Dark History - 120: PROOF that the FBI targeted, tracked, and unalived Americans! | The Dark History of COINTELPRO
Episode Date: February 7, 2024Hi friends, happy Thursday Welcome to the Dark History podcast. It’s no secret that the FBI has had a bad reputation for spying, sleuthing, and watchlists. But where did it all begin? At some point..., the FBI went from just keeping an eye on people to actively trying to ELIMINATE them. They had their sights set on an up-and-coming inspirational leader from within a growing American movement, and they would do whatever it took to take them down. Today, we’re taking a deep dive into the dark waters of… COINTELPRO. I appreciate you for coming by, and tune in next week for more Dark History. Want some cool Bailey Merch? Shop Dark History Merch: https://www.baileysarian.com _______ We have a special deal for our audience: Get your first visit for only five dollars at https://www.Apostrophe.com/DARKHISTORY when you use our code: DARKHISTORY. That’s a savings of fifteen dollars! For listeners of the show, Dipsea is offering an extended 30 day free trial when you go to https://www.DipseaStories.com/DARKHISTORY. The Fits Everybody collection and more perfect-fit essentials are available now at https://www.SKIMS.com. Plus, get free shipping on orders over seventy five dollars! After you place your order, be sure to let them know I sent you! Select "podcast" in the survey and be sure to select Dark History in the dropdown menu that follows. Go to https://www.Zocdoc.com/DARKHISTORY and download the Zocdoc app for FREE. Then find and book a top-rated doctor today. _______ You can find the Dark History podcast on Apple, Spotify, wherever you listen to your podcasts, and every Thursday here on my YouTube for the visual side of things. Apple Podcast- https://www.apple.co/darkhistory Dark History Merch- https://www.baileysarian.com _______ FOLLOW ME AROUND  Tik Tok: https://bit.ly/3e3jL9v Instagram: http://bit.ly/2nbO4PR Facebook: http://bit.ly/2mdZtK6 Twitter: http://bit.ly/2yT4BLV Pinterest: http://bit.ly/2mVpXnY Youtube: http://bit.ly/1HGw3Og Snapchat: https://bit.ly/3cC0V9d Discord: https://discord.gg/BaileySarian RECOMMEND A STORY HERE: cases4bailey@gmail.com Business Related Emails: baileysarianteam@wmeagency.com Business Related Mail: Bailey Sarian 4400 W. Riverside Dr., Ste 110-300 Burbank, CA 91505
Transcript
Discussion (0)
So over like the holiday break, I got really sick. I've already mentioned this. You got it.
I got sick and I had like a lot of free time. So I was watching movies and I was reading books.
And I for some reason went down this rabbit hole about Bernie Madoff. Do you know Bernie Madoff
Ponzi scheme? If you don't, Bernie Madoff was a Wall Street criminal who stole something like
$65 billion. Completely insane. I was like, how do you do that? I want to know. So it turns out
his sons actually turned him in. He had two sons and then the daughter-in-laws, they wrote like a tell all book, you know, their side of the story. And girl, let me tell you, I was like, I had to read it because I was like, what do they have to say? So while I was reading all about like the FBI investigating Bernie, I got to think about other high profile FBI cases. Like, you know, Jonestown, Black Dahlia, the McMillian's case with the scratchers. And I kept coming across this one major story. And I was like, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I, you know, Jonestown, Black Dahlia, ooh, the McMillian's case with the scratchers.
Yeah.
And I kept coming across this one major story,
FBI story that I had never heard of before.
By the way, it was Bernie Madoff books.
They were not good.
I could, eh.
Anyways, this story was called Co-Intel Pro.
And with each new thing I learned about it,
I was like, how the hell did I not learn
about this in school for sure?
And like, why aren't we talking about this more?
There's something here.
Are we paying attention?
Today we're taking a deep dive
into the dark waters of Cointel Pro.
["The Dark Waters of Cointel Pro"]
Hi friends. I hope you're having a wonderful day today. My name is Bailey Sarian and I'd like to welcome you to my podcast. Hi, it's Dark History. Here, we believe history does
not have to be boring. A lot of the times it's tragic, let's be honest. Sometimes it's
happy and a lot of it can be uncomfortable. But either way, it's our
dark history. So all you have to do is sit back, relax, and let's talk about that hot, juicy history
goss. Joan over here is definitely not the FBI. And then we have Paul dressed as an FBI. It's very Are you FBI? No? But you are?
So our story starts in America in the 1950s.
You know around the time of the white picket fences and leave it to beaver.
That's my favorite porno.
But for millions of other Americans, things weren't so neat and pretty.
During the 50s, social justice groups were popping up left and right,
and they were demanding major change in society. And most importantly, I mean, they were demanding
equality. So simple, right? These groups were showing up all across the country in different
cities, and this was catching the attention of America's hall monitors. The Federal Bureau of
Investigation, aka the FBI, they know likey. For years, the
FBI had been secretly keeping tabs on these groups. They're probably thinking like, hey,
this whole social justice thing will go away soon, right? But the opposite was happening.
Civil rights movements were taking hold in America, and it wasn't just within communities
of color. It was all over the country.
People in power started to see the rise of these groups as a threat to their freedom,
so there was just a sense of panic in the air.
The FBI decided to start a new program called the Counterintelligence Program, aka CoIntelPro.
So CoIntelPro was a top secret undercover operation that was monitoring all of the grassroots
movements happening in America.
And if they were even a tiny bit suspicious, the FBI would send in agents to break up those
groups because ultimately they believed a tiny movement could end up becoming powerful
enough to take down the government.
But even if it seemed like a harmless organization, these Cointel Pro agents would cause chaos
and disruption and cause the individual groups to break up.
Strama. And this was all proven in an FBI document, which stated that the purpose of Cointel Pro was to quote, expose, disrupt, misdirect, discredit,
or otherwise neutralize the activities
of the black nationalists."
End quote.
So I feel like that's pretty straightforward
as to what their plan was, you know?
Some of Cointel's biggest targets were organizations
like the Communist Party,
any groups led by black Americans,
and also the American Indian movement.
The American Indian movement was a grassroots movement headed up by Indigenous Americans
trying to fight back against things like discrimination, poverty, and police brutality.
And when they started to get a little too much attention in the media, COINTELPRO would
then step in and take action.
Agents would be sent undercover to these groups
to stir shit up. They would start rumors about other members to get everyone to like turn
on each other. And it was just like high school drama. Like I heard that Jake wants to be
in charge of everyone and thinks Michael is a dumbass and a bad leader. And his breath
stinks. Just plant that seed and walk away, you know?
And people within the group would fight and be like,
oh my God, I heard that same shit, that's so weird.
And he does have bad breath, you know?
Look, people within the group would fight
and lose sight of the mission
and it would just be a whole mess.
This usually worked, but let's say if this didn't work,
then agents would round up the leaders of the movement
and throw them in jail for months at high bail costs so they wouldn't be able to get
out.
But if that didn't slow them down, Cointel would play even dirtier.
So they would use a tactic called snitch jacketing.
So this was essentially when agents would start rumors that people within a movement
are snitches for the FBI.
Even if that was totally untrue, which it usually was,
all the FBI needed to do was plant the seed of suspicion.
People who were snitched, jacketed,
would usually be driven out of the organization
or even sometimes killed.
Between all of that, this would cause major damage
to the movement by creating chaos in their ranks.
Many of these groups never really even got a fair chance to make real change happen.
And of course the FBI didn't play by the rules when they were messing with them.
They were just taking down these groups by any means necessary.
Almost 80% of all of their actions against civil rights groups were targeted at one in
particular, the Black Panther Party.
This organization focused on making political moves to help Black communities get access
to decent housing and education, equal rights in society, and to fight police brutality.
In the media, they only seem to focus on how this group seemed to carry weapons.
It's like, yeah, of course they wanted to, they wanted to defend themselves.
And don't they have a right to bear arms?
The fact that they had these weapons,
it seemed to upset a lot of people.
So they ended up getting labeled as an extremist group.
The FBI believed that black nationalist groups,
especially the Black Panthers,
were essentially anarchists trying to ruin America.
And there was one guy they had their eyes on,
a leader capturing the hearts and minds of thousands of people
and pushing for radical change in America.
Our country has our priorities way out of whack.
Like, it seems too easy to get a credit card.
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slash dark history. The FBI's director at the time, his name was J. Edgar Hoover, the same slime ball we
covered last episode of Remember Yeah.
He absolutely hated a guy named Martin Luther King Jr.
He hated him.
Even though MLK was all about peace, didn't matter.
Hoover and Cointel Pro saw him as an uncontrollable threat that needed to be neutralized, and
anyone who disagreed with Hoover was freaking out.
Sadly, MLK was shot and killed in 1968, and there are many rumors out there that Cointel
Pro was actually involved in his death.
But nothing has been proven, just like all signs point to them.
So with that problem, quote- quote, problem out of the way,
the FBI had their sights set on another leader
within the black community, a guy named Fred Hampton.
So Fred was born on August 30th, 1948 in Chicago.
And even at a young age, many thought of him
as like a very natural leader.
He petitioned his school to allow black girls
to compete for homecoming queen alongside the white girls.
He protested against the lack of black teachers and administrators at the school,
and he even rallied for an integrated pool and rec center in his neighborhood.
Like, Fred's just amazing, right?
At home, Fred would host these free breakfasts on the weekend for kids in the neighborhood who were hungry.
I mean, his whole life was about social justice and giving back.
And after he graduated high school, Fred even marched alongside MLK at a peaceful protest.
He went on to help negotiate a non-aggression truce between Chicago gangs in the area.
It was kind of like, what can't Fred do, you know?
Then Fred joined the Black Panthers and there he naturally rose up the ranks really
quick and he earned an important leadership position within the organization. Around 1969,
Fred and his girlfriend Deborah got engaged and pretty soon after that Deborah was pregnant.
So he's got a leadership position, he has a family on the way, like his future is feeling bright.
So naturally this is when the FBI is like,
a black man thriving, not on our watch.
By this time, in the mid 1960s,
the FBI was 12 years into their secret
co-until-pro mission.
They had spent over a decade secretly attempting
to undermine black leaders of the civil rights movement.
Simply put, the FBI thought these men had too much power,
so they felt threatened that the fabric of America was about to unravel. It looked a lot like Fred
was going to be what Hoover believed was the quote black messiah that he was afraid of. He was
about to make it his personal mission to stop Fred from building a movement that would become too
big to take down. So the FBI, this up and comer from Chicago, had the ability to unite not just black Americans,
but millions of people from all walks of life. Fred's political power was growing by the day,
and he was on the fast track to becoming a major power player in the civil rights movement.
So the FBI decided something drastic had to be done. Around the same time across town,
there was a troubled young man named William O'Neill.
Now, William, he was 18 and he was 11 in Chicago.
And at the age of 18, he had built himself,
you know, quite the criminal rap sheet, you know.
He had gotten into trouble for things like kidnapping,
home invasion and like torture, so small stuff.
And most recently, he had driven a stolen car
across state lines and he got into a car accident
and fled the scene.
And that was kind of the cherry on top
for the shit Sunday for young William.
Because he crossed state lines, the FBI gets involved.
So an FBI agent working under Hoover
comes to William with an offer.
The agent told William that every single one of his charges,
not just the car theft, all of them would poof,
magically go away.
And it would go away if he did a couple of favors
for the FBI.
Just like a few small little things, some errands.
So they tell William, here's what you gotta do.
You gotta go to Chicago.
You gotta join the Black Panther Party, okay?
Become friends with everybody.
Get close with the man named Fred Hampton.
Then you're gonna report it all back to us
and everything will be okay for you, William.
So naturally, I mean, hello, William has two choices
in his mind.
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don't take the deal and spend
probably forever in prison or two, become a spy for the FBI and get a fresh start in life.
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So over the next year,
William joined the Black Panthers and rose up the ranks.
He became not just like a reliable member of the organization,
but also a trusted friend of Fred.
Oh yeah.
So William was given keys to several Black Panther headquarters
and safe houses, and not only that, William became Fred's bodyguard and head of security.
Meanwhile, William was reporting back to the FBI secretly giving all the info on Fred and the group.
During this time, the Chicago police were also randomly conducting raids on Panther
offices. They were rounding up members of the organization and like arresting them on whatever
charges they could think of. For example like Panthers would get arrested on reports that they
were stealing cars and if like the police looked into it turned out they were not stealing cars,
they were actually driving their own cars.
So yeah.
Police would like show up maybe where the Panthers were meeting, claiming that there
was reports of a stabbing.
And then that would turn out to be false.
Panthers even got arrested on charges of assaulting officers when an assault never took place.
It was just coming from all sides.
The police even burned down the building where the Panther offices were.
But that didn't stop Fred or the Panthers.
In fact, it only motivated them to work harder.
And to them, it proved exactly what they were fighting against.
Police brutality and corruption.
So the Chicago police and the FBI are talking.
They're like, this obviously isn't working.
We tried arresting people, nothing happened.
We even tried blowing everything up
and like it didn't work.
So the FBI decided they had to ramp things up.
They felt that if they wanted to kill the snake,
they needed to cut off the head.
The FBI told William they're informant
that he needed to get a detailed floor plan
of Fred's apartment.
And on that floor plan,
they wanted to know which specific bed Fred slept in,
which is like, hmm, why would you wanna know that?
That's kinda weird.
William wasn't in a position to ask questions.
You know, he didn't wanna go to prison.
So he just did what he was told.
He ended up getting this floor plan
and he handed it right over.
And then he'll never believe
what the FBI ended up doing with that information. On the evening of December 3rd, 1969, Fred taught a political
education class at a nearby church where William was in charge of security. After that, Fred
invited some members of the Panthers over for a little dinner at his apartment, which was located
on the west side of Chicago. William steps up and volunteers to cook the meal
for all of the guys.
And everyone's like, oh my God, what a nice guy, you know?
Great.
While he was doing all that,
William slipped something called secobarbital
into one of Fred's drinks.
This is a fast-acting sedative.
So it would knock you right out.
He was literally going to aqua-tifana someone.
Fred.
And people, like literally people have been doing this
for years, right?
William did this because the FBI told him
that the Chicago police were going to raid Fred's home
that very night.
They wanted to make sure that Fred wouldn't be awake
during the raid.
Eventually the dinner party ends and William leaves
and Fred winds down for the night.
He calls his mom to check in.
Not sure what they talked about, doesn't matter.
And at about 1.30 a.m., Fred falls asleep
while he's on the phone with his mom.
From 1.30 a.m. to about 4.44 a.m.,
Fred is sleeping peacefully in his bed
next to his pregnant fiance, Deborah.
There were also a few other panthers
sleeping over as well,
but then 4.45 a.m am rolls around and all hell breaks loose.
The front door of our apartment is kicked in. 14 Chicago police officers in
Shreikos storm his place. And right away, it was clear that this was not a normal raid.
These guys were armed with pistols, shotguns, machine guns, and knew every square inch of Fred's
place thanks to William's floor plan. They first encountered a panther who was on guard that night.
His name was Mark. Mark was armed and as soon as the cops saw him, they shot him right in the heart.
It was said that Mark did shoot back, but it's unclear if his gun went off after he was killed
because maybe like when he fell like the gun went off
or maybe like his arm or body spasmed
and that's because of,
and then that's why the gun went off.
Do you know what I'm saying?
You get it.
But the bullet from Mark's gun shot upward into the ceiling.
The cops marched through the apartment
firing their weapons the whole time
despite the Panthers pleading with them to stop.
Like it was not necessary.
Reports say they fired about 90 bullets, wounding several Panthers, as they made their way to
Fred's bedroom.
A fellow Panther hurried into Fred's bedroom trying to wake him up, saying like, Chairman,
Chairman, wake up, pigs are vamping.
But again, Fred was drugged, and he really couldn't wake up even if he wanted to.
The details of what happens next comes from Fred's fiance, Deborah, who witnessed all of this first hand.
Deborah said the cops stormed the entrance to the bedroom and would not stop shooting.
She said it felt like forever, but it only had lasted 10 minutes, but still 10 minutes feels like forever.
Plaster was flying off the walls and so many bullets were shot into the mattress that Deborah
said it was vibrating. The man who tried to wake Fred up screamed, stop shooting, stop shooting, we all,
we got a pregnant sister here. Somehow Fred and Debra survived this barrage of bullets.
Eventually the cops did stop shooting once they broke into the bedroom. Even though Debra was
visibly pregnant, they dragged her into the kitchen and the horror continued. Deborah heard one of the cops say like,
is he still alive? And then moments later, two more gun shots ring out.
And then she said she heard another cop say like he's good and dead now.
Fucked up.
Fred was never fully conscious, never left his bed, and was executed at close range with two
shots to his head. So when information started to come to light
about what happened that night, I mean, people were shot.
Fred was killed, Mark, Clark, the security guard was killed
and four others were injured.
The authorities who raided the home
shot over 90 bullets in just a few minutes.
And it was reported that the Black Panthers
only shot a single bullet.
But still, the authorities had the upper hand
when it came to the media.
The police knew it would be more,
it would be like he said, she said,
no, the police, they're just fucking assholes.
And they went to the media and they told everyone,
hey, it was a shootout, you know,
what were we supposed to do?
They were shooting us.
So we, we, bang, bang, shot back. Like, what were we supposed to do? They were shooting us. So we, we, they shot back.
Like we'd saved you guys.
You should be thanking us.
The police, Chicago police decided to get ahead of the news
and release their own public statement.
They praised their officers for having quote,
the professional discipline in not killing all the panthers
present, unquote.
Yeah, they were praising each other
for not killing all of them.
I guess that's pretty bad on itself. No further comment needed.
They explained to the public that the Panthers started firing at them through the apartment
door before they even entered the space. The Chicago police even went out of their way to film.
They literally took part of their budget, right?
Chicago police budget to film like a reenactment video.
They invested in one of these.
It's all cheesy, showing how the raid went down.
You know, like they were shooting at us
and we were just being police officers.
And the public was just like, oh my God, that's crazy.
I'm glad the police were okay.
They saved the day.
At the same time, the Black Panthers are figuring out
how to deal with all the bad press.
They were seen as the bad guys here, right?
Very aggressive shooting at the police.
On top of all that, they had lost their beloved leader
and one of their members.
A group knew from the surviving witnesses
what actually went down, and they were understandably
upset that the story being put out in the media was complete bullshit.
They decided the only way forward was to let the truth speak for itself so the Black Panthers
opened up the crime scene, aka Fred's apartment, to journalists.
They're like, come on in.
Look at the evidence.
And pretty much right when they stepped onto the scene, they knew something was off. Now originally, the cops alleged that there
were bullet holes all over the door of the bedroom. But when the journalists took a gander,
it was clear to them that the only thing on the door were nails to hold up like a few posters.
There were no bullet holes to be found. On top of that, there was a bunch of empty shells and bullets on the ground,
but they only matched police weapons.
So the journalists published what they saw,
but still nothing was done about it.
What are they gonna do?
Because the Black Panthers had already at this point
been dragged through the mud
and painted as these violent enemies of America.
There's nobody really cared.
So the death of Fred Hampton was just ruled
a justifiable homicide.
The Black Panthers, for a great reason, were outraged
in the whole country to send it deeper into chaos.
And like this set into motion, a chain of events
that would eventually expose Hoover, the FBI,
and their super secret Co-Andel Pro scheme.
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Now let's get back to today's story.
By this point in 1970, both Martin Luther King Jr.
and Fred Hampton were dead.
Rumors and conspiracy theories of the FBI
destroying civil rights groups were on the lips
of everyone across the country.
But the problem was no one had any hard evidence
until one day a physics professor decided to go
and like figure this shit out.
He's like, I'll do it.
William was a physics professor at a college
and he was like on a mission to prove
that the FBI was trying to shut up anyone
who questioned the government.
So he put together another underground group
of seven other activists and they called themselves
the Citizens Committee to investigate the FBI.
Pretty much right away, they knew the only way they could get the information they needed was
to break into the FBI's office, which was in Pennsylvania. One of the activists was a woman
named Bonnie, and in 1971, Bonnie disguised herself as a college student and went undercover inside
the FBI. She told everyone she was conducting research
on work opportunities for women.
And people totally bought it.
She's like, yeah, it's cool.
While she was in there, she took notes on everything.
The number of guards, the location of filing cabinets,
the entrances, the exits.
You know, so I like going through people's desks.
Sometimes they always have like snacks stuffed in their drawers. So I'm sure she did some of that too. She was trying to create like a perfect plan for the committee to easily slip in and out of the building to get the information they needed.
when they knew everyone's attention would be somewhere else, like even the FBI's attention. And I was thinking, well, how the hell are they gonna distract? How do you distract the FBI?
Well, March 8th, 1971, an iconic boxer named Muhammad Ali was facing off against Joe Frazier.
And it's like the fight of the century. I'm sure you know about it because it was the
five of the century. Frazier was the world about it because it was the five of the century.
For Asia, it was the world heavyweight champ at the time
and Ali was fighting him to get a title back.
So everyone was all pumped up for this.
Like this was a huge event.
And anyone who had a TV or whatever was tuning in, okay?
If you were alive and breathing,
most likely you were tuning in.
It was estimated that more than 300 million people
were watching this fight. So
they knew that the good people at the FBI would most likely be tuning in as well.
Which was like really smart, huh? I wouldn't have thought of that.
After the fight began, all eight members of the citizens' committee waited until the FBI building
was locked up for the night. Once everyone's gone, that's when they go up to the building
and they try and like open up the door. and they find out that the door recently had been
like the lock had been replaced with a new one. And I'm like, oh, fuck, that sucks. It's
unpickable. So they had to pivot, pivot and push their way through another door by just
using a sheer force. Luckily they had some tools.
They had a crowbar.
So they used that crowbar to wedge open a side entrance door
and one by one, they just like split into the building.
So once they got in,
their plan couldn't have been more perfect.
They found an empty building with zero guards,
unlocked filing cabinets and a treasure trove
of confidential files ready to be snatched up.
So the group, they're just grabbing whatever the hell they could,
and they quickly just got the hell out of there.
Once they were safe back at their home base,
they realized they managed to take around 1000 FBI files.
Oh shit, yeah.
They sat down, they got to work trying to find evidence
that Americans were being spied on.
But then they've ended up reading the documents,
and what they found was way more juicier. They're like, oh, shit. The committee knew if they had released the
information themselves, most likely they'd get in trouble and nobody would believe them. So they
went over probably to like a library or something. Maybe, um, remember Kiko's? Kiko's? Anyways, they
went and made a bunch of copy machine copies of these documents.
And they made sure to make copies of the documents
that had like the most damning evidence on them.
And then they sent them to different news outlets
and different journalists,
and even to two senators across the country.
Personally, this is a dream job.
I love secrets.
I love confidential document.
Like I would love to do this.
Not that I'm going to FBI, don't put me on your list.
I'm not going to, okay.
I'm not able to climb fences or anything like that.
Anyways, most news organizations
didn't wanna publish any of this information right away.
I mean, it was really scary shit.
And it was the government, but there was one journalist
who was like, nah, fuck you guys, I'm gonna do it. A woman named Betty Metzger at the Washington Post.
You go Betty. She was ready to play dirty and I love it. Betty was sent copies of 14 stolen FBI
documents that exposed the truth that there were two FBI's, the public one and the secret one.
The findings were published on the front page of the Washington Post in the article called, Skull in Documents,
Describe FBI Surveillance Activities.
And girl, of course,
describe the attention of the American people.
The secret FBI embodies words,
quote,
used deceptions,
disinformation and violence as tools to harass,
damage and silence people whose political opinions,
J. Edgar Hoover, opposed."
And quote, I think that says a lot, right?
You don't even need to add commentary to that.
But people are reading this and they're like,
wait a minute, we thought the FBI were the good guys.
You know, so they're starting to like question.
And then word got back to J. Edgar Hoover
about this article and he was, he was pissed.
When this first started, the FBI was seen as like American heroes, taking care of business,
keeping everyone safe, and suddenly there were like cracks showing in that perfect image
that the FBI had.
Betty said quote, the overall impression in directives, written by Hoover, was that the
FBI thought of black Americans as falling into two categories, black people who should be spied on and black
people who should spy on other black people for the FBI."
And in this document, dumped the American people learned another thing.
One of the memos in the stolen files had something written on the heading, Cointel Pro.
This was the very first time Americans had even heard that word before.
And Hoover is this freaked him out.
He was freaking the freak out.
He was like, how did they hear about my secret club?
Oh my God, oh my God, oh my God.
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Now let's get back to today's story. Thanks Skims. So the media started covering this and it essentially led to the FBI becoming the bad guys.
Their reputation down the toilet.
And in response to all of this,
Hoover closed 103 of the FBI's field offices
and he launched an operation called MedBerk
or media burglary.
Yeah, he wanted to investigate how in the hell
this break-in happened in the first place.
He's still stuck on that.
So Hoover had transferred 200 of his FBI agents
to Philly to investigate,
but they were never able to get to the bottom of it.
In the end, the FBI had a pull-a-plug on COINTELPRO
on April 28th, 1971. Over the next few years, batches of the FBI's files from
the media office continued to be released, and with each new document dumped, the public was
getting more and more angry. Document dump sounds so dirty, right? It sounds like I'm wearing a
diaper and like I'm just like shitting documents. That's where my mind goes. Let me know what you think. Their mind was completely blown, right?
Because they're realizing that the FBI
is probably bugging their homes.
They're like, what the fuck?
They're wiretapping?
Hello, freedom?
Where?
People were being sent to die.
The Vietnam War this time was going on,
so like people are upset like about that.
People are feeling betrayed, violated, wanting change, and instead getting
met with like violent attacks. People were just pissed off. Like when was anyone going to face
any damn consequences? Around the same time public uproar pushed the Senate to do something.
They put together the select committee to study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities.
I know, it really just rolls off the tongue super catchy, but for sure it became known
as the Church Committee.
Why not just name it that, huh?
Well, it became the Church Committee because the Senator running it, his name was Frank
Church.
Anyway, the church committee
did some investigating and held some hearings that exposed even more illegal operations of the FBI.
And this is important because it brings us back to the story of Fred Hampton. Back when Fred was
murdered in his own bed in those early morning hours, the Black Panthers publicly declared the FBI
were responsible for Fred's death. But at that point, they had no hard evidence linking Fred's death to the FBI.
That is, until a breakthrough happened in 1973.
The Chicago Tribune somehow found out about William. Remember the informant?
They published a big old story about it. The minute those papers hit
newsstands, Williams life was now in jeopardy, right? So he was placed in
witness protection and whisked away to California. But with this link between
William and the FBI now exposed, lawyers at the People's Law Office in
Chicago found a lawsuit on behalf of Frank Hampton's family and the other
Panthers that were impacted
by the raid. After the court granted them access to FBI files, the People's Law Office sifted
through mountains of documents that were once top secret. And with a little help from that church
committee over in Washington, DC, they were able to discover everything they needed for their case.
The first thing was that the FBI planned to use
violence against Fred from the jump, and the second thing, which turned out to be their smoking gun,
was that the horrible raid in those early morning hours was very much a part of Cointel Pro. I mean,
that should be an airtight case, right? Well, I guess not so fast. In January of 1976, the trial of the Fred Hampton civil case began in federal court,
and the case completely took over the media.
During it, the FBI accidentally, whoopsie,
revealed that they hadn't released all of its own files
on Fred, William O'Neill, and the Black Panther party.
Sorry about that, you guys.
So the judge ordered them to release every single page,
and it was just like,
uh, way more paper than anyone was expecting.
So the next day, you know,
some guys are wheeling some shopping carts
that are filled with like 200 like big ass binders
that are filled with just documents.
So imagine being the lawyers
who had to go through all that, you know?
You're like, oh fuck. The files showed that the FBI specifically targeted Fred Hampton, that they
used William O'Neill to get to him, and there were also massive illegal wiretaps that included
conversations between Black Panthers and their journeys. And then another smoking gun came out of these files.
There were memos to and from the FBI headquarters
and the Chicago office requesting $300.
It's like, what's this for?
This money was a bonus for William providing information,
AKA the floor plan, that was of quote, tremendous value,
which made the raid that killed Fred Hampton a quote,
success.
So evidence, it's all there, right?
It's totally obvious that this whole thing is corrupt,
but even so the judge seemed to be on the FBI side.
The judge like loved the FBI, number one fangirl.
So this judge ends up clearing the FBI of any wrongdoing
when it came to like hiding those documents.
They were like, they accidentally forgot.
And the judge was like, yeah, I totally get it.
You're fine.
But the people's law office kept fighting
and appealed the ruling.
I mean, they were not gonna let them get away with like
any of this.
So on April 23rd, 1979, the court found
that the FBI obstructed justice by keeping all those documents about Fred to themselves.
They also found evidence that the FBI tried to get rid of the entire Black Panther Party with the raid,
and then tried to hide it in court.
Death to all of them!
Not Black Panthers, I mean the FBI, they need to go. The case went all the way to Supreme Court,
who upheld the decision that said,
yeah, the FBI fucked up.
And it's like, oh, thank God, right?
Oh, someone willing to stand up to these shitheads.
It would all come to light that the FBI
and Chicago police weren't together to drug
and kill Fred Hampton to stop the Black Panther Party.
Documents show that they passed memos back and forth
containing all sorts of info, instructions,
and directions on how to do it.
It's a very shocking cover up.
Even to the state, you can go read the documents
at wherever they're released.
It's very wild and very real.
Fred Hampton was just one example
of the FBI's criminal actions during the Cointel pro saga. The FBI also had its hooks
in the American Indian movement, which I mentioned earlier, and they went to crazy links to fuck with
Martin Luther King Jr. I'm talking they had secret recordings, wiretaps, and blackmail threatening to
ruin him, but they didn't kill him. Yeah know? Apparently, the FBI had all sorts of memo,
audio tapes, photographs, and film footage of Dr. King from back in the day. In 1977, a judge ruled
that the tapes were to be kept under lock and key until 2027. So when 2027 comes around, just you
wait because that Freedom of Information Act request becomes available and we will be looking right. It's just crazy to think that all this happened because the FBI
was running around unchecked for decades. I mean who's going to check the FBI? That's a good question.
I don't know. I mean they probably have dirt on you, you know. I think this final report of the
church committee says it best. They said quote, too many people have been spied upon by too many government agencies and too much information has been illegally collected.
Groups and individuals have been assaulted, repressed, harassed, and disrupted because of
their political views, social beliefs, and their lifestyles. End quote. I know I'm over here wondering
like, damn, has anything really changed?
You know?
I guess the takeaway here is like
that the FBI is really fucked up, huh?
Like whenever you see something in the news
over and over again, something that's being hyped up,
it's like you always need to ask yourself,
like, who does this really benefit?
I think that alone is a good question to ask
because usually it's pretty revealing.
And if the FBI has done this in the past,
they're definitely capable of doing it again, right? So it's like, where are they up to now? Are there
any groups today that they're infiltrating? Probably. I guess we'll have to wait and see,
which is like fucked up. This place sucks. And if something big does come out, how the F do we
Americans keep the FBI in check anyways, You know, some days we feel so powerless
because like what really can we do as just a human?
I mean, if they were doing this back in the 1950s,
imagine what they're doing now.
They didn't even have internet back then.
They were solving mysteries with paper, wild.
I don't know.
I just think this is all fucked up.
But I'm just like, it sucks.
And like it makes me feel hopeless.
And that's how I'm gonna end it.
Thanks.
I would love to hear what you guys think about all this.
So let me know in the comments down below.
I mean, what do we do as humans?
As people, I don't have answers for everything, obviously.
I found this story to be incredibly sad and awful.
Not that I fully like ever trusted
the FBI, you know, but it's like, there's literally no one to trust.
It's like they always have some nasty ass agenda, trying to white people out for what?
So white people could stay happy?
What is going on?
I hate this place.
Anyways, next week we'll be talking about a holiday that is controversial to say the
least.
I mean, it's a holiday that is happy for most, I think, and deeply depressing for others.
Many people will get pregnant this day.
Some say it's a bullshit capitalist grab for money, but some say it's an important expression
of love.
I say I was not expecting it to be so weird.
Next week I'm talking about public orgies,
bloody animal sacrifices, and human raffles.
Check out next week's episode on Valentine's Day.
Don't forget to join me over on my YouTube
where you can watch these episodes on Thursday
after the podcast airs.
And while you're there, you can also catch my murder mystery and makeup.
I'd love to hear your guys' reactions to today's story.
So make sure to use the hashtag dark history over on social media so I can follow along.
Now let's read a couple of comments you guys left me.
Becoming Nyrell had a question for me.
Random Bailey seems so chill and down to earth.
I can't even imagine what your guilty luxury pleasure could be. Tell us. That's a good question. You know what?
Okay, here it is. My bidet. I have a bidet. Cleans my ass. I know and it's not a
luxury to most of you who live in like Europe and stuff because it's normal to
you guys but in America it's like kind of weird and like not like it's it's a little intimidating but I got one and
let me tell you that is a luxury I will never live without again I mean I'd
prefer not to live without it again it claims my ass like you wouldn't believe
ten stars. Yves Amorall confessed something to me saying quote I have a
confession I'm only here for Joan not you Bailey just Joan love you bae
end quote well all right then
Jasmine Collins left us an episode suggestion would love to see Bailey talk
about Niagara Falls in New York there's an area known as Love Canal where thousands of pounds of toxic waste
were dumped in the 40s and 50s.
Homes in a school were built on it.
So many people's health were affected
and still are to this day.
I believe they are still finding dump sites
around Niagara Falls.
I'm interested.
I've never heard of this.
And the fact that it's called Love Canal
is kind of creepy, right?
But it's toxic.
Okay, thanks for that hot tip.
I will be Googling as soon as I get home.
Oh, I am home, I forgot.
As soon as I'm done, I'm gonna start Googling.
I love you for watching
and I hope you have a good rest of your day.
I love you for engaging and commenting
and saying hi and hanging out with me.
You make your choices and I'll be talking to you guys later.
Bye.
Dark History is an audio boom of original.
This podcast is executive produced by Bailey Sarian,
Junya McNeely from Three Arts, Kevin Grush,
and Matt Enlow from Maiden Network.
Writers Joey Scavuzzo, Katie Burris,
Allison Palobos and me, Bailey Sarian, production lead,
Brian Jaggers, research provided by Xander Elmore.
Special thank you to our expert, Dr. Yahoo Williams.
And I'm your host, Bailey Sarian. you