HOUSE OVERSIGHT 026654 Dhabi AGT was responsible for installing a "unique civil surveillance network in Abu Dhabi that means 'every person is monitored from the moment they leave their doorstep to the moment they return to it,' according to the noted security publication MiddleEastEye.<http ://www.middleeasteye.net/news/uae-israel-surveillance-2104952769> The invasive system is dubbed "Falcon Eye". Kochavi also owns Israeli security and private intelligence firms 3iMind and Logic Industries. Like Vocativ, 3iMind claims to use "the deep web" to mine information, though in 3iMind's case it provides spy services, not journalistic ones. 3iMind even advertises online that it will spy on "the planning and execution of violent civil unrest" for clients.<https://www.3i-mind.com/use cases/political-social-unrest/> The website for Kochavi's mother company<https://www.agtinternational.com/about/>, AGT, claims its current business is using "Internet of Things" technology for entertainment and "fashion" applications in partnership with the giant talent agency WME-IMG ... though it's unclear what any of these applications really are<http://www.euroleague.net/final-four/berlin-2016/news/i/6vokoibj5fsgqg4q/heed-the-event-platform-based- joint-venture-between-wme-img-and-agt-international-makes-first-official-foray-into-sports>, and certainly what value they provide for entertainment. Security experts say Internet of Things type sensors could be tied together to monitor crowds for security purposes. According to Israeli and U.S. Jewish publications, the lines within Kochavi's companies can blur, with Vocativ employees doing work for 3iMind and Logic, and vice versa. So who was this "journalist" arrested amid the unrest on Inauguration Day? Was he actually doing journalism? Or, as some journalists around town have been asking, could he also have been doing surveillance of anti-Trump demonstrators on behalf of an Arab or Israeli client, possibly a foreign governmen