Victims of Police Spying Launch Crowdfund to Cover Inquiry Funding Gap @ 12 Dec 2017
www.crowdjustice.com/case/help-victims-of-police-spying

The police have admitted that they spied on 1000 political groups including those campaigning for equality, justice, community empowerment and the environment, those fighting against war, racism, sexism, homophobia, government policies, corporate power, and police brutality.

The official Inquiry offers a unique opportunity to hold the police and those responsible to account in the fight for transparency and justice. However, the process is extremely formal and legalistic. There is an urgent need to make it easier for people to get involved.

The Spy Cops Communication Group was founded to ensure victims of undercover policing get justice. The funds raised will enable the group to:

The Home Office called the Inquiry in 2014 as result of pressure from people targeted by police spies, after campaigners exposed the level of police infiltration into political groups. Kate and Kim allege the undercover operations invaded people's lives, committing human rights abuses for decades. They also claim that systematic spying was aimed at controlling political dissent in the UK, undermining what should be a healthy democracy.