Risk and Responsibility
Understand the risks involved and how to prepare.
Risk and Responsibility
Warning
Every act of resistanceβdigital or physicalβcarries risk. This course prepares you to assess and respond to those risks responsibly, protecting yourself, your team, and the people you're supporting.
Why This Matters
Acting without understanding risk puts everyone in danger. Understanding risk helps you:
- Make informed decisions under pressure
- Reduce harm to vulnerable people nearby
- Protect community trust and long-term relationships
- Sustain resistance efforts over time
The strongest teams aren't the boldestβtheyβre the most prepared.
Types of Risk
Type | Example | Mitigation Strategy |
---|---|---|
Physical | Confrontation with ICE or police | Situational awareness, de-escalation |
Legal | Arrest, surveillance, phone seizure | KYR knowledge, legal observers, anonymity |
Emotional | Witnessing violence or trauma | Grounding techniques, buddy systems |
Digital | Phone tracking, chat leaks, metadata exposure | Signal, burner phones, E2E encryption |
Reputational | Breaking trust with allies or partners | Consent protocols, transparency, follow-up |
Personal Risk Assessment
Before you act, ask yourself:
-
Who am I?
What privilege, risk, or visibility do I carry? -
What am I carrying?
Are there legal risks, warrants, sensitive data on me? -
What am I entering?
Is the action volatile? Am I wanted or needed here? -
Whatβs my exit plan?
Do I have a safe exit strategy if things go wrong? -
Who could be affected by me?
Might my presence increase risk for others?
Collective Risk, Collective Care
You're not alone in this. Smart teams plan ahead:
- π Pre-brief every action (roles, map, fallback plans)
- π§ Check-in regularly using duress codes or Signal
- β Signal needs with discreet gestures or words
- π οΈ Debrief after actions β process, repair, learn
Success
Teams that rehearse protocols bounce back faster when things go sideways.
When to Say βNoβ
Saying no can be a form of leadership. Step back if:
- Youβre unwell physically or emotionally
- You havenβt been trained for the role
- You donβt understand the context
- Youβre not ready to absorb the risk
"Iβm not ready" is responsible β not selfish.
Safety by Role
Role | Common Risks | Mitigation |
---|---|---|
Legal Observer | Intimidation, gear seizure | Vests, legal backup, documentation prep |
Medic | Vicarious trauma, crowd panic | Buddy system, psychological first aid |
De-escalator | Targeting, aggressive confrontation | Partner work, exit strategy, body language |
Rideshare Coordinator | Tracking, compromised contact info | Pseudonyms, pre-verified passenger lists |
Media Support | Arrest, doxxing, data leaks | No live-streaming, encrypted storage |
Worst-Case Scenarios
Prepare for what you donβt want to happen:
If Arrested:
- Say only: "I want a lawyer. I do not consent to a search."
- Stay silent. Donβt explain or justify.
- Do not unlock your phone or give passcodes.
- Contact the legal support hotline as soon as possible.
If Your Device Is Seized:
- Use encryption + auto-lock timers.
- Turn off fingerprint/unlock before actions.
- Never carry sensitive data unless needed.
- Wipe unnecessary apps/media beforehand.
If You Suspect an Infiltrator:
- Donβt accuse publicly. Escalate privately.
- Watch for inconsistent stories or pushy behavior.
- Use trusted internal channels (not Signal groups) to flag concerns.
Scenario: What Would You Do?
You're de-escalation certified. You arrive at a shopping plaza ICE raid. A family member is screaming. Tension is rising. A crowd is forming.
Decision Point 1:
Do youβ¦
A. Run toward the agents to stop them
B. Approach the family member to help ground them
C. Start recording from a visible spot
β Correct: B. Calm and support the vulnerable first. Presence is protection.
Decision Point 2:
You see someone filming with their face uncovered. Do youβ¦
A. Warn them about doxxing risk
B. Ignore it β itβs their choice
C. Ask them to tag you in the footage
β Correct: A. Share safety tips privately β protect your team.
Preparation Checklist
- You know your role + risks
- You cleared unnecessary data from your phone
- You shared your emergency contact plan
- You packed basic gear (mask, ID, legal number)
- You have a check-in time post-action
- Youβve practiced or reviewed safety protocols
Key Terms
Term | Meaning |
---|---|
E2E Encryption | "End-to-end" β Only sender and recipient can read messages (e.g. Signal) |
Duress Word | Code that secretly signals distress to teammates |
KYR Training | "Know Your Rights" β legal self-defense training |
Metadata | Hidden info attached to media (e.g. GPS in photos) |
Doxxing | Public exposure of private info to harass or threaten |
Summary
- Risk is not avoidable, but it is manageable
- Your preparedness impacts everyone around you
- Saying βnoβ is a sign of maturity
- The best protection is collective readiness
π Knowledge Check
Which of the following is a valid reason to say βNoβ to participating in an action?
What are examples of collective care in high-risk environments?
What is a safe way to communicate with team members during direct action?
Which of the following are personal risk factors you should evaluate before taking action?
Youβre the rideshare coordinator during a courthouse protest. Someone texts asking to be picked up 6 blocks away, but you donβt recognize the number. What should you do?
Burnout and trauma are legitimate risks that should be factored into safety planning.
How could your presence increase risk for someone more vulnerable?
If law enforcement demands your phone, what should you say?
A teammate starts livestreaming on Facebook without warning. What is the most responsible response?
Which of the following best defines a βduress wordβ?
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