About
F.A.Q.
Frequently-asked questions

1. What is the RNC '08 Report archive project?

This website exists to provide a citizen's archive of media reports, government documents, and other resources relating to the 2008 Republican National Convention. The source material posted on this website will ultimately be used to compile a truly independent, publicly available, citizen's report on what happened during the 2008 RNC.

If we are to address what happened, the public needs to have access to as much primary source material as possible--including camera footage from both police and city car and street camera videotapes.

This archive exists to compile and freely offer the broadest possible scope of source materials which will help members of the public, researchers, and decision-makers of all kinds to work out exactly what happened.

The RNC '08 Report is a voluntary independent media project.


2. Will you index every article, TV broadcast, etc., about the 2008 RNC on this website?

Not every source.

For example, articles or reports primarily concerned with the Convention agenda, delegates, or speeches in the X'cel Convention Center would only be included if they included significant material related to the primary focus of this archive project. Other than these obvious exclusions, we're here to archive any content—from police press conferences to protester pot luck speeches, from commercial media reports to Joe or Jane Citizen with a camera.

There are no doubt many key primary sources that we have not even considered. Browse the site, search the site, let us know what's missing.


3. Can I submit my own material about the RNC as a source?

Yes! We are looking for video footage, still photographs, audio interviews, protest art, and anything else you would like to make a case for.

If you have original footage you can digitize, contact us for video dimension specs as we're heading for a higher quality than You Tube. Quicktime, MPEG-4 and FLV files are fine.

For photographic images, please feel free to send us annotated image sets detailing what we are looking at and where and when it was taken. We can professionally resize those for you for the site. We can also add a credit and link to your website.

We are not currently adding pages to our site whose content only consists of a link to an external multimedia file. From bitter experience due to unreliable longevity of multimedia on many websites, we are trying to avoid one of the main frustrations that defeats the purpose of an archiving project.

From our point of view, it is preferable to do the work to capture, encode and archive it locally, than trying to keep abreast of which external multimedia links have expired and having to deal with the need to delete a previously listed and cross-linked reference resource.


4. Who created the RNC '08 Report website?

Minneapolis resident Nigel Parry, who has lived for seven years in the Twin Cities since 1998, including 5 years at the Tilsner Artists' Cooperative in Lowertown, St. Paul, where he was based during the RNC. Nigel's background is in journalism, website design, and public relations, with a focus on independent reporting and the nonprofit community.

alfanarhotel20030321_002.jpg
Lights in the window of the Al-Fanar Hotel in Baghdad show the locations of Electronic Iraq correspondents -- members of the Iraq Peace Team -- in the middle of a nearby US bombing attack during "Shock & Awe". (Photo by Al-Jazeera)
From the West Bank Palestinian town of Ramallah, Nigel created the first alternative news website in a war zone in 1996. In 2003, he coordinated Iraq War coverage and new media publishing with an unembedded team of independent journalists on the ground in Baghdad during "Shock & Awe."

The project, Electronic Iraq, and its 2001 sister project The Electronic Intifada won the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee's Voices of Peace Award "in recognition of [their] commitment to bringing the concerns, voices, and experiences of the Iraqi and Palestinian peoples to audiences the world over via the Internet." Both sites received requests from the Library of Congress and the British Library to be archived in their permanent digital archives.

For his day job, Nigel Parry offers website, print, and multimedia design through his business nigelparry.net, "award-winning communications solutions for people with something to say". He is also a musician, whose band Pocket of Resistance, is currently playing in the Twin Cities.


5. Why was the RNC '08 Report website created? What made this necessary?

Nigel Parry started the RNC '08 Project after seeing St. Paul and the neighborhood in which he lived for 5 years, gratuitously turned into a police state for a week. Journalists and cop-watcher videographers were targeted even before the Convention began. Unmarked cars with police snatch squads prowled our streets. Later in the week, protesters being released from jail were not able to simply walk out the jail doors. Rather they were taken by police in vans and dumped, in random neighborhoods around the city, at all times of the day and night. In plain English, it was a creepy couple of weeks.

There is never an excuse for targeting journalists. There is rarely an excuse for riot police, even during large public events. The riot police are the ones you keep round the corner in a van, in case there are any problems. Not so during the 2008 RNC in St. Paul, Minnesota. $50 million of Federal money had been earmarked for security, $36 million for salaries, $14 for new equipment. As the Associated Press reported on September 3rd 2008, the Republican Party's host committee was required by the City of St. Paul
"to buy insurance covering up to $10 million in damages and unlimited legal costs for law enforcement officials accused of brutality, violating civil rights and other misconduct."

All of this showed. During the first two hours of the Poor People's Rally and March in St. Paul's Mears Park on September 2nd, there were 200-300 people there, 100 of whom were journalists, legal observers and street medics. The organizing group, the Poor People's Economic Human Rights Campaign, an initiative started by Martin Luther King shortly before his assassination, is a local organization that has held peaceful protests in the Twin Cities for over a decade.

m-16.jpg
How completely unnecessary it all got, an M-16/M-4 at the Mears Park Poor People's March. (Photo by Nigel Parry)
On the State's side of that tiny, peaceful rally of 200 people, we could see 2 helicopters, 40 riot police, 20 bike police, 6 horse police, the National Guard, Secret Service, SWAT, and no doubt numerous undercover police officers. Some of the police were armed with M-16 or M-4 assault rifles. Machine guns, in plain English. There was blatantly no public order imperative for any of this.

This kind of overkill characterized security deployment during the RNC week, and created a tangible atmosphere of intimidation that discouraged attendance at rallies and other public events, which chilled much of the expected protest around the Convention, and undermined free speech at an event where the free speech of the Convention attendees from the Republican Party was guarded jealously, with cages keeping those who disagreed far away and—as it clearly wasn't the American public's—a private army securing the streets outside.

Much of the commercial media coverage was shallow and ceased investigating and following-up events in any meaningful way within a week of the Convention's end. At the same time, there were miles of incredible video tape footage captured by another army—an army of independent journalists and citizen witnesses. Much of this material has not been seen by the public, yet represents a very important part of the story.

This website is an attempt to redress some of the imbalances of the news-producing system and offer a space for people to have access to as many sources as possible to understand what happened.

browse-source-illustration.jpg
A sense of the diversity of sources from which material has been collected for the RNC '08 Report archive project.
While the RNC '08 Report may have been created out of a desire to take a stand and express an implicitly suppressed point of view about police behavior, the resource that has been created out of that angst is a library-quality research archive that offers every point of view—from the 2007 pre-Convention statements of the anarchist group, the RNC Welcoming Committee, to Convention Week TV news broadcasts by Fox 9, the Twin Cities' local Fox News affiliate.

You can read the military communication-style transcripts of the protest groups' sector Twitter feeds during Day 1, or find a U.S. Army press release about the deployment of the National Guard from the Department of Defense.

The RNC '08 Report project is dedicated to the idea that true democracy, transparency, and accountability requires widely-available, free, public access to the greatest possible number of information sources and opinions. A healthy dose of reality—and especially of all of reality—helps us to see things as they really are in a world where many people and institutions have a vested interest in making sure that we do not.

More from RNC 08 Report | Top of Page


Useful article? Use these tools to let someone know:
Send & Share | Print | Access RSS Feed for Syndication
 

Why we deserve your support



Archive

RSS Feed    Send & Share  


   Join our low-traffic Mailing List:


Browse by Date
August 28th | August 29th | August 30th | August 31st | September 1st | September 2nd | September 3rd | September 4th | September 5th

Browse by Event
2004 Republican National Convention in NY, 2008 Democratic National Convention in Denver, Harassment of Glass Bead Collective journalists (night of Aug 26th/early morning of Aug 27th), Critical Mass Bike Ride at Loring Park (Aug 29th), Raid on Convergence Center at 627 Smith Ave S, St. Paul, MN (Aug 29th), Raid on 951 Iglehart Ave, St. Paul, MN where i-Witness Video were staying (Aug 30th), Raid on 2301 23rd Ave South, Minneapolis, MN (Aug 30th) Food Not Bombs home. Nathanael David Secor arrested, Raid on 3500 Harriet Avenue, Minneapolis, MN (Aug 30th), Raid on 3240 17th Avenue South, Minneapolis, MN (Aug 30th) - Garrett Scott Fitzgerald, Eryn Chase Trimmer, Monica Rachel Bicking arrested, Liberty Parade on Nicollet Mall (Aug 31st), Vets for Peace Solumn Funeral Procession (Aug 31st), March on the RNC to Stop the War (Sep 1st), Vandalism in downtown St. Paul (Sept 1st), Democracy Now staff arrests (Sep 1st), Mass Arrest of Harriet Island "Take Back Labor Day" concert-goers on Shepard Road (Sep 1st), Ripple Effect Concert at the State Capitol (Sep 2nd), Mears Park Poor People's Rally & March for Our Lives (Sept 2nd), Near-raid on i-Witness Video space at 1595 Selby Ave (Sep 3rd), Mass arrest of Rage Against The Machine concert goers in Minneapolis (Sept 3rd), Student Strike Against the RNC (Sep 4th), "No Peace for the Warmakers" Rally & Demonstration (Sep 4th), Mass arrest on Marion St Bridge (Sept 4th), Community Conversation about the RNC (Sep 24th), RNC Public Review Safety Commission public hearing (Nov 6th), G-20 Protests in London (March-April 2009), G-20 protests in Pittsburgh (24-25 September 2009), RNC 8 evidentiary hearings (May 2010), G-20 Protests in Toronto (26-27 June 2010), RNC 8 Final Court Appearance (19 October 2010)


Key People
BOSTROM, Matt (Assistant Police Chief of St. Paul), CHOI, John (St. Paul City Attorney), COLEMAN, Christopher B. (St. Paul Mayor), DARBY, Brandon (A.K.A. "CHS 1", paid informant who infiltrated Austin protesters), DARST, Andrew (A.K.A. "Panda", "CRI 2", paid informant who infiltrated RNC Welcoming Committee), DEPALMA, Matthew (Michigan Molotov Case), DOLAN, Tim (Minneapolis Police Chief), FLETCHER, Bob (Ramsey County Sheriff), GAERTNER, Susan (Ramsey County Attorney), GOODMAN, Amy (Democracy Now, arrested Sept 1st), GROSS, Michelle (Communities United Against Police Brutality), HARRINGTON, John (St. Paul Police Chief), HEFFELFINGER, Tom (Former U.S. Attorney) and LUGER, Andy (former Assistant U.S. Attorney), HUGHES, Elliot (alleged torture under Ramsey County Sheriff's care), JOHNSON, Jason (Tased in Mears Park on Day 2), KELLY, Mick (Banner carrier shot with projectile at point blank on Day 4/Arrested for distributing leaflets about RNC march at Obama rally), LANE, Leah (abusive arrest on Day 4 captured on CNN and Fox 9), LUBINSKI, Sharon (Assistant Police Chief of Minneapolis), MAHONEY, Dave (Accused of dropping sandbag onto I-94 freeway on Day 1), MULHOLLAND, Ann (St. Paul Deputy Mayor), NESTOR, Bruce (President of National Lawyers Guild, Minnesota Chapter), PAWLENTY, Tim (Governor of Minnesota), ROWLEY, Coleen (retired FBI 9/11 whistle-blower and peace activist), "RNC 8" Arrestees (Monica BICKING, Robert CZERNIK, Garrett FITZGERALD, Luce Guillen GIVINS, Erik OSELAND, Nathanael SECOR, Max SPECTOR, and Eryn TRIMMER), RYBACK, R.T. (Minneapolis Mayor), SMITH, Keith (17-year-old protester allegedly beaten by police on Day 1), SULLIVAN, Karen (Undercover FBI agent who infiltrated the Anti-War Committee), SUNDIN, Jess (March on the RNC organizer, Anti-War Committee), "TEXAS TWO" Arrestees (Bradley Neal CROWDER and David MCKAY), THUNE, Dave (Ward 2 Council Member for St. Paul)

Browse by Source
Academic Source | Activist Group | American Civil Liberties Union | The American Jewish World | Amnesty International | Associated Press | Austin American-Statesman | Austin Chronicle | The Austin Informant Working Group | City Pages | CNN | Committee to Protect Journalists | Communities United Against Police Brutality | Community RNC Arrestee Support Structure (CRASS) | Congressional Quarterly Today | Connecticut Local Politics | crimethinc.com | The Daily Show with Jon Stewart | Defense Technology/Federal Laboratories | Democracy Now! | Des Moines Register | Digital Journal | Federal Bureau of Investigation | Flickr.com | Fox 9 (Fox News affiliate) | Free Speech TV | Glass Bead Collective | Gnooze.com | The Guardian | Huffington Post | i-Witness Video | Indian Express | Indymedia | Kare 11 (NBC affiliate) | Kentucky Kernal | KSTP Eyewitness 5 (ABC affiliate) | Legal Firms | Malarky News | Minneapolis City Council | Minneapolis Police Department | Minneapolis Saint Paul 2008 RNC Host Committee | Minneapolis Star Tribune | Minnesota Daily | Minnesota Independent | Minnesota Monitor | Minnesota Public Radio | MinnPost | Minnesota State Legislature | Mobile Broadcast News | MPLS Mirror | National Lawyers Guild Minnesota | National Press Photographers Association | New Orleans Gambit Weekly | The New York Observer | The New York Times | nigelparry.com | PBS | Poynter Institute | The Rag Blog | Ramsey County District Court | Ramsey County Sheriff's Office | Reporters Committee For Freedom of the Press | Reporters sans frontieres | RNC '08 Report | RNC 8 | RNC Welcoming Committee | Security Source | States News Service | Society of Professional Journalists | St. Paul City Council | St. Paul Legal Ledger | St. Paul Pioneer Press | St. Paul Police Department | Submedia.tv | The Texas Observer | Truthdig | Twin Cities Daily Planet | Twitter.com | The Uptake | U.S. Department of Defense | United Press International | Variety | The Washington Times | WCCO (CBS affiliate) | Xinhua News Agency

Important RNC Links
Coldsnap Legal Collective | Communities United Against Police Brutality (CUAPB) | Community RNC Arrestee Support Structure (CRASS) | Friends of the RNC 8 | Glass Bead Collective | Ground Noise and Static documentary | Help Dave Mahoney | The Milwalkee Three | National Lawyers Guild (Minneapolis) | RNC Commission Report & Executive Summary | Support the Texas Two | Terrorizing Dissent documentary | Twin Cities Indymedia
You are here: Archive Home > About > F.A.Q.

FAIR USE NOTICE: This is a freely available archive on an issue of significant public interest and importance, compiled to increase public awareness and to offer journalists, historians and legal researchers a reliable reference source for materials related to the 2008 Republican National Convention. Fair use of copyrighted material includes the use of protected materials for non-commercial educational purposes, such as teaching, scholarship, research, criticism, commentary, news reporting, and other content. The content on this site is only being used for educational, informational, and noncommercial purposes. RNC08report.org will cite authors and sources of all content as we would material from any printed work.

Site design copyright ©2008 by the RNC '08 Report  |  a nigelparry.net project