COINTELPRO: The Untold American Story

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Apr 25, 2002
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#1
This was provided by www.blackelectorate.com

It should be interesting and informative for many people here, as it was for me:

As many of you know, we have worked for two years now, to get the Hip-Hop community and the Black community, in particular, to consider its current condition - culturally, economically and politically - in the historical light of of the FBI's counter intelligence program (COINTELPRO). We continue that effort today by providing the text of one of the best documents to be found anywhere on the subject. It is the "untold story" of COINTELPRO, presented to the United Nations last September at the UN conference on racism in Durban, South Africa. For those of our viewers who are skeptical of COINTELPRO, largely unaware of it, and even for those who have expertise on the matter, we think this presentation, with sources provided, will deepen your knowledge of a reality that affects us all, to this very day.

COINTELPRO: The Untold American Story

Compilation by Paul Wolf with contributions from Robert Boyle, Bob Brown, Tom Burghardt, Noam Chomsky, Ward Churchill, Kathleen Cleaver, Bruce Ellison, Cynthia McKinney, Nkechi Taifa, Laura Whitehorn, Nicholas Wilson, and Howard Zinn.

Presented to U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Mary Robinson at the World Conference Against Racism in Durban, South Africa by the members of the Congressional Black Caucus attending the conference: Donna Christianson, John Conyers, Eddie Bernice Johnson, Barbara Lee, Sheila Jackson Lee, Cynthia McKinney, and Diane Watson, September 1, 2001.


Table of Contents



Overview

Victimization

COINTELPRO Techniques

Murder and Assassination

Agents Provocateurs

The Ku Klux Klan

The Secret Army Organization

Snitch Jacketing

The Subversion of the Press

Political Prisoners

Leonard Peltier

Mumia Abu Jamal

Geronimo ji Jaga Pratt

Dhoruba Bin Wahad

Marshall Eddie Conway

Justice Hangs in the Balance

Appendix: The Legacy of COINTELPRO

CISPES

The Judi Bari Bombing

Bibliography





Overview

We're here to talk about the FBI and U.S. democracy because here we have this peculiar situation that we live in a democratic country - everybody knows that, everybody says it, it's repeated, it's dinned into our ears a thousand times, you grow up, you pledge allegiance, you salute the flag, you hail democracy, you look at the totalitarian states, you read the history of tyrannies, and here is the beacon light of democracy. And, of course, there's some truth to that. There are things you can do in the United States that you can't do many other places without being put in jail.

But the United States is a very complex system. It's very hard to describe because, yes, there are elements of democracy; there are things that you're grateful for, that you're not in front of the death squads in El Salvador. On the other hand, it's not quite a democracy. And one of the things that makes it not quite a democracy is the existence of outfits like the FBI and the CIA. Democracy is based on openness, and the existence of a secret policy, secret lists of dissident citizens, violates the spirit of democracy.

Despite its carefully contrived image as the nation's premier crime fighting agency, the Federal Bureau of Investigation has always functioned primarily as America's political police. This role includes not only the collection of intelligence on the activities of political dissidents and groups, but often times, counterintelligence operations to thwart those activities. The techniques employed are easily recognized by anyone familiar with military psychological operations. The FBI, through the use of the criminal justice system, the postal system, the telephone system and the Internal Revenue Service, enjoys an operational capability surpassing even that of the CIA, which conducts covert actions in foreign countries without having access to those institutions.

Although covert operations have been employed throughout FBI history, the formal COunter INTELligence PROgrams (COINTELPRO's) of the period 1956-1971 were the first to be both broadly targeted and centrally directed. According to FBI researcher Brian Glick, "FBI headquarters set policy, assessed progress, charted new directions, demanded increased production, and carefully monitored and controlled day-to-day operations. This arrangement required that national COINTELPRO supervisors and local FBI field offices communicate back and forth, at great length, concerning every operation. They did so quite freely, with little fear of public exposure. This generated a prolific trail of bureaucratic paper. The moment that paper trail began to surface, the FBI discontinued all of its formal domestic counterintelligence programs. It did not, however, cease its covert political activity against U.S. dissidents." 1

Of roughly 20,000 people investigated by the FBI solely on the basis of their political views between 1956-1971, about 10 to 15% were the targets of active counterintelligence measures per se. Taking counterintelligence in its broadest sense, to include spreading false information, it's estimated that about two-thirds were COINTELPRO targets. Most targets were never suspected of committing any crime.

The nineteen sixties were a period of social change and unrest. Color television brought home images of jungle combat in Vietnam and protesters and priests burning draft cards and American flags. In the spring and summer months of 1964, 1965, 1966, 1967 and 1968, massive black rebellions swept across almost every major US city in the Northeast, Midwest and California. 2 Presidents Johnson and Nixon, and many others feared violent revolution and denounced the protesters. President Kennedy had felt the opposite: "Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable."

The counterculture of the sixties, and the FBI's reaction to it, were in many ways a product of the 1950s, the so-called "Age of McCarthyism." John Edgar Hoover, longtime Director of the FBI, was a prominent spokesman of the anti-communist paranoia of the era:

The forces which are most anxious to weaken our internal security are not always easy to identify. Communists have been trained in deceit and secretly work toward the day when they hope to replace our American way of life with a Communist dictatorship. They utilize cleverly camouflaged movements, such as peace groups and civil rights groups to achieve their sinister purposes. While they as individuals are difficult to identify, the Communist party line is clear. Its first concern is the advancement of Soviet Russia and the godless Communist cause. It is important to learn to know the enemies of the American way of life. 3

Throughout the 1960s, Hoover consistently applied this theory to a wide variety of groups, on occasion reprimanding agents unable to find "obvious" communist connections in civil rights and anti-war groups. 4 During the entire COINTELPRO period, no links to Soviet Russia were uncovered in any of the social movements disrupted by the FBI.

The commitment of the FBI to undermine and destroy popular movements departing from political orthodoxy has been extensive, and apparently proportional to the strength and promise of such movements, as one would expect in the case of the secret police organization of any state, though it is doubtful that there is anything comparable to this record among the Western industrial democracies.

In retrospect, the COINTEPRO's of the 1960s were thoroughly successful in achieving their stated goals, "to expose, disrupt, misdirect, discredit, or otherwise neutralize" the enemies of the State. . . . . .


. . . . . Continued

This is kinda long so instead of posting the entire thing here i thought i'd make it available for you to DL that way you can read it at your leasure, print it to share with your friends, use it for papers for school, or in your arguments on the message boards.

Take your time reading, but i'd be interested to hear your feed back (even if you only read this far and don't keep going).


DL the rest here:

http://coldbloodedthecb.homestead.com/files/COINTELPRO.doc


If it doesn't DL for you or you have any trouble, I can e-mail it to you or help you DL it, just let me know.
 
Apr 25, 2002
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#2
I know you're not sleepin on this?

Don't sleep on this, it is the history of how the FBI tried to destroy the lives and futures of many people!

Targets of COINTELPRO included Martin Luther King, Malcolm X, Stokely Carmichael, Leonard Peltier, Geronimo ji Jaga Pratt, Eldridge Cleaver, and Elijah Muhammad. :eek:




Here is another excerpt:


"Between 1968-1971, FBI-initiated terror and disruption resulted in the murder of Black Panthers Arthur Morris, Bobby Hutton, Steven Bartholomew, Robert Lawrence, Tommy Lewis, Welton Armstead, Frank Diggs, Alprentice Carter, John Huggins, Alex Rackley, John Savage, Sylvester Bell, Larry Roberson, Nathaniel Clark, Walter Touré Pope, Spurgeon Winters, Fred Hampton, Mark Clark, Sterling Jones, Eugene Anderson, Babatunde X Omarwali, Carl Hampton, Jonathan Jackson, Fred Bennett, Sandra Lane Pratt, Robert Webb, Samuel Napier, Harold Russell, and George Jackson.

One of the more dramatic incidents occurred on the night of December 4, 1969, when Panther leaders Fred Hampton and Mark Clark were shot to death by Chicago policemen in a predawn raid on their apartment. Hampton, one of the most promising leaders of the Black Panther party, was killed in bed, perhaps drugged. Depositions in a civil suit in Chicago revealed that the chief of Panther security and Hampton's personal bodyguard, William O'Neal, was an FBI infiltrator. O'Neal gave his FBI contacting agent, Roy Mitchell, a detailed floor plan of the apartment, which Mitchell turned over to the state's attorney's office shortly before the attack, along with "information" -- of dubious veracity -- that there were two illegal shotguns in the apartment. For his services, O'Neal was paid over $10,000 from January 1969 through July 1970, according to Mitchell's affidavit.

The availability of the floor plan presumably explains why "all the police gunfire went to the inside corners of the apartment, rather than toward the entrances," and undermines still further the pretense that the barrage was caused by confusion in unfamiliar surroundings that led the police to believe, falsely, that they were being fired upon by the Panthers inside. 10

Agent Mitchell was named by the Chicago Tribune as head of the Chicago COINTELPRO directed against the Black Panthers and other black groups. Whether or not this is true, there is substantial evidence of direct FBI involvement in this Gestapo-style political assassination. O'Neal continued to report to Agent Mitchell after the raid, taking part in meetings with the Hampton family and their discussion with their lawyers.

There has as yet been no systematic investigation of the FBI campaign against the Black Panther Party in Chicago, as part of its nationwide program against the Panthers."
 
Apr 25, 2002
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#3
COINTELPRO was some bullshit. It didn't just target black militants though, it was invented by the FBI in the 1950s to target communists and radicals of all races, and then was applied in the 1960s to: the civil rights movement and the anti-war movement. Chicanos, Blacks, Puerto Ricans, Whites, Asian-Americans, and others fell victim to this secret police state program.

It put Geronimo Pratt in jail on fake charges for over 20 years. ("niggas that did more years than Geronimo Pratt" -- Yukmouth")

It killed Black Panther members Fred Hampton and Mark Clark ("Son of a Panther that the government shot dead
Back in 12-4-1969
4 o clock in the mornin" -- Dead Prez)


They wiretapped Martin Luther King JR and sent him anonymous letters telling him to kill himself.

They wiretapped and infiltrated all the farmworker unions and Chicano civil rights organizations, along with white leftist groups and black organizations.

And more... read up.
 
Apr 25, 2002
15,044
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#5
State Repression and the Black struggle
By Imani Henry

In 1966, Huey P. Newton and Bobby Seale created the Black Panther Party for Self Defense in their hometown of Oakland, Calif., to wage a struggle against police brutality in their community. By 1968, the Panthers had chapters in more than 20 cities, about 5,000 members on the books and thousands of sympathizers.

In 1969 the U.S. government opened a full-scale assault against the Black Panthers through the Counter Intelligence Program--COINTELPRO. By 1971, due to infiltration, frame-ups, dissemination of false information, and outright violence against the BPP, the organization had begun to dissolve.

To this day, former members of the Black Panther Party, including Mumia Abu-Jamal, remain in U.S. jails for their political activism.

I had the honor of interviewing Safiya Bukhari, a former Black Panther and Black Liberation Army leader who spent close to nine years in prison. Now the co-chair of the New York City Free Mumia Coalition and an international organizer of the Jericho Movement, she continues to struggle to free hundreds of political prisoners of war and to fight for the liberation of her people. The following excerpts are the first installment of the interview with this courageous freedom fighter.

IH: I wanted to ask you about your childhood and what influenced you and brought you into the political struggle?

SB: I was born in 1950 in Harlem Hospital. When I was 9 years old my grandfather took me to South Carolina. So I had a lot of experience in the South on the farm, but we moved back and forth from the South to New York several times. And the whole community where I grew up in the South and even in the North were relatives, so I never had the experience of racism, because I never came in contact with people of other races until I went to college.

I left home the summer of '67 and went to college. And it was the second year of college, in 1968, that the Black Power Movement was really going strong and everybody was changing their names and getting involved. But I was very one-track and I was going to be a doctor. So I never had time for the clubs at school.

But on a dare, I pledged a sorority and it was then that I learned about racism--because it was the first year that Black people were even allowed in that sorority and so we elected a Black president.

One of the things we were talking about at a sorority meeting was about foster care and sending monies to foreign countries to feed hungry children.

And the president that year (her name was Beatrice) said at the meeting, "Why should be sending monies somewhere else to feed hungry children when there are hungry children right here to be fed in New York."

And nobody believed her. This was the "land of plenty."

Because there was no such thing as starving children in the United States, right?

So we were sent out, myself and two other women, on a fact-finding mission in New York to determine whether there were hungry children that needed to be fed.

So we got on the train and went to Harlem. The first people we met coming off the train were some Panthers.

We told them what we were there for and they took us around and showed us the breakfast program, and things like that.

The rhetoric they were talking about and everything else that at the time, I didn't believe it, I didn't adhere to that, but I did get up in the morning and go to the breakfast program and cook and feed the kids. And then we noticed that the children weren't coming to the breakfast program, even though we were doing everything we were supposed to do. We found that the police were lying and telling the kids and parents that we were feeding the kids "poison food." Now, we were eating the same food right along side the kids, but the parents believed this--that is, the idea that the police wouldn't help but they would try to keep kids from getting fed.

That to me ... you know, why would you do this? It was inconceivable. That was the first thing that got me thinking.

The second things was, my sorority sister Wanda and myself were downtown on 42nd Street, and we noticed that there was a Panther selling papers and the police were harassing him.

So we asked what was going on and the police said to me that my asking the question was obstructing a governmental process and then I said that he had a constitutional to right to disseminate political literature.

The cop said I was inciting a riot and said that if I didn't shut up that he was going to arrest the both of us. So quite naturally I didn't shut up because we had rights. So he ended up arresting me, Wanda, and the Panther, putting us in handcuffs and throwing us in the back of the car.

By this time, I've shut up because I am still thinking, this is totally not right, and then Wanda was mouthing off, selling woof tickets and everything.

This was the very first arrest and I am being arrested for following the Constitution. And they told Wanda if she didn't shut up they were gonna ram a nightstick up her ______.

And she quite naturally didn't stop. Once we got to the 14th Precinct, they put us in cell and called for a matron to strip-search us. Because according to them we could be carrying anything. When the matron came, the cops told her that she should put on some gloves because there is no telling what we might have. Then they strip us. We went through that whole process and then they gave us that one phone call.

When I called home I told my mother that I had made a decision about what I wanted to do and I decided that was to join the Black Panther Party.

Next week--Part 2