jamesd@echeque.com # # If those radicals were being murdered by the feds, the radical # left would have been eager to have them investigated, instead # of closing their eyes and looking the other way, and suddenly # dropping vanished radicals down the memory hatch. Being subject to: o illegal "Echelon" monitoring o murderous attempts on the organization o a "grand scale" of FBI interference with civil rights orgs o FBI aiding false imprisonment ...doesn't exactly make for a peaceful democratic process. ---- : The Puzzle Palace : Inside the National Security Agency, : America's most secret intelligence organization : Author James Bamford, 1983 revision, ISBN 0-14-00.6748-5 # # P317: 1962. Now, for the first time, NSA had begun turning its massive ear # inward toward its own citizens. With no laws or legislative charter to # block its path, the ear continued to turn. # # # P319: The Secret Service, the CIA, the FBI and the DIA submitted entries # for the NSA's watch list. # # The names on the various watch lists ranged from members of radical political # groups to celebrities to ordinary citizens involved in protest against their # government. # # Included were such well-known figures as Jane Fonda, Joan Baez, Dr. Benjamin # Spock, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., the Reverand Ralph Abernathy, Black # Panther leader Eldridge Cleaver, and Chicago Seven defendants Abbie Hoffman # and David T. Dellinger. * "The Rise of the Computer State", David Burnham, 1984 * * p128: Federal authorities were concerned that foreign governments MIGHT * try to influence civil rights leaders in the United States. The list * of Americans monitored ballooned as political groups, celebrities and * ordinary citizens were added to the 'watch lists'. The NSA surveillance * was illegal and was instantly stopped [years later] when it appeared * that Congress might learn about the eavesdropping. * Main Justice, by Jim McGee and Brian Duffy, 1996, ISBN 0-684-81135-9 * * The FBI had been spying on members of the civil rights movement * to discredit Martin Luther King and destroy the civil rights * movement, government files showed. There had been burglaries * and illegal wiretapping on a grand scale. At the same time Hoover was in power and developed the "Security Portfolio" and attacked civil rights movements in the United States, a Black Panther named Elmer "Geronimo" Pratt was framed for a murder he didn't commit by the FBI. * "Above the Law", by David Burnham, ISBN 0-684-80699-1, 1996 * * At 4:00 A.M. on December 4, 1969, for example, a special fourteen-man * squad of Chicago police officers raided a house used by the Black * Panther Party. During the shoot-first-ask-questions-later raid, police * fired at least ninety-eight rounds into the apartment. Illinois chairman * Fred Hampton and Peoria chairman Mark Clark were killed. * * An FBI informant gave the bureau specific information about where * Hampton was probably sleeping, and a detailed floor plan of the house * which the special squad used during its raid. * * Thirteen years later, in November 1982, District Court Judge John F. * Grady determined that there was sufficient evidence of an FBI-led * conspiracy to deprive the Panthers of their civil rights, and awarded * the plaintiffs $1.85 million in damages. : 5/30/97 MSNBC : : After more than a quarter of a century in prison, a Black Panther : activist has won the right to a new trial. A judge ruled there had : been prosecutorial misconduct. The judge overturned the conviction : when it was disclosed the government prosecutors withheld critical : evidence: : : o They never said the informer was working with and paid by : the FBI. : : o A former FBI agent also agrees with his alibi: that he was : in the Black Panther HQ at the time of the murder. That the : FBI knew this because they were monitoring the HQ. : : o And the jury never knew the eyewitness, who has since died, : had misidentified people in other cases. : : He has been turned down for parole 16 times, and had been in prison : longer than most murderers. : : : 6/10/97 MSNBC: Mr. Pratt has been freed over the U.S. Attorney's : objections. His first minutes of freedom were spent with his : 94-year-old mother. : : Court TV: : : Judge Dickey overturned the conviction last month, ruling that : prosecutors failed to tell the defense that the key witness against : Pratt was an infiltrator and paid informant for the FBI and police. : *** This primary "witness" had claimed Pratt confessed!!! *** : : "It's madness in there," Pratt said after walking out of jail : on $25,000 bail. "You have political prisoners on top of political : prisoners. I'm only one of a great many that should be exposed, : should be addressed." : : The same judge who presided over Pratt's original trial set him free. : Johnny Cochran said Pratt spent the first eight years of his sentence : in solitary confinement. That's a long time to sit in jail just because the FBI didn't want to reveal its monitoring operations, isn't it?
-- jamesd@echeque.com
If those radicals were being murdered by the feds, the radical left would have been eager to have them investigated, instead of closing their eyes and looking the other way, and suddenly dropping vanished radicals down the memory hatch.
On 15 Jul 2001, at 22:22, George@Orwellian.Org wrote:
Being subject to:
o illegal "Echelon" monitoring o murderous attempts on the organization o a "grand scale" of FBI interference with civil rights orgs o FBI aiding false imprisonment
...doesn't exactly make for a peaceful democratic process.
The blank panthers and the rest were opposed to the bourgeois democratic process. They did not require any pressure from the spooks to persuade them to deviate from it. --digsig James A. Donald 6YeGpsZR+nOTh/cGwvITnSR3TdzclVpR0+pr3YYQdkG TWVsSmXlKGPgP5psBmekM8uQU/SiJ1zqTAZkuMPA 45fu5MBEuiwlzf2k7dIvi6XLnZh9ypkkByC7bJBkv
Quoting George@Orwellian.Org (George@Orwellian.Org):
: After more than a quarter of a century in prison, a Black Panther : activist has won the right to a new trial. A judge ruled there had : been prosecutorial misconduct. The judge overturned the conviction : when it was disclosed the government prosecutors withheld critical : evidence:
That's a long time to sit in jail just because the FBI didn't want to reveal its monitoring operations, isn't it?
What a surprise that the interests of State Officials trumps due process. It's also a shocking surprise that the individuals employed by the various agencies collectively remained silent. "Broken eggs and all that." Regards, Steve -- ``The pressure of society forces upon us conduct which later we discover to be necessary for our happiness and for the preservation of a society whose survival is a condition of our happiness.'' -- H. J. Paton, ``Can Reason Be Practical?''
participants (3)
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George@Orwellian.Org
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jamesd@echeque.com
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Steve Thompson