For nearly three years, our colleague and friend Ben Makuch has had the full weight of Canada’s intelligence agencies, federal government, and court systems bearing down on him for the crime of committing journalism.
While the Canadian editor of Motherboard, Ben interviewed Farah Mohamed Shirdon, who joined ISIS and burnt his Canadian passport on YouTube in 2014. The interview provided an early look at the motivations of one of a still-growing number of Western-born people who left Canada, the United States, or the United Kingdom to join the Islamic State. It was, by any standard, an insightful piece of reporting that helped our audience understand a mysterious and frightening enemy.
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Soon after the articles ran, agents for the Royal Canadian Mounted Police showed up at VICE’s Toronto office and demanded that Ben turn over all communications he had with Shirdon (which the Kik messaging service deletes as soon as they are delivered), as well as notes and emails exchanged between Ben, who now is a reporter with VICE News, and Motherboard editorial staff. The request was made under a top-secret gag order; for nine months, Ben couldn’t tell his colleagues, family, or friends that the Canadian government intended to turn him into an investigative arm for its top federal police agency.
Continue reading on Motherboard.