|
INTELLIGENCE ACTIVITIES AND THE
RIGHTS OF AMERICANS
_______
BOOK II
_______
FINAL REPORT
OF THE
SELECT COMMITTEE
TO STUDY GOVERNMENTAL OPERATIONS
WITH RESPECT TO
INTELLIGENCE ACTIVITIES
UNITED STATES SENATE
TOGETHER WITH
ADDITIONAL, SUPPLEMENTAL, AND SEPARATE
VIEWS
APRIL 26 (legislative day, April 14), 1976
D. USING COVERT ACTION TO DISRUPT AND DISCREDIT DOMESTIC
GROUPS
MAJOR FINDING
The Committee finds that covert action programs have
been used to disrupt the lawful political activities of
individual Americans and groups and to discredit them,
using dangerous and degrading tactics which are abhorrent
in a free and decent society.
Subfindings
(a) Although the claimed purposes of these action programs
were to protect the national security and to prevent violence,
many of the victims were concededly nonviolent, were not
controlled by a foreign power, and posed no threat to
the national security.
(b) The acts taken interfered with the First Amendment
rights of citizens. They were explicitly intended to deter
citizens from joining groups, "neutralize" those
who were already members, and prevent or inhibit the expression
of ideas.
(c) The tactics used against Americans often risked and
sometimes caused serious emotional, economic, or physical
damage. Actions were taken which were designed to break
up marriages, terminate funding or employment, and encourage
gang warfare between violent rival groups. Due process
of law forbids the use of such covert tactics, whether
the victims are innocent law-abiding citizens or members
of groups suspected of involvement in violence.
(d) The sustained use of such tactics by the FBI in an
attempt to destroy Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., violated
the law and fundamental human decency.
Elaboration of the Findings
For fifteen years from 1956 until 1971, the FBI carried
out a series of covert action programs directed against
American citizens. 1 These "counterintelligence programs"
(shortened to the acronym COINTELPRO) resulted in part
from frustration with Supreme Court rulings limiting the
Government's power to proceed overtly against dissident
groups. 2
They ended formally in 1971 with the threat of public
exposure. 3 Some of the findings discussed herein are
related to the findings on lawlessness, overbreadth, and
intrusive techniques previously set forth. Some of the
most offensive actions in the FBI's COINTELPRO programs
(anonymous letters intended to break up marriages, or
efforts to deprive people of their jobs, for example)
were based upon the covert use of information obtained
through overly-broad investigations and intrusive techniques.
4 Similarly, as noted above, COINTELPRO involved specific
violations of law, and the law and the Constitution were
"not [given] a thought" under the FBI's policies.
5
But COINTELPRO was more than simply violating the law
or the Constitution. In COINTELPRO the Bureau secretly
6 took the law into its own hands, going beyond the collection
of intelligence and beyond its law enforcement function
to act outside the legal process altogether and to covertly
disrupt, discredit and harass groups and individuals.
A law enforcement agency must not secretly usurp the functions
of judge and jury, even when the investigation reveals
criminal activity. But in COINTELPRO, the Bureau imposed
summary punishment, not only on the allegedly violent,
but also on the nonviolent advocates of change. Such action
is the hallmark of the vigilante and has no place in a
democratic society.
Under COINTELPRO, certain techniques the Bureau had used
against hostile foreign agents were adoped for use against
perceived domestic threats to the established political
and social order. 7
Some of the targets of COINTELPRO were law-abiding citizens
merely advocating change in our society. Other targets
were members of groups that had been involved in violence,
such as the Ku Klux Klan or the Black Panther Party. Some
victims did nothing more than associate with targets.
8
The Committee does not condone acts of violence, but
the response of Government to allegations of illegal conduct
must comply with the due process of law demanded by the
Constitution. Lawlessness by citizens does not justify
lawlessness by Government.
The tactics which were employed by the Bureau are therefore
unacceptable, even against the alleged criminal. The imprecision
of the targeting compounded the abuse. Once the Government
decided to take the law into its own hands, those unacceptable
tactics came almost inevitably to be used not only against
the "kid with the bomb" but also against the
"kid with the bumper sticker."
Subfinding (a)
Although the claimed purposes of these action programs
were to protect the "national security" and
to prevent violence, many of the victims were concededly
nonviolent, were not controlled by a foreign power, and
posed no threat to the "national security."
The Bureau conducted five "counterintelligence programs"
aimed against domestic groups: the "Communist Party,
USA" program (1956-71); the "Socialist Workers
Party" program (1961-69); the "White Hate"
program (1964-1971); the "Black Nationalist-Hate
Group" program (1967-71) ; and the "New Left"
program (1968-71).
While the declared purposes of these programs were to
protect the "national security" or prevent violence,
Bureau witnesses admit that many of the targets were nonviolent
and most had no connections with a foreign power. Indeed,
nonviolent organizations and individuals were targeted
because the Bureau believed they represented a "potential"
for violence -- and nonviolent citizens who were against
the war in Vietnam were targeted because they gave "aid
and comfort" to violent demonstrators by lending
respectability to their cause. 11
The imprecision of the targeting is demonstrated by the
inability of the Bureau to define the subjects of the
programs. The Black Nationalist program, according to
its supervisor, included "a great number of organizations
that you might not today characterize as black nationalist
but which were in fact primarily black." 12 Thus,
the nonviolent Southern Christian Leadership Conference
was labeled as a Black Nationalist-"Hate Group."
Furthermore, the actual targets were chosen from a far
broader group than the titles of the programs would imply.
The CPUSA program targeted not only Communist Party members
but also sponsors of the National Committee to Abolish
the House Un-American Activities Committee 14 and civil
rights leaders allegedly under Communist influence or
not deemed to be "anti-Communist". 15 The Socialist
Workers Party program included non-SWP sponsors of antiwar
demonstrations which were cosponsored by the SWP or the
Young Socialist Alliance, its youth group. 16 The Black
Nationalist program targeted a range of organizations
from the Panthers to SNCC to the peaceful Southern Christian
Leadership Conference, and included every Black Student
Union and many other black student groups. 17 New Left
targets ranged from the SDS 18 to the InterUniversity
Committee for Debate on Foreign Policy, 19 from Antioch
College ("vanguard of the New Left") 20 to the
New Mexico Free University and other "alternate"
schools, 21 and from underground newspapers 22 to students
protesting university censorship of a student publication
by carrying signs with four-letter words on them. 23
Subfinding (b)
The acts taken interfered with the First Amendment rights
of citizens. They were explicitly intended to deter citizens
from joining groups, "neutralize" those who
were already members, and prevent or inhibit the expression
of ideas.
In achieving its purported goals Of protecting the national
security and preventing violence, the Bureau attempted
to deter membership in the target groups. As the supervisor
of the "Black Nationalist" COINTELPRO stated,
"Obviously, you are going to prevent violence or
a greater amount of violence if you have smaller groups.
4 The chief of the COINTELPRO unit agreed: "We also
made an effort . . . to deter recruitment where we could.
This was done with the view that if we could curb the
organization, we could curb the action or the violence
within the organization." 25 As noted above, many
of the organizations "curbed" were not violent,
and covert attacks on group membership contravened the
First Amendment's guarantee of freedom to associate.
Nor was this the only First Amendment right violated
by the Bureau. In addition to attempting to prevent people
from joining or continuing to be members in target organizations,
the Bureau tried to "deter or counteract" what
it called "propaganda" 26 -- the expression
of ideas which it considered dangerous. Thus, the originating
document for the "Black Nationalist" COINTELPRO
noted that "consideration should be given to techniques
to preclude" leaders of the target organizations
"from spreading their philosophy publicly or through
various mass communication media." 27
Instructions to "preclude" free speech were
not limited to "black nationalists;" they occurred
in every program. In the New Left program, for instance,
approximately thirty-nine percent of all actions attempted
to keep targets from speaking, teaching, writing, or publishing.
28
The cases included attempts (sometimes successful) to
prompt the firing of university and high school teachers;
29 to prevent targets from speaking on campus; 30 to stop
chapters of target groups from being formed; 31 to prevent
the distribution of books, newspapers, or periodicals;
32 to disrupt or cancel news conferences; 33 to interfere
with peaceful demonstrations, including the SCLC's Poor
People's Campaign and Washington Spring Project and most
of the large anti-war marches; 34 and to deny facilities
for meetings or conferences. 35
As the above cases demonstrate, the FBI was not just
"chilling" free speech, but squarely attacking
it.
The tactics used against Americans often risked and sometimes
caused serious emotional, economic, or physical damage.
Actions were taken which were designed to break up marriages,
terminate funding or employment, and encourage gang warfare
between violent rival groups. Due process of law forbids
the use of such covert tactics whether the victims are
innocent law-abiding citizens or members of groups suspected
of involvement in violence. The former head of the Domestic
Intelligence Division described counterintelligence as
a "rough, tough, dirty, and dangerous" business.
36 His description was accurate.
One technique used in COINTELPRO involved sending anonymous
letters to spouses intended, in the words of one proposal,
to "produce ill-feeling and possibly a lasting distrust"
between husband and wife, so that "concern over what
to do about it" would distract the target from "time
spent in the plots and plans" of the organization.
87 The image of an agent of the United States Government
scrawling a poison-pen letter to someone's wife in language
usually reserved for bathroom walls is not a happy one.
Nevertheless, anonymous letters were sent to, among others,
a Klansman's wife, informing her that her husband had
"taken the flesh of another unto himself," the
other person being a woman named Ruby, with her "lust
filled eyes and smart aleck figure;" 38 and to a
"Black Nationalist's" wife saying that her husband
"been maken it here" with other women in his
organization "and than he gives us this jive bout
their better in bed then you." 39 A husband who was
concerned about his wife's activities in a biracial group
received a letter which started, "Look man I guess
your old lady doesn't get enough at home or she wouldn't
be shucking and jiving with our Black Men" in the
group. 40 The Field Office reported as a "tangible
result" of this letter that the target and her husband
separated. 41
The Bureau also contacted employers and funding organizations
in order to cause the firing of the targets or the termination
of their support. 42 For example, priests who allowed
their churches to be used for the Black Panther breakfast
programs were targeted, and anonymous letters were sent
to their bishops; 43 a television commentator who expressed
admiration for a Black Nationalist leader and criticized
heavy defense spending was transferred after the Bureau
contacted his employer; 44 and an employee of the Urban
League was fired after the FBI approached a "confidential
source" in a foundation which funded the League.
45
The Bureau also encouraged "gang warfare" between
violent groups. An FBI memorandum dated November 25,1968
to certain Field Offices conducting investigations of
the Black Panther Party ordered recipient offices to submit
"imaginative and hard-hitting counterintelligence
measures aimed at crippling the BPP." Proposals were
to be received every two weeks. Particular attention was
to be given to capitalizing upon differences between the
Panthers and US, Inc. (an other "Black Nationalist"
group), which had reached such proportions that "it
is taking on the aura of gang warfare with attendant threats
of murder and reprisals." 45a On May 26,1970, after
U.S. organization members had killed four BPP members
and members of each organization had been shot and beaten
by members of the other, the Field Office reported:
Information received from local sources indicate[s] that,
in general, the membership of the Los Angeles BPP is physically
afraid of US members and take premeditated precautions
to avoid confrontations.
In view of their anxieties, it is not presently felt
that the Los Angeles BPP can be prompted into what could
result in an internecine struggle between the two organizations.
. . .
The Los Angeles Division is aware of the mutually hostile
feelings harbored between the organizations and the first
opportunity to capitalize on the situation will be maximized.
It is intended that US Inc. will be appropriately and
discreetly advised of the time and location of BPP activities
in order that the two organizations might be brought together
and thus grant nature the opportunity to take'her due
course. 46 [Emphasis added.]
A second Field Office noted:
Shootings, beatings and a high degree of unrest continues
to prevail in the ghetto area of Southeast San Diego.
Although no specific counterintelligence action can be
credited with contributing to this overall situation,
it is felt that a substantial amount of the unrest is
directly attributable to this program. 47
In another case, an anonymous letter was sent to the
leader of the Blackstone Rangers (a group, according to
the Field Offices' proposal, "to whom violent-type
activity, shooting, and the like are second nature")
advising him that "the brothers that run the Panthers
blame you for blocking their thing and there's supposed
to be a hit out for you." The letter was intended
to "intensify the degree of animosity between the
two groups" and cause "retaliatory action which
could disrupt the BPP or lead to reprisals against its
leadership." 48
Another technique which risked serious harm to the target
was falsely labeling a target an informant. This technique
was used in all five domestic COINTELPROs. When a member
of a nonviolent group was successfully mislabeled as an
informant, the result was alienation from the group. 49
When the target belonged to a group known to have killed
suspected informants, the risk was substantially more
serious. On several occasions, the Bureau used this technique
against members of the Black Panther Party; it was used
at least twice after FBI documents expressed concern over
the possible consequences because two members of the BPP
had been murdered as suspected informants. 50
The Bureau recognized that some techniques used in COINTELPRO
were more likely than others to cause serious physical,
emotional, or economic damage to the targets. 51 Any proposed
use of such techniques -- for example, encouraging enmity
between violent rival groups, falsely labeling group members
as informants, and mailing anonymous letters to targets'
spouses accusing the target of infidelity -- was scrutinized
carefully by headquarters supervisory personnel, in an
attempt to balance the "greater good" to be
achieved by the proposal against the known or risked harm
to the target. If the "good" was sufficient,
the proposal was approved. For instance, in discussing
anonymous letters to spouses, the agent who supervised
the New Left COINTELPRO stated:
[Before recommending approval] I would want to know what
you want to get out of this, who are these people. If
it's somebody, and say they did split up, what would accrue
from it as far as disrupting the New Left is concerned?
Say they broke up, what then. . . .
[The question would be] is it worth it? 52
Similarly, with regard to causing false suspicions that
an individual was an informant, the chief of the Racial
Intelligence Section stated:
You have to be able to make decisions and I am sure that
labeling somebody as an informant, that you'd want to
make certain that it served a good purpose before you
did it and not do it haphazardly.... It is a serious thing
... As far as I am aware, in the black extremist area,
by using that technique, no one was killed. I am sure
of that. 52a
This official was asked whether the fact that no one
was killed was the, result of "luck or planning."
He answered: "Oh, it just happened that way, I am
sure." 52b
It is intolerable in a free society that an agency of
the Government should adopt such tactics, whether or not
the targets are involved in criminal activity. The "greater
good" of the country is in fact served by adherence
to the rule of law mandated by the Constitution.
Subfinding (d)
The sustained use of such tactics by the FBI in an attempt
to destroy Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., violated the law
and fundamental human decency.
The Committee devoted substantial attention to the FBI's
covert action campaign against Dr. Martin Luther King
because it demonstrates just how far the Government could
go in a secret war against one citizen. In focusing upon
Dr. King, however, it should not be forgotten that the
Bureau carried out disruptive activities against hundreds
of lesser known American citizens. It should also be borne
in mind that positive action on the part of high Government
officials outside the FBI might have prevented what occurred
in this case. 53
The FBI's claimed justification for targeting Dr. King
-- alleged Communist influence on him and the civil rights
movement -- is examined elsewhere in this report. 54
The FBI's campaign against Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
began in December 1963, four months after the famous civil
rights March on Washington, 55 when a nine-hour meeting
was convened at FBI Headquarters to discuss various "avenues
of approach aimed at neutralizing King as an effective
Negro leader." 56 Following the meeting, agents in
the field were instructed to "continue to gather
information concerning King's personal activities ...
in order that we may consider using this information at
an opportune time in a counterintelligence move to discredit
him." 57
About two weeks after that conference, FBI agents planted
a microphone in Dr. King's bedroom at the Willard Hotel
in Washington, D.C. 58 During the next two years, the
FBI installed at least fourteen more "bugs"
in Dr. King's hotel rooms across the country. 59 Physical
and photographic surveillances accompanied some of the
microphone, coverage. 60
The FBI also scrutinized Dr. King's tax returns, monitored
his financial affairs, and even tried to determine whether
he had a secret foreign bank account. 61
In late 1964, a "sterilized" tape was prepared
in a manner that would prevent attribution to the FBI
and was "anonymously" mailed to Dr. King just
before he received the Nobel Peace Prize. 62 Enclosed
in the package with the tape was an unsigned letter which
warned Dr. King, "your end is approaching . . . you
are finished." The letter intimated that the tape
might be publicly released, and closed with the following
message:
King, there is only one thing left for you to do. You
know what it is. You have just 34 days in which to do
(this exact number has been selected for a specific reason,
it has definite practical significance). You are done.
There is but one way out for you . . . 63
Dr. King's associates have said he interpreted the message
as an effort to induce him to commit suicide. 64
At about the same time that it mailed the "sanitized"
tape, the FBI was also apparently offering tapes and transcripts
to newsmen. 65 Later when civil rights leaders Roy Wilkins
and James Farmer went to Washington to persuade Bureau
officials to halt the FBI's discrediting efforts, 66 they
were told that "if King want[s] war we [are] prepared
to give it to him." 67
Shortly thereafter, Dr. King went to Europe to receive
the Nobel Peace Prize. The Bureau tried to undermine ambassadorial
receptions in several of the countries he visited '68
and when he returned to the United States, took steps
to diminish support for a banquet and a special "day"
being planned in his honor. 69
The Bureau's actions against Dr. King included attempts
to prevent him from meeting with world leaders, receiving
honors or favorable publicity, and gaining financial support.
When the Bureau learned of a possible meeting between
Dr. King and the Pope in August 1964, the FBI asked Cardinal
Spellman to try to arrange a cancellation of the audience.
70 Discovering that two schools (Springfield College and
Marquette University) were going to honor Dr. King with
special degrees in the spring of 1964, Bureau agents tried
to convince officials at the schools to rescind their
plans. 71 And when the Bureau learned in October 1966
that the Ford Foundation might grant three million dollars
to Dr. King's Southern Christian Leadership Conference,
they asked a former FBI agent who was a high official
at the Ford Motor Company to try to block the award. 72
A magazine was asked not to publish favorable articles
about him. 73 Religious leaders and institutions were
contacted to undermine their support of him. 74 Press
conference questions were prepared and distributed to
"friendly" journalists. 75 And plans were even
discussed for sabotaging his political campaign in the
event he decided to run for national office. 76 An SCLC
employee was "anonymously" informed that the
SCLC was trying to get rid of her "so that the Bureau
[would be] in a position to capitalize on [her] bitterness."
78 Bureau officials contacted members of Congress, 79
and special "off the record" testimony was prepared
for the Director's use before the House Appropriations
Committee. 80
The "neutralization" program continued until
Dr. King's death. As late as March 1968, FBI agents were
being instructed to neutralize Dr. King because he might
become a "messiah" who could "unify, and
electrify, the militant black nationalist movement"
if he were to "abandon his supposed 'obedience' to
'white liberal doctrines' (nonviolence) and embrace black
nationalism." 81 Steps were taken to subvert the
"Poor People's Campaign" which Dr. King was
planning to lead in the spring of 1968. 82 Even after
Dr. King's death, agents in the field were proposing methods
for harassing his widow 83 and Bureau officials were trying
to prevent his birthday from becoming a national holiday.
84
The actions taken against Dr. King are indefensible.
They represent a sad episode in the dark history of covert
actions directed against law abiding citizens by a law
enforcement agency.
Footnotes:
1 Before 1956 the FBI engaged in activities to disrupt
and discredit Communists and (before World War II) Fascists,
but not as part of a formal program. The Bureau is the
only agency which carried on a sustained effort to "neutralize"
domestic groups, although other agencies made sporadic
attempts to disrupt dissident groups. (See Military Surveillance
Report; IRS Report.)
2 The Bureau personnel involved in COINTELPRO link the
first formal counterintelligence program, against the
Communist Party, USA, to the Supreme Court reversal of
the Smith Act convictions, which "made it impossible
to prosecute Communist Party members at the time".
(COINTELPRO unit chief, 10/16/75, p. 14.) It should be
noted, however, that the Court's reversal occurred In
1957, the year after the program was instituted. This
belief in the deficiencies of the law was a major factor
in the four subsequent programs as well: "The other
COINTELPRO programs were opened as the threat arose in
areas of extremism and subversion and there were not adequate
statutes to proceed against the organization or to prevent
their activities." (COINTELPRO Unit Chief, 10/16/75,
p. 15.)
3 For further information on the termination of each
of the programs, see The Accountability and Control Findings,
p. 265 and the detailed reports on the Black Panther Party
and COINTELPRO.
Although the programs have been formally terminated,
Bureau witnesses agree that there is a "grey area"
between "counter-intelligence" and investigative
activities which are inherently disruptive. These investigative
activities, continue. (See COINTELPRO Report: "Command
and Control -- The Problems of Oversight.")
4 Information gained from electronic surveillance, informant
coverage, burglaries, and confidential financial records
was used in COINTELPRO. p. 275.)
5 Moore, 11/3/75, p. 83.
6 Field offices were instructed that no one outside the
Bureau was to know that COINTELPRO existed, although certain
persons in the executive branch and in Congress were told
about -- and did not object to -- efforts to disrupt the
CPUSA and the Klan. However, no one was told about the
other COINTELPRO programs, or about the more dangerous
and degrading techniques employed. (See p. 275.)
7 As the Chief of the Racial Intelligence Section put
it:
"You can trace [the origins of COINTELPRO] up and
back to foreign intelligence, particularly penetration
of the group by the individual informant. Before you can
engage in counterintelligence you must have intelligence.
. . . If you have good intelligence and know what it's
going to do, you can seed distrust, sow misinformation.
The same technique is used, misinformation, disruption,
is used in the domestic groups, although in the domestic
groups you are dealing in '67 and '68 with many, many
more across the country ... than you had ever dealt with
as far as your foreign groups." (Moore, 11/3/75,
pp. 32-33.)
Former Assistant Director William C. Sullivan also testified
that the "rough, tough, dirty business" of foreign
counterintelligence was "brought home against any
organization against which we were targeted. We did not
differentiate." (Sullivan, 11/1/75, pp. 97-98.)
8 For example, parents and spouse, of targets received
letters containing accusations of immoral conduct by the
target. (Memorandum from St. Louis Field Office to FBI
Headquarters, 1/30/70; memorandum from FBI Headquarters
to Minneapolis Field Office, 11/4/68.)
9 Huston, 9/23/75, Hearings, Vol. 2, p. 45.
10 Moore, 11/8/75, p. 37.
11 New Left supervisor, 10/28/75, p. 69.
12 Black Nationalist Supervisor, 10/17/75, p. 12.
13 omitted in original.
14 For example, the entire Unitarian Society of Cleveland
was targeted because the minister and some members circulated
a petition calling for the abolition of HUAC, and because
the Church gave office space to the "Citizens for
Constitutional Rights". (Memorandum from FBI Headquarters
to Cleveland Field Office, 11/6/64.)
15 See Finding on "Overbreadth" p. 181.
16 For instance, the Bureau targeted two non-member students
who participated in an anti-war "hunger strike"
at Oberlin, which was "guided and directed"
by the Young Socialists Alliance. The students' parents
received anonymous letters, purportedly from a friend
of their sons. One letter expressed concern that a group
of "left wing students" were "cynically
using" the boy, which would lead to "injury"
to his health and "damage to his academic standing".
The other letter also stated that it was motivated by
concern for "damage" to the student's "health
and personal future" and "the belief that you
may not be aware of John's current involvement in left-wing
activities." (Memorandum from FBI headquarters to
Cleveland Field Office, 11/29/68.)
17 One proposal sought to expose Black Student Union
Chapters as "breeding grounds for racial militancy"
by an anonymous mailing to "all institutions where
there are BSU chapters or incipient chapters". (Memorandum
from Portland Field Office to FBI Headquarters, 6/3/68.)
18 For example Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to San
Antonio Field Office, 10/31/68.
19 An anonymous letter was sent to "influential"
Michigan political figures, the mass media, University
of Michigan administrators, and the Board of Regents,
in an attempt to "discredit and neutralize"
the "communist activities" of the IUCDFP. The
letter decried the "undue publicity" given anti-war
protest activities which "undoubtedly give 'aid and
comfort' to the enemy" and encourage the Vietcong
and the North Vietnamese in "refusing to come to
the bargaining table". The letter continued, "I
wonder if the strategy is to bleed the United States white
by prolonging the war in Vietnam and pave the way for
a takeover by Russia?" (Memorandum from Detroit Field
Office to FBI Headquarters, 10/11/66; Memorandum from
FBI Headquarters, to Detroit Field Office 10/26/66.)
20 Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to Cincinnati Field
Office, 6/18/68.
21 The New Mexico Free University was targeted because
it taught such courses as "confrontation politics"
and "draft counselling". (Memorandum from FBI
Headquarters to Albuquerque Field Office, 3/19/69.) In
another case, an "alternate" school for students
"aged five and beyond", which was co-sponsored
by the ACLU, was targeted because "from the staff
being assembled, it appears that the school will be a
New Left venture and of a radical revolutionary nature".
The Bureau contacted a confidential source in the bank
financing the school so that he could "take steps
to discourage its developments". (Memorandum from
FBI Headquarters to San Antonio Field Office, 7/23/69.
22 See e.g., Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to Pittsburgh
Field Office, 11/14/69.
23 Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to Minneapolis Field
Office, 11/4/68.
24 Black Nationalist supervisor, 10/17/75, p. 24.
25 COINTELPRO unit chief, 10/12/75, p. 54.
26 COINTELPRO unit chief, 10/12/75, P. 54.
27 Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to all SAC's, 8/25/67.
28 The FBI was not the only intelligence agency to attempt
to prevent the propagation of ideas with which it disagreed,
but it was the only one to do so in any organized way.
The IRS responded to Congressional and Administration
pressure by targeting political organizations and dissidents
for audit. The CIA Improperly obtained the tax returns
of Ramparts magazine after it learned that the magazine
intended to publish an article revealing Agency support
of the National Student Association. The CIA saw the article
as "an attack on CIA in particular and the Administration
in general." (CIA memorandum re: "IRS Briefing
on Ramparts," 2/2/67.)
29 For instance, a high school English teacher was targeted
for inviting two poets to attend a class at his school.
The poets were noted for their efforts in the draft resistance
movement. The Bureau sent anonymous letters to two local
newspapers, the Board of Education, and the school board.
(Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to Pittsburgh Field
Office, 6/19/69.)
30 In one case, the Bureau attempted to stop a "Communist"
speaker from appearing on campus. The sponsoring organization
went to court and won an order permitting the lecture
to proceed as scheduled; the Bureau then investigated
the judge who issued the order. (Memorandum from Detroit
Field Office to FBI Headquarters. 10/26/60; Memorandum
from FBI Headquarters to Detroit Field Office, 10/27/60,
10/28/, 10/31/60; Memorandum from F. J. Baumgardner to
A. H. Belmont, 10/26/60.)
31 The Bureau tried on several occasions to prevent the
formation of campus chapters of SDS and the Young Socialist
Alliance. (See, e.g., Memorandum from San Antonio Field
Office to FBI Headquarters, 5/1/69; Memorandum from FBI
Headquarters to San Antonio Field Office, 5/1/69.)
32 For example, an anonymous letter to a state legislator
protested the distribution on campus of an underground
newspaper's "depravity", (Memorandum from Newark
Meld Office to FBI Headquarters, 5/23/69; Memorandum from
FBI Headquarters to Newark Field Office, 6/4/69) and the
Bureau anonymously contacted the landlady of premises
rented by two "New Left" newspapers in an attempt
to have them evicted. (Memorandum from Los Angeles Field
Office to FBI Headquarters, 9/9/68; Memorandum from FBI
Headquarters to Los Angeles Field Office, 9/23/68.)
33 For example, a confidential source in a radio station
was contacted In two successful attempts to cancel news
conferences. (Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to Cleveland
Field Office, 10/1/65; Memorandum from FBI Headquarters
to Cleveland Field Office 10/4/65; Memorandum from Boston
Field Office to FBI Headquarters, 2/5/64; Memorandum from
F. J. Baumgardner to William C. Sullivan, 6/25/64.)
34 For instance, the Bureau used the standard counterespionage
technique of "disinformation" against demonstrators.
In one case, the Chicago Field Office duplicated blank
forms soliciting housing for demonstrators coming to Chicago
for the Democratic National Convention, filled them out
with fictitious names and addresses and sent them to the
organizers. Demonstrators reportedly made "long and
useless journeys to locate these addresses." (Memorandum
from Chicago Field Office to FBI Headquarters. 9/9/68.)
The same program was carried out by the Washington Field
Office when housing forms were distributed for demonstrators
coming to the 1969 Presidential inaugural ceremonies.
(Memorandum from ]FBI Headquarters to Washington Field
Office. 1/10/69.) Army Intelligence agents occasionally
took similar, but wholly unauthorized action, see Military
Surveillance Report: Section Ill: "Domestic Radio
Monitoring by ASA: 1967-1970."
35 Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to San Diego field
office, 9/11/69.
36 Sullivan, 11/1/75, pp. 97-98.
37 Memorandum from St. Louis Field Office to FBI Headquarters,
2/14/69.
38 Memorandum from Richmond Field Office to FBI Headquarters,
8/26/66.
39 The wife who received this letter was described in
the Field Office proposal as "faithful . . . an intelligent
respectable young mother who is active in the AME Methodist
Church." (Memorandum from St. Louis Meld Office to
FBI Headquarters, 2/14/69.)
40 Memorandum from St. Louis Field Office to FBI Headquarters,
1/30/70.
41 Memorandum from St. Louis Field Office to FBI Headquarters,
6/19/70.
42 When the targets were teachers, the intent was to
prevent the propagation of ideas. In the case of other
employer contacts, the purpose was to stop a source of
funds.
43 Memorandum from New Haven Field Office to FBI Headquarters,
11/12/69; Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to San Diego
Field Office, 9/9/69.
44 memorandum from FBI Headquarters to Cincinnati Field
Office, 3/28/69.
45 Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to Pittsburgh Field
Office, 3/3/69.
45a Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to Baltimore Field
Office, 11/25/68.
46 Memorandum from Los Angeles Field Office to FBI headquarters,
5/26/70, pp. 1-2.
47 Memorandum from San Diego Field Office to FBI headquarters,
9/15/69.
48 Memorandum from Chicago Field Office to FBI headquarters,
1/12/69; Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to Chicago Field
Office, 1/30/69.
49 See, e.g., Memorandum from San Diego Field Office
to FBI Headquarters, 4/30/69.
50 One proposal to label a BPP member a "pig informer"
was rejected because the Panthers had recently murdered
two suspected informers. The victims had not been targets
of a Bureau effort to label them informants. (Memorandum
from FBI Headquarters to Cincinnati Field Office, 2/18/71.)
Nevertheless, two similar proposals were implemented a
month later, (Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to Washington
Field Office, 3/19/71; Memorandum from FBI Headquarters
to Charlotte Field Office, 3/31/71.)
51 At least four assaults -- two of them on women --
were reported as "results" of Bureau actions,
(See COINTELPRO Report, Section IV: Wartimes Technique
Brought Home.)
52 New Left supervisor 10/28/75, pp. 72, 74.
52a Moore, 11/3/75, p. 62.
52b Moore, 11/3/75, p. 64.
53 See pp. 275-277 and 205-206 of this Report for a detailed
discussion of which officials were aware or should have
been aware of what the Bureau was doing to Dr. King and
how their action or inaction might have contributed to
what went on.
53 See Martin Luther King Report, Section III, "Concern
in the FBI and the Kennedy Administration Over Allegations
of Communist Influence in the Civil Rights Movement Increases,
and the FBI Intensifies the Investigation: October 1962-October
1963." See generally, Finding on Overbreadth, p.
175.
55 The August 1963 march on Washington was the occasion
of Dr. Kings "I Have a Dream" speech, on the
steps of the Lincoln Memorial. (See memorandum from William
C. Sullivan to Alan Belmont, 8/30/63, characterizing the
speech as "demagogic".)
56 Memorandum from William C. Sullivan to Alan Belmont,
12/24/63. Although FBI officials were making derogatory
references to Dr. King and passing personal information
about Dr. King to their superiors. (Memorandum from Hoover
to Deputy Attorney General Katzenbach, 8/13/63.) Prior
to December 1963, the Committee had discovered no document
reflecting a strategy to deliberately discredit him prior
to the memorandum relating to the December 1963 meeting.
57 Memorandum from William C. Sullivan to Alan Belmont,
12/24/63.
58 The microphone was installed on January 5, 1964 (Memorandum
from William C. Sullivan to Alan Belmont, 1/6/64.), just
days after Dr. King's picture appeared on the cover of
Time magazine as "Man of the Year." (Time Magazine,
January 3, 1964.) Reading of the Time magazine award,
the Director had written, "They had to dig deep in
the garbage to come up with this one." (Note on UP
release, 12/29/63.)
59 FBI memoranda make clear that microphones were one
of the techniques being used in the effort to obtain Information
about Dr. King's private life. (Memorandum from F. J.
Baumgardner to William C. Sullivan 1/28/64.) The microphones
were installed at the following places: Washington: Willard
Hotel (Jan. 1964) ; Milwaukee: Shroeder Hotel (Jan. 1964)
; Honolulu: Hilton Hawaiian Village (Feb. 1964) ; Detroit:
Statler Hotel (March 1964) ; Sacramento: Senator Motel
(Apr. 1964) ; New York City: Park Sheraton Hotel (Jan.
1965), Americana Hotel (Jan. and Nov. 1965), Sheraton
Atlantic Hotel (May 1965), Astor Hotel (Oct. 1965), New
York Hilton Hotel (Oct. 1965).
60 FBI summary memorandum, 10/3/75; memorandum from F.
J. Baumgardner to William C. Sullivan, 3/26/64; memorandum
from William C. Sullivan to Alan Belmont, 2/22/64; and
unsigned memorandum, 2/28/64.
61 Memorandum from F. J. Baumgardner to William C. Sullivan,
3/27/64; memorandum from New York Field Office to FBI
Headquarters, 6/2/64; memorandum from F. J. Baumgardner
to William Sullivan, 7/14/65.
62 Sullivan 11/1/75, pp. 104-105, staff summary of a
special agent interview, 7/25/75. Three days before the
tape was mailed, Director Hoover had publicly branded
Dr. King "the most notorious liar in the country"
and Dr. King had responded with a criticism of the Bureau.
(Memorandum from Cartha DeLoach to John Mohr, 11/18/64;
telegram from Martin Luther King to J. Edgar Hoover 11/19/64.)
63 This paragraph appears in a document in the form of
a letter which the FBI has supplied to the Committee and
which the Bureau maintains was discovered in the files
of former Assistant Director Sullivan. (FBI memorandum
to the Select Committee, 9/18/75.) Sullivan stated that
he did not recall the letter and suggested that it may
have been "planted" in his files by his former
colleagues. (Sullivan 11/1/75, p. 104.) Congressman Andrew
Young has informed the Committee that an identical paragraph
was contained in the letter which was actually received
by Dr. King with the tape, and that the letter the committee
had, supplied by the Bureau, appears to be an "early
draft." (Young, 2/19/76, P. 36.)
Sullivan said that the purpose of sending the tape was
"to blackmail King into silence . . . to stop him
from criticising Hoover; . . . to diminish his stature.
In other words, if it caused a break between Coretta and
Martin Luther King, that would diminish his stature. It
would weaken him as a leader." (Sullivan, 11/1/75,
11/26/75, p. 152.)
64 Young, 2/19/76, p. 37, Time magazine had reported
earlier in the year that Dr. King had attempted suicide
twice as a child. [Time magazine, Jan. 4, 1964.]
65 Several newsmen have informed the Committee that they
were offered this kind of material or that they were aware
that such material was available. Some have refused to
Identify the individuals who made the offers and others
have said they could not recall their identities. Former
FBI officials have denied that tapes or transcripts were
offered to the press (e.g., DeLoach testimony, 11/26/75,
p. 152) and the Bureau maintains that their files contain
no documents reflecting that this occurred.
66 Staff interviews of Roy Wilkins, 11/23/75, and James
Farmer, 11/13/75.
67 Memorandum from Cartha DeLoach to John Mohr, 11/27/64;
staff interview of James Farmer, 11/13/75. Three days
after Wilkins' meeting with DeLoach, Dr. King asked to
see the Director, telling the press "the time has
come to bring this controversy to an end." (UPI release,
12/1/64) Dr. King and Hoover met the following day; the
meeting was described as "amicable." (Memoranda
from Cartha DeLoach to John Mohr, 12/1/64 and 12/2/64.)
Despite the "amicable" meeting, the Bureau's
campaign against Dr. King continued.
68 Memorandum from F. J. Baumgardner to William C. Sullivan,
11/30/64; memorandum from Legat to FBI Headquarters, 12/10/64.
Steps were also taken to thwart a meeting which Dr. King
was planning to have with a foreign leader during this
same trip (Memorandum from F. J. Baumgardner to William
C. Sullivan, 11/10/64; memorandum, from FBI Headquarters
to Legat, 11/10/64), and to influence a pending USIA decision
to send Dr. King on a ten-day lecture trip in Africa after
receiving the Nobel Prize. (Memorandum from F. J. Baumgardner
to William C. Sullivan, 11/12/64.)
69 The Bureau was in touch with Atlanta Constitution
publisher Ralph McGill, and tried to obtain the assistance
of the Constitution's editor, Eugene Patterson, to undermine
the banquet. (Memorandum from William C. Sullivan to Alan
Belmont, 12/21/64; staff summary of Eugene Patterson interview,
4/30/75.) A governor's assistance was sought in the effort
to "water down" the "King day." (Memorandum
from F. J. Baumgardner to William C. Sullivan, 3/2/65.)
70 The Bureau had decided it would be "astounding"
for Dr. King to have an audience with the Pope and that
plans for any such meeting should be "nipped In the
bud." (Memorandum from F. J. Baumgardner to William
C. Sullivan, 8/31/64.) When the Bureau failed to block
the meeting and the press reported that the audience was
about to occur, the Director noted that this was "astounding."
(FBI Director's notation on UPI release, 9/18/64). FBI
officials took immediate steps to determine "if there
could possibly have been a slip-up'' (Memorandum from
F. J. Baumgardner to William C. Sullivan, 9/17/64.)
71 The Bureau had decided that it would be "shocking
indeed that the possibility exists that King may receive
an Honorary Degree from the same Institution (Marquette)
which honored the Director with such a Degree in 1950."
With respect to Springfield College, where the Director
had also been offered an honorary degree, the Bureau's
decision about whom to contact included the observation
that "it would not appear to be prudent to attempt
to deal with" the President of the college because
he "is very close to Sargent Shriver." (Memorandum
from F. J. Baumgardner to William C. Sullivan, 3/4/64;
and 4/2/64; memorandum from Cartha DeLoach to John Mohr,
4/8/64.)
72 Memorandum from Cartha DeLoach to Clyde Tolson, 10/25/66
and 10/26/66. At about the same time, the Bureau leaked
a story to the press about Dr. King's intention to seek
financial assistance from Teamsters Union President James
R. Hoffa because "[d]isclosure would be mutually
embarrassing to both men and probably cause King's quest
for badly needed funds to fail in this instance'' (Memorandum
from F. J. Baumgardner to William C. Sullivan, 10/28/66.)
The Bureau also tried to block the National Science Foundation
(NSF) from dealing with the SCLC. "It is incredible
that an outfit such as the SCLC should be utilized for
the purpose of recruiting Negroes to take part In the
NSF program, particularly where funds of the U.S. Government
are involved." (Memorandum from F. J. Baumgardner
to William C. Sullivan, 12/17/64.)
73 Memorandum from Special Agent to Cartha DeLoach, 11/3/64.
74 "It is shocking Indeed that King continues to
be honored by religious groups." (Memorandum from
F. J. Baumgardner to William C. Sullivan, 2/1/65.) Contacts
were made with representatives of the National Council
of Churches of Christ, the Baptist World Alliance, the
American Church in Paris, and Catholic Church, (Memoranda
from William C. Sullivan to Alan Belmont, 6/12/64, 12/15/64
and 2/16/64; memorandum from F. J. Baumgardner to William
C. Sullivan, 2/18/66; memorandum from Chicago Meld Office
to FBI Headquarters, 2/24/66, and memorandum from Legat,
Paris, to FBI Headquarters, 4/14/66 and 5/9/66.) The Director
did disapprove a suggestion that religious leaders be
permitted "to listen to sources we have" (FBI
Director's note on memorandum from Jones to Thomas Bishop,
12/8/64.)
75 Memorandum from Charles Brennan to William C. Sullivan,
3/8/67. The Bureau also disseminated to "friendly
media sources" a newspaper article which was critical
of Dr. King's position on the Vietnam war. The stated
purposes were to "publicize King as a traitor to
his country and his race," and to "reduce his
income," (memorandum from George C. Moore to William
C. Sullivan, 10/18/67.) "Background information"
was also given to at least one wire service (memorandum
from Sizoo to William C. Sullivan, 5/24/65).
76 Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to New York Field
Office 5/18/67. There had been rumors about a "peace
ticket" headed by Dr. King and Benjamin Spock.
77 Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to New York Field
Office, 4/13/64; memorandum from New York Field Office
to FBI Headquarters, 4/2/64.
78 Memorandum from Cartha DeLoach to John Mohr, 8/14/65;
memorandum from F. J. Baumgardner to William C. Sullivan,
1/10/67.
'Memorandum from F. J. Baumgardner to William C. Sullivan,
1/22/64; memorandum from Nicholas Callahan to John Mohr,
1/31/64. On one occasion the testimony leaked to other
members of Congress, prompting the Director to note, "Someone
on Rooney's Committee certainly betrayed the secrecy of
the 'off the record' testimony I gave re: King."
(Director's note on memorandum from Cartha DeLoach to
John Mohr, 3/16/64.)
81 Memorandum from FBI Headquarters to all SACs, 3/4/68.
82 Memorandum from George C. Moore to William C. Sullivan,
3/26/68.
83 Memorandum from Atlanta Field Office to FBI Headquarters,
3/18/69.
84 Memoranda: From George C. Moore to William C. Sullivan,
1/17/69; and from Jones to Thomas Bishop, 3/18/69. Steps
were even taken to prevent the issuance of "commemorative
medals." (Memorandum from Jones to Thomas Bishop,
5/22/68.)
|