FBI quotes
[back] FBI
a major FBI division that was called the crime reporting division was theoretically supposed to keep track of how federal crimes were being reported. Why that was their business, I don't know. But that's what its theory was. But in fact what it was doing was a whole division set up to keep track of journalists and reporters and magazines and newspapers to decide who could be counted on to write stories that the FBI wanted written, who would slant stories the way they wanted it. [1999] Testimony of Mr. William Schaap on the role of the U.S. Government in the assassination of Martin Luther King
It has been documented that the FBI has been responsible for not only ruining case investigations in several instances but intimidating witnesses to recant their abuse. [See, Westpoint, Bonacci v. King, Finders case]. In the Finders case it appeared that the FBI had a conflict of interest because this organization was in their counter-intelligence files. [2009 Feb] Satanism and Ritual Abuse - Case-by-Case Documentation by Alex Constantine
Most Americans, who have not been the victims of such overt hate campaigns as
have been waged against me for more than thirty years, refuse to believe that we
are governed by criminals. I refer you to the opinion of one of the most famous
FBI agents, Charlie Winstead, the man who gunned down John Dillinger. In his
book, "The Bureau", William C. Sullivan quotes Charlie Winstead as saying,
(P.27),
"When I investigate a man and prove
he's a criminal, if he doesn't already work for the government, they'll hire
him. If he already has a government job, once they hear he's a crook they'll
promote him. The criminals in Congress only feel comfortable with other
criminals."
We could not ask for a more
qualified source, nor for a more apropos phrase than "the criminals in
Congress." The criminals enact into law program after program to reward their
fellow-criminals, and to rob and enslave the workers of America. Anyone who gets
in their way is disposed of by the "majesty of the law." I would have been
condemned to spend the rest of my life in an insane asylum by due process of
law. All the legal niceties would have been observed.
A WRIT FOR MARTYRS by Eustace Mullins
the FBI has made relations with the media a key area. Not so much
infiltrating employees as the CIA did, but cultivating very, very deep
connections throughout the American media. They had the entire division of the
FBI -- the crime reporting division was dealing solely with developing friendly
journalists, developing ways in which you could get what you wanted to appear in
the papers to be there and what you didn't want not to be there on a level that
was -- nobody realized until these -- these reports came out.
The crime reporting division was
keeping track of virtually every journalist in America that wrote anything that
had to do with the FBI. And whether everything was being classified as friendly
or unfriendly, it -- of course, it was somewhat complicated because it generally
meant: Did J. Edgar Hoover like what they wrote or not like what they wrote? And
practically -- the opinion of nobody else at the FBI mattered while Hoover was
alive.
But he kept charts on every
significant journalist as to who was helpful. And when you look through the
reports and the documents that have come out, you will see statements by Hoover
and his immediate subordinates get this information to friendly journalists. Get
this to our friend at U.S. News and World Report. Get this to some friendly
reporters in Memphis. And you just see all that sort of stuff.
Interestingly though, this information -- it never mattered whether the
information was true or false. That was not what it was about. You find FBI
planting information that's true, you find them planting information that's
false. The critical thing was if they had the friend at that media place, that
friend was going to run what they wanted without investigating it.
[1999] Testimony of Mr. William
Schaap on the role of the U.S. Government in the
assassination of Martin Luther King
CoIntellPro was Counter Intelligence Program,
and that was the -- the major FBI program to counter what it conceived to be
threats to American democracy. And it was, at least in my opinion, rather
paranoid in what it considered threats. It had divisions trying to operate
against communists, against socialists, against the New Left, against the Old
Left, against what they referred to as Black Nationalists, what they referred to
as hate groups. They had a separate section just on the Nation of Islam. They
had a separate section on the Civil Rights Movement. They had a hybrid program
on CommInfil which was to deal with the possibility that communists were
infiltrating non-communist groups.
So they had one section trying to
disrupt groups they felt were communist influence or dangerous, and another one
trying to infiltrate groups or find out about groups that they thought other
people were infiltrating.
Basically they -- and, of course,
you have to understand, "counter intelligence program" was really a misnomer.
Because counter intelligence normally means you're trying to find things out.
Counter intelligence officers in war time and in espionage are supposed to be
finding out information. But these were active committees, not passive. And what
counter intelligence programs were, were overt attempts -- sometimes very, very
complicated operations to disrupt organizations which they felt were a threat
regardless of whether the organizations were committing any crimes.
I mean, the irony of this is that
while the FBI theoretically was supposed to limit itself to investigating
crimes, and federal crimes at that, it basically took the position that, you
know, thinking bad thoughts was a crime. Or if you didn't like the current
government of that day, that was a crime. And if J. Edgar Hoover decided the
group should be disrupted, then CoIntellPro would sit down and figure out how to
disrupt it. [1999] Testimony of
Mr. William Schaap on the role of the U.S. Government
in the assassination of Martin Luther King
The FBI and its allies waged all-out war on AIM and the Native people. From 1973-76, they killed 69 residents of the tiny Pine Ridge reservation, a rate of political murder comparable to the first years of the Pinochet regime in Chile. To justify such a reign of terror and undercut public protest against it, the Bureau launched a complementary program of psychological warfare. [1999] WAR AT HOME by Brian Glick
Within months of taking office, Reagan pardoned W. Mark Felt and Edward S. Miller, the only FBI officials convicted of COINTELPRO crimes. His congressional allies publicly honored these criminals and praised their work. The President continually revived the tired old Red Scare, adding a new "terrorist" bogeyman, while Attorney General Meese campaigned to narrow the scope of the Bill of Rights and limit judicial review of the constitutionality of government action. [1999] WAR AT HOME by Brian Glick
"COINTELPRO" was the FBI's secret program to undermine the popular upsurge which swept the country during the 1960s. Though the name stands for "Counterintelligence Program," the targets were not enemy spies. The FBI set out to eliminate "radical" political opposition inside the US. When traditional modes of repression (exposure, blatant harassment, and prosecution for political crimes) failed to counter the growing insurgency, and even helped to fuel it, the Bureau took the law into its own hands and secretly used fraud and force to sabotage constitutionally- protected political activity. Its methods ranged far beyond surveillance, and amounted to a domestic version of the covert action for which the CIA has become infamous throughout the world. Brian Glick http://www.whatreallyhappened.com/RANCHO/POLITICS/COINTELPRO/cointelpro.html
"I submitted an 1100-plus page report in March 1981 to Judge William Webster, who was then the head of the FBI, with a personal letter to him and to the US Department of Justice. Much to my surprise, my 19 witnesses including Helena Stokely started calling me and telling me, 'Hey Ted, they're trying to get me to recant.' And I'm telling myself, 'That isn't the responsibility of the FBI. The FBI is supposed to gather information, not destroy it.' And that was my first clue that we had a serious problem in that case and in the other cases I handled. I noticed in each instance that evidence was destroyed, lost, stolen; that there were strong indications of corruption. MIND CONTROL SLAVERY & The NEW WORLD ORDER - by Uri Dowbenko
The Rockefellers were involved in the creation of the FBI, so that the FBI has always been an arm of power for the Illuminati. That is why there are official FBI programs in action today to kidnap children and provide them for sacrifice. Yes, American people, the wolf was set in charge of guarding the chicken coop. The organization that is working as part of the FBI is the Finders. (The stink was so bad that US. News & World Report did a story to soften the impact of the scandal. See the article on a following page. Ex-Satanists who worked with the FBI to receive the children the FBI kidnapped and sold to them for sacrifice have been trying to get the word out publicly about the FBI’s corruption. When the Illuminati was beginning to get exposed in the Franklin Saving & Loan case in Lincoln, NE the FBI was part of the dirty actors and was part of the cover up. The Rockefellers have had control over the FBI since they helped get it started. When Congress wanted to investigate the CIA for wrongdoing the appointed a Commission headed by Rockefeller to investigate the CIA’s wrongdoings! Yes, the Rockefeller Commission did a big study and slapped the hands of the CIA for a few misdeeds. Their report is still cited as the big investigation of the CIA. Some investigation! Since the Rockefeller family work hand in hand with the CIA to create Monarch slaves, of course that part of the CIA’s misdeeds got overlooked! Bloodlines of the Illuminati 10. Rockefeller
Gunderson
had this to say: "The
Finders-A CIA front established in the 1960's. It has top clearance and
protection in its
assigned task of kidnapping and torture-programming young children throughout
the U.S. Members are specially trained government kidnappers known to be sexual
degenerates who involve the kidnapped children in satanic sex orgies and bloody
rituals as well as the murders of other children and slaughter of animals.
They
use a fleet of unmarked vans to grab targeted children from parks and
schoolyards. In doing so they use children within their organization as decoys
to attract the victims close
to the vans where they are grabbed by adults. They then drug the children and
transport them to a series of safe houses for safe keeping. They are then used
in their ceremonies for body parts, sex slaves and some are auctioned off at
various locations in the northern hemisphere. In the past they have been
auctioned off near a location in Nevada
and Toronto
, Canada
. Marion David Pettie, the
leader of the cult, is an identified homosexual pedophile and a CIA officer. His
son was an employee of a CIA proprietary firm, Air
America
, which was notorious for
smuggling drugs, destined for the U.S.
, out of the Golden Triangle
into Saigon
during the Vietnam war."
(26) [1997]
Sex, Drugs, the CIA, MIND CONTROL and Your Children By A.B.H. Alexander
The most eye-opening hasn’t been the mutilated backwoods remains of a cult
victim’s body in Massachusetts. It wasn’t the bloody pentagram carved into a
cult victim’s corpse in San Francisco. The most eye-opening, has been a widely
cited Law Enforcement Perspective report out of the FBI’s Behavioral Science
Center in Quantico, Virginia.
The report was written by supervisory special agent Kenneth Lanning. It has
gone out to law enforcement agencies around the country; and has been cited
consistently throughout the media the last several years.
The report states, in regards to "organized" Satanic ritual abuse homicide
(that is, two or more Satanic cult members conspiring to commit murder): "The
law enforcement perspective can’t ignore the lack of physical evidence (no
bodies, or even hairs, fibers, or fluids left by violent murders."
Given the tangible evidence now surfacing, and given the volume of people
reporting Satanic cult related abuse, it would seem curious the FBI would come
out with such a definitive stance attempting to discredit the increasing
phenomenon. Of course, then again, it was the same FBI that for more than the
first half of this century consistently said there was no evidence whatsoever of
another type of "organized" criminal activity. That is -- Mafia related crime.
YOU DON’T HAVE TO PLAY ME BACKWARDS...SATANIC RITUAL ABUSE: THE EVIDENCE
SURFACES by Daniel Ryder, CCDC, LSW
p11
... he FBI [i]s a national political police force. The Bureau should be in the
business of catching criminals. It should be removed, once and forever, from the
business of monitoring citizens' political beliefs. As a federal police force
engaged in the pursuit of inter-state crime, drug trafficking, fraud and
violence, the FBI is a significant element in the defense of society. As a
political police, mobilized to protect the interests of any political
establishment, it is an affront to the basic rights of free speech and
association and an insult to the letter and the spirit of the Constitution.
[1991] Break-ins,
Death Threats and the FBI
the covert war against the Central America movement by
Ross Gelbspan
p13
Perhaps the most troubling legacy of the administration's war on citizen
activists was the embrace by the FBI, CIA, National Security Council and State
Department of a doctrine called "active measures," under which political
dissenters can be labeled as "communist proxies" and investigated as
"terrorists" simply because some of their opinions may conform to some positions
held by the Soviet Union or another government which is considered hostile to
the United States.
[1991] Break-ins, Death Threats
and the FBI the covert war against the Central
America movement by Ross Gelbspan
While elements of the FBI's probe of domestic political groups in the 1980s may have been discredited by subsequent revelations, the doctrine of "active measures" remains in force as a justification for investigating citizens-whose activities are not only legal but are specifically protected by the First Amendment to the Constitution-as terrorists. So categorized, an individual can become subjected to governmental surveillance, harassment and intimidation which is legitimized by an array of arcane regulations governing the federal law enforcement and intelligence apparatus; may become an instant suspect in the event of an outbreak of violence in the United States; can be denied any public- or private-sector job requiring a security clearance and can at any time, find his or her reputation in shambles. During the 1980s, the FBI's terrorism files swelled by more than 100,000 names, a large portion of whom were law-abiding activists who participated in demonstrations, contributed to political groups or subscribed to publications critical of Administration policies. [1991] Break-ins, Death Threats and the FBI the covert war against the Central America movement by Ross Gelbspan
At the same time the Reagan White House was using the nation's intelligence and police powers to "neutralize" adversarial points of view it was also, under cover of secrecy, pumping a stream of propaganda through the nation's libraries, universities and communications media into the public consciousness through writers and speakers who posed as "independent" experts, but who were, in fact, acting covertly on behalf of the governing Administration. [1991] Break-ins, Death Threats and the FBI the covert war against the Central America movement by Ross Gelbspan
p16
Even before Ronald Reagan took office, it was apparent that the refinement of
democracy through the free play of ideas was not a priority of his
administration. Between his election and his inauguration, a transition team
headed by his campaign manager, William Casey, was laying the groundwork for a
massive domestic operation to stifle dissent and engineer the terms of the
national debate over U.S. foreign policies.
[1991] Break-ins, Death
Threats and the FBI the
covert war against the Central America movement by
Ross Gelbspan
p86
In the summer of 1982 the FBI dramatically upped the stakes in its campaign
against political activists. In its initial investigation of CISPES for
violations of the Foreign Agents Registration Act, the FBI sought tangible
evidence that the group was directly linked to the FMLN. But CISPES was not
being paid by the FDR, was not helping provide weapons to the FMLN and was not
taking its political direction from any "foreign principal," according to a memo
from FBI headquarters to the Justice Department in early 1982.
[1991] Break-ins,
Death Threats and the FBI
the covert war against the Central America movement by
Ross Gelbspan
The following year [1983], however, the Bureau determined that it no longer needed such specific evidence of tangible links between a U.S. group and an international adversary in order to investigate the group. Henceforth, the FBI declared, it would be enough for dissenters inside the United States to publicly espouse positions which conformed to those of, say, the Soviet Union, the Sandinista government of Nicaragua or the Salvadoran FMLN rebels. That, alone, would provide the necessary evidence that the group was, in intelligence parlance, an "active measures front"-and, as such, a legitimate target for an FBI terrorism investigation. [1991] Break-ins, Death Threats and the FBI the covert war against the Central America movement by Ross Gelbspan
p87
... Shortly after [William Casey] assumed the directorship of the Central
Intelligence Agency in 1981, Casey ordered two internal studies done for him by
agency personnel. The Qrst was to develop mechanisms for improving coordination
between the CIA, on one hand, and the FBI and other elements of the intelligence
community, on the other.
[1991] Break-ins, Death Threats
and the FBI the covert war against the Central
America movement by Ross Gelbspan
The second internal study involved a CIA report on "Soviet Active Measures"-a broad term that included "soft" covert activities designed to influence the political process in other countries. These so-called "active measures" included activities such as propaganda, disinformation, manipulation of news media, the cultivation of foreign opinion leaders and the use of "front" groups by the Soviets or their political clients to promote Moscow's line on particular issues. Significantly, the early CIA study identified CISPES as one such "active measures front," even while the group was barely becoming an organized political entity. Domestically, the political meaning of the '`active measures" concept- minus the mystifying jargon of intelligence specialists-was enunciated in a hearing of the Denton committee just a month before a presentation in the summer of 1982 by FBI and CIA officials to the House Intelligence Panel. [1991] Break-ins, Death Threats and the FBI the covert war against the Central America movement by Ross Gelbspan
In a statement which opened the subcommittee's hearings on the FBI's guidelines, Denton noted that: "...In the reordering of priorities and the restructuring of the entities within the Bureau which deal with substantive foreign counter-intelligence and domestic security, an important aspect of the Bureau's work may have fallen through the cracks. . . What seems to be missing. . . is attention to organizations and individuals that cannot be shown to be controlled by a foreign power and which have not yet committed a terrorist or subversive act, but which, nevertheless, may represent a substantial threat to the safety of Americans and, ultimately, to the security of the country. " s J Despite the FBI's own pronouncements that domestic terrorist events had been declining for the previous three years, Denton continued: "At this time of ever increasing terrorist activity, I believe the American people need an organization that has the ability, the desire, and the understanding of the threat to see through propaganda and false ~ colors so that American people can be informed of the threat represented by organizations committed to the destruction of our freedoms. When I speak of a threat, I do not just mean that an organization is, or is about to be, engaged in violent criminal activity. I believe many share the view that the support groups that produce propaganda, disinformation or legal assistance may be even more dangerous than those who actually throw the bombs."
p118
Michael Ratner, Margaret Ratner, Chip Berlet and Dr. Ann Mari Buitrago saw it
coming from the beginning. The only problem was that for the longest time they
couldn't tell which direction it was coming from.
[1991] Break-ins, Death
Threats and the FBI the
covert war against the Central America movement by
Ross Gelbspan
The Ratners worked at the Center for Constitutional Rights, a public interest group of liberal and left-wing lawyers based in lower Manhattan. For them, as well as for Berlet, a political researcher who had been involved in cases involving the FBI and the Chicago Red Squad, and Buitrago, one of the country's foremost experts in the use of the Freedom of Information Act, the election of Ronald Reagan began to raise alarms as early as the winter of 1980. [1991] Break-ins, Death Threats and the FBI the covert war against the Central America movement by Ross Gelbspan
Chip Berlet
"What you're up against when you take on the FBI, the CIA, the undercover
informants who feed the governmental apparatus, is a self-selected group of
people who have a messianic vision of themselves. It keeps rising up over and
over again. Trying to protect civil liberties is like Sisyphus. It is an
unceasing battle. All governments want more power. It makes them more efficient.
But democracy, on the other hand, implies inefficiency. So there's always the
need to fight back. The battle over domestic civil liberties will never be won.
It just has to keep being fought."
[1991] Break-ins, Death
Threats and the FBI the
covert war against the Central America movement by
Ross Gelbspan
p119
Dr. Ann Mari Buitrago, a longtime movement activist and one of the country's
pre-eminent experts in understanding and deciphering FBI files
"The Freedom of Information Act is a wonderful tell-tale. If you see an administration that sets out to attack it, gut it, get rid of that act, that means it is intending to do something it thinks the public will not approve of. It is setting out with something to hide, and repression will follow. You don't have to know what precisely they're up to. If you just watch what they do to freedom of information, you can figure out where to start looking." [1991] Break-ins, Death Threats and the FBI the covert war against the Central America movement by Ross Gelbspan
p162
Frank Verelli
"It was an absolute rule that every single name in the newspaper, everyone
quoted as saying things against the Administration or in favor of CISPES or the
FDR-FMLN, went into the computers, into the terrorism files. There were no
exceptions," he noted.
[1991] Break-ins, Death Threats
and the FBI the covert war against the Central
America movement by Ross Gelbspan
p184
Around the same time that the Office of Public Diplomacy was geared-up for its
CIA-inspired covert disinformation and propaganda campaign, Lt. Col. Oliver
North was working with officials of the Federal Emergency Management Agency-an
obscure agency which had traditionally overseen relief planning for disasters-to
draw up a secret contingency plan to surveil political dissenters and to arrange
for the detention of hundreds of thousands of undocumented aliens in case of an
unspecified national emergency. The plan, part of which was code-named Rex 84,
called for the suspension of the Constitution under a number of scenarios,
including a U.S. invasion of Nicaragua.
[1991] Break-ins, Death
Threats and the FBI the
covert war against the Central America movement by
Ross Gelbspan
p185
The fate of Rex 84 has never been definitively
explained. Nor has the plan's development been thoroughly explored. During the
Iran-Contra hearings in the summer of 1987, Rep. Jack Brooks (D-Tex.) attempted
to raise the issue during an open session of the committee during the appearance
of Oliver North.
Brooks: "Col. North, in your work at the NSC, were you not assigned, at one time, to work on plans for the continuity of government in the event of a major disaster?"
Sen. Daniel Inouye (Co-chair): "I believe that question touches upon a highly sensitive and classified area so may I request that you not touch upon that."
Brooks: "I was particularly concerned, Mr. Chairman, because I read in the Miami papers and several others that there had been a plan developed, by that same agency, a contingency plan in the event of an emergency that would suspend the American Constitution. And I was deeply concerned about it and wondered if that was the area in which [North] had worked. I believe that it was, and I wanted to get his confirmation."
Inouye: "May I most respectfully request that that matter not be touched upon at this stage. If we wish to get into this, I'm certain arrangements can be made for an executive session."
That was the beginning and the end of any Congressional discussion of the plan. Apparently, there was no follow-up executive session in which committee members tried to learn just how extensive and well-developed was this plan to surveil and imprison large numbers of citizens and refugees who might object to the United States invading Nicaragua or becoming embroiled in armed hostilities in other parts of the world. But, as researcher Diana Reynolds and others have noted, "It ) is clear that the FEMA contingency plans to round up political dissenters was related to the FBI's investigation of political dissidents." [1991] Break-ins, Death Threats and the FBI the covert war against the Central America movement by Ross Gelbspan
p213
The real secret ... is the fact that the FBI-following the lead of the White
House and the Reagan CIA-allowed the direction of its investigation of American
liberals to be partially dictated by the Salvadoran security forces, thereby
collaborating in the persecution of American citizens with one of the most
terrorist governments in the world.
[1991] Break-ins, Death
Threats and the FBI the
covert war against the Central America movement by
Ross Gelbspan
p209
From a U.S. standpoint, the most frightening aspect of the assault on dissenting
citizens lies in the string of break-ins, thefts, death threats and assaults
that stretches forward from 1983 to 1990 like an underground epidemic of
low-grade terrorism.
p221
... the FBI's operations against liberal and left-wing citizens opposed to U.S.
policies beg to be seen in the context of the Bureau's history of abusing its
law enforcement powers by persecuting law-abiding dissenters for strictly
political reasons.
Given that historical context, the FBI Director's description of the CISPES probe as an "aberration" is indefensible. For the FBI's investigation and harassment of Central America groups in the 1980s is, after all, simply one more chapter in a continuing series of FBI political police operations which date back at least to the 1950s-and which have continued, virtually unabated, to the present.
... dating at least from the McCarthy period of the 1950s, the Bureau has engaged in active investigations of virtually every major dissident political movement in recent American history. Those investigations have involved techniques ranging from file checks to active surveillance to infiltration and provocation to harassments and character assassination to such covert operations as "black-bag jobs," wiretaps and assassinations. [1991] Break-ins, Death Threats and the FBI the covert war against the Central America movement by Ross Gelbspan
p222
An adviser to Dr. Martin Luther King, Stanley Levison, was investigated on
suspicion he was a communist sympathizer. According to a 1964 FBI memorandum
which ordered the investigation to continue:
"The Bureau does not agree with the expressed belief of the field office that [Levison] is not sympathetic to the Party cause. While there may not be any evidence that [he] is a Communist, neither is there any substantial evidence that he is anti-communist." [1991] Break-ins, Death Threats and the FBI the covert war against the Central America movement by Ross Gelbspan
p223
In the course of its operations against civil rights organizations, black
political activists, anti-Vietnam War groups, the Free Speech Movement of
university students, the American Indian Movement and the movement for Puerto
Rican independence, the FBI opened hundreds of thousands of letters; wiretapped
thousands of telephone conversations; conducted break-ins at hundreds of
residences and offices; and surveilled untold numbers of groups and activists.
[1991] Break-ins,
Death Threats and the FBI
the covert war against the Central America movement by
Ross Gelbspan
p224
One of the FBI's more notorious operations included providing Dr. King with a
tape recording of his private activities, along with a note suggesting he commit
suicide to avoid public humiliation.
[1991] Break-ins, Death
Threats and the FBI the
covert war against the Central America movement by
Ross Gelbspan
p227
The FBI's own regulations are ... not sufficient to prevent violations. The
regulations can also be repealed or modified in the future and do not,
therefore, guarantee future compliance...Based on the FBI's past behavior, there
is a reasonable likelihood of repetition."
[1991] Break-ins, Death
Threats and the FBI the
covert war against the Central America movement by
Ross Gelbspan
p227
Clearly the FBI systematically uses distortion, disinformation and deliberate
lies as official instruments of policy. Whether those lies are directed toward
political adversaries, news reporters, other agencies of the executive branch or
overseers in Congress charged with monitoring the Bureau's operations, the
record of the FBI's counter-terrorism and counter-intelligence units
demonstrates unequivocally that it is not to be trusted to tell the truth. With
the acquiescence of the Congressional committees, the FBI has succeeded in Iying
its way out of a series of scandals whose casualties have been truth, the
democratic process, and the First Amendment to the Constitution.
[1991] Break-ins,
Death Threats and the FBI
the covert war against the Central America movement by
Ross Gelbspan
p228
In the spring of 1990, Adm. John Poindexter, the former National Security
Adviser to whom Oliver North reported, was sentenced to six months in prison for
lying to Congress. At Poindexter's sentencing, U.S. District Court Judge Harold
Greene said that, had Poindexter not served time in jaiI, it would be tantamount
to a statement that a scheme to lie to and obstruct Congress is of no great
moment, and that even if the perpetrators are found out, the courts will treat
their criminal acts as no more than minor infractions." Judge Greene held that
Poindexter and North had acted "in violation of a principle fundamental to this
constitutional republic-that those elected by and responsible to the people
shall make the important policy decisions, and that their decisions may not be
nullified by appointed officials who happen to be in positions _ that give them
the ability to operate programs prohibited by law."
It is perplexing that the appropriate officials of the FBI-Ronald Davenport, Oliver Revell, and William Webster-have not been held to the same standards as Poindexter and other federal employees who have been convicted of Iying to Congress. The message inherent in the lack of such convictions is that the very agency empowered to enforce the the federal laws of the country is, itself, beyond the reach of those laws.
Given the Bureau's tenacious adherence to illegal domestic operations in the face of public and Congressional criticism, given its unwillingness or inability to police its own actions in accordance with the requirements of free speech embedded in the Constitution, and given its time-tested proclivity to act, not as a guardian of the law but as a proprietary police force for the incumbent power structure, there seems no reason for advocates of civil liberties to accept, once again, another promise that the FBI will respect the basic rights of freedom and privacy of U.S. citizens.
... As Frank Wilkinson, a former minister who endured more than three decades of FBI surveillance and dirty tricks, has consistently pointed out, the only reliable remedy for illegal FBI activities is a Congressional charter that would remove the responsibility for overseeing the Bureau from the Bureau itself. Such a charter would mandate the so-called "criminal standard." Under its terms, the FBI would be prohibited from any investigation unless there were clear and present indications that a law had been broken or was about to be broken. Whether Wilkinson's organization, the National Committee Against Repressive Legislation, will be successful in its current efforts to promote such a charter remains to be seen. But short of completely abolishing the FBI, there seems no other solution that would be acceptable to the hundreds of thousands of law-abiding citizens who have been victimized by the zealotry of the Bureau.
A major accomplice of the unidentified individuals who coordinated, planned and executed the break-ins is a press corps which finds nothing extraordinary or ominous about a sustained campaign of political assault against law-abiding citizens who disagree with their president's foreign policies. That was the kind of activity that heralded the rise to power of Hitler. And, if the United States ever falls prey to demagoguery, zealotry or institutionalized intolerance, this is the way it will begin. And it will proceed with an assist from the press whose members who will most likely dismiss victims of political repression as "fringe types" as they turn away from uncomfortable clues of tyranny.
It was the press, after all, that was unconcerned that the FBI was permitted to enter tens of thousands of names of citizens into its terrorism ( files-records which can be used to deny them jobs, to savage their reputations, to subject them to arbitrary surveillance, and to make them criminal suspects the next time a bomb explodes in one of America's cities.
Caught in the grip of economic uncertainty and facing a future of environmental degradation and global political upheaval, much of the U.S. public has lost sight of the very civil liberties that distinguish the United States from other empires that were merely powerful and wealthy. If that forgetfulness persists, this country will have lost that which has made it an ideal for newly emerging "Pro-Democracy" regimes throughout Eastern Europe, that which has made it special in the light of history.
The notion of civil liberties-a major hallmark of the American Constitution-seems very elusive to many Americans in the 1990s and virtually irrelevant to others. But from both a societal and an individual point of view, it is critical to the survival of the country as we know it. Throughout U.S. history, solutions to problems have often come from oppositional political movements-most recently the Civil Rights movement, the Nuclear Freeze, the environmental movement, the women's movement-many of which began with small followings and marginal influence. But the existence of unpopular or dissenting groups provides a kind of intellectual wetlands, a spawning ground for new experiments, new ideas, new solutions to problems which are intractable to traditional approaches.
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[The FBI] sees its basic mandate as preventing the success of any significant
movement for social change in America. From its mission as a national police
force, dedicated to thwarting interstate and international crime, the FBI has
become a guardian of the status quo, the incumbency, and the front line in the
war against any set of citizens who oppose the policies of the country's
leadership. That mission may have been appropriate in Stalin's Soviet Union or
Deng's China or Pinochet's Chile. It is not appropriate to the laws of the
United States.
1991] Break-ins, Death Threats
and the FBI the covert war against the Central
America movement by Ross Gelbspan