heart of the protest movement, and the psychological feat of pulling that off.

256 pages, Paperback

First published June 26, 2012

15 people want to read

About the author

Rob Evans

29 books3 followers

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Nicholas.
Author 4 books11 followers
July 28, 2013
I really enjoyed this book, which at the same time is moving and gripping. It's very clearly written and brings the issues very clearly into focus in particular the cynicism of many of the undercover officers in having various affairs simply for the purposes of their mission and knowing they would be abandoning those that loved them for a return to police work. The book is packed full of interesting information about how undercover officers go about infiltration which must be of use to any activist organisation and probably make such missions more difficult for the police (and private companies) in future.
Profile Image for James Mcsporran.
4 reviews
September 3, 2013
reading this at the moment, the crass twisted manner in which the filth manipulated people and discarded them is beyond revulsion
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