http://angola3news.blogspot.com/2014/09/terrorism-cointelpro-and-black-panther.html
(PHOTO:
Angela A. Allen-Bell joins Amnesty International in support of the Angola 3 outside
of the Louisiana State Capitol on April 17, 2012.) |
Terrorism, COINTELPRO, and the Black Panther Party
--An interview with law professor Angela A. Allen-Bell
By Angola 3 News
This past July, students from Northwestern
University’s Medill Justice Project visited the infamous Louisiana State
Prison known as Angola.
While there, students landed an impromptu interview with Warden
Burl Cain, where they asked him about an inmate at Angola named Kenny
‘Zulu’ Whitmore, who has now been in solitary confinement for 28
consecutive years. This important interview was cited afterwards by Time
Magazine in an article examining the impact of solitary confinement on
prisoners’ health.
Zulu Whitmore is a member of the Angola
Prison chapter of the Black Panther Party (BPP) that was first started in
the early 1970s by Herman Wallace and Albert Woodfox of the Angola 3. In reply
to the students’ question about Whitmore, Cain cited his affiliation with the
Angola BPP and expressed concern that Whitmore could spread his beliefs in the
prison, sparking violence among inmates. “The Black Panther Party advocates
violence and racism—I’m not going to let anybody walk around advocating
violence and racism,” Cain said. At the time of publication, Whitmore
remains in solitary confinement.
Burl Cain’s characterization of the BPP as “advocating violence and racism” is
reminiscent of a
deposition he gave on October 22, 2008, following Albert Woodfox’s second
overturned conviction, where Cain cited Woodfox’s affiliation with the BPP as a
primary reason for not removing him from solitary confinement. Asked what gave
him “such concern” about Woodfox, Cain stated: “He wants to demonstrate. He
wants to organize. He wants to be defiant.” Cain then stated that even if
Woodfox were innocent of the murder, he would want to keep him in solitary,
because “I still know he has a propensity for violence…he is still trying to
practice Black Pantherism, and I still would not want him walking around my
prison because he would organize the young new inmates.”
The remarks by Burl Cain in 2008 and 2014 are just the ‘tip
of the iceberg’ when it comes to misrepresenting the Black Panther Party.
“Until history is accurately told, this type of misinformation will live on and
we will all suffer as a result of it,” argues Southern University Law professor
Angela A. Allen-Bell in the interview featured below. Her new article,
published by the Journal
of Law and Social Deviance, entitled “Activism Unshackled &
Justice Unchained: A Call to Make a Human Right Out of One of the Most
Calamitous Human Wrongs to Have Taken Place on American Soil,” turns the tables
on the anti-BPP rhetoric by asking if what the BPP sustained at the hands of
government officials is itself akin to domestic terrorism.
In “Activism Unshackled & Justice Unchained,” Prof. Bell
concludes that the US government’s multi-faceted response to the BPP, primarily
within the framework of the FBI’s
infamous COINTELPRO, was indeed the very definition of terrorism. Bell
writes that “the magnitude of the unwarranted harm done to the BPP has not yet
been explored in an appropriate fashion. Much like a fugitive, it has eluded
justice.” As a result, “the FBI's full-scale assault on the social movements of
the 1960s and 1970s remains an open wound for the nation itself. This is more
than a national tragedy; this is a human wrong.”
Several pages of Bell’s new article examine the case of the
Angola 3 in the context of the broader government repression faced by the Black
Panthers. Bell is no stranger to the Angola 3 case. Her 2012 article written
for the Hastings
Constitutional Law Quarterly, entitled "Perception Profiling
& Prolonged Solitary Confinement Viewed Through the Lens of the Angola 3
Case: When Prison Officials Become Judges, Judges Become Visually Challenged
and Justice Becomes Legally Blind,” used the Angola 3 case as a springboard for
examining the broader use of solitary confinement in US prisons.
We interviewed
Bell previously, following the release of her 2012 law journal article.
Since the Angola 3 News project began in 2009, we have conducted interviews
focusing on many different aspects of the Black Panther Party and the
organization's legacy today, including: Remembering
Safiya Bukhari, COINTELPRO
and the Omaha Two, The
Black Panther Party and Revolutionary Art, Dylcia
and Cisco on Panthers and Independistas, "We
Called Ourselves the Children of Malcolm," Medical
Self Defense and the Black Panther Party, and The
Black Panther Party's Living Legacy.
(PHOTO: Billy X
Jennings of It's About Time BPP at
the first BPP office in Oakland, CA.) |
Angola 3 News:
Let’s begin by examining the word ‘terrorist.’ How is this defined?
Angela A. Allen-Bell:
For my article, I accept the view that a terrorist commits atrocities in an
attempt to influence the behavior of the general population and the government.
Their intended victims are not those they kill or harm, but rather are the
government and the millions of people they hope to terrorize into some desired
change of behavior.
The US government’s definition of terrorism is not uniform
and varies among different branches of the police, military, and US government.
Some suggest that even the best intentions would result in an unclear
definition, given the fact that any number of acts could constitute an act of
terrorism, including offenses not yet conceived.
Others suggest the lack of a specific definition is deliberate. In their book,
Unchecked and Unbalanced: Presidential Power in a Time of Terror, authors
Frederick A. O. Schwarz Jr. and Aziz Z. Huq suggest terrorism to be nothing
more than a “political communications strategy” and a “preexisting
neoconservative blueprint for a more interventionist American foreign policy,
especially in the Middle East.”
Regardless of the reason for the current difficulty in
adopting a uniform understanding of what is meant by ‘terrorism’ and
‘terrorist,’ the lack of a reliable definition comes at a price. In his article
entitled, “A Human Rights Approach to Counter-Terrorism,” Mark D. Kielsgard
writes: “On a larger scale, the lack of a definition diminishes the word's use
to a watered-down expression that can mean virtually anything. Allegorically
speaking, the terrorist is the new nameless enemy, which to some may include
all foreigners, immigrants, welfare recipients, or democrats, to name only a
few. Terrorist has become the twenty-first century equivalent of communist, a
generic term of derision whether the target perpetrates violence or just
maintains a different point of view. It has entered the lexicon as a propaganda
tool to label competing ideologies and promote fear and bigotry.”
With this understanding, consumers of information must
listen with a discerning ear when these amorphous labels are assigned to the
BPP or to other individuals and groups.
A3N:
In your new article you directly confront the mainstream portrayal of the
BPP as being a ‘terrorist’ group. Since you conclude that they were not in fact
‘terrorists,’ can you please explain how and why you reached this conclusion?
AB:
From the outset, I wish to note that my responses apply to the Black Panther
Party (BPP), not the New Black Panther Party.
There are several competing reasons in support of my
conclusion that the BPP was not a terrorist organization, the first of which
involves two official reports issued by bodies acting on behalf of the
government. Both reports were based on thorough investigations that included
extensive witness testimony.
The Church Committee
Report of 1976 established that they were victims of government excesses
and the 1971 Report by the Committee on International Security, House of
Representatives, entitled “Gun-Barrel Politics,” while having almost nothing
positive to say about the BPP, did not find that they had an agenda to kill or
harm solely for the purpose of making a political statement and also did not
find that they had the means to accomplish this even if such an agenda
existed. Therefore, my first reason for reaching the conclusion that the
BPP was not a terrorist organization is the absence of any credible, official
findings establishing that they were.
My second reason involves the extensive surveillance used by
the government against the BPP. I have reviewed volumes of these declassified
documents and have found nothing to support a conclusion that the organization
was out to kill or harm in order to make a political point.
My last reason involves my extensive research on the topic.
I have read countless court cases, books, documents, interviews and articles. I
have even discussed the topic with BPP members and key figures. In all of this,
no credible plot to kill or harm in order to make a political point has ever
emerged.
A3N: If, as you argue,
the BPP was not in fact a ‘terrorist group,’ what do you think it was about the
BPP that the government actually did feel threatened by? Why did they choose to
undertake the well-documented campaign of repression undertaken by the FBI as
part of COINTELPRO?
AB: I once
read a book written by a man who inspires others to live life without
boundaries or limitations. In this book entitled, Solitary Refinement,
Christopher Coleman makes a profound inquiry. He asks: when was the most
dangerous time in the life of a slave?
One might think the correct response to be when the slave
was caught attempting an escape or when he talked back or disobeyed. However,
Mr. Coleman forces us to see past the superficial and argues that the most
dangerous time is when the slave actually accepts the fact that he is a slave
because, at that very moment, bondage becomes self-inflicted and the slave
becomes his own slave master. The slave no longer hopes to or attempts to
change his condition. The slave simply decides to be a slave and wishes for
nothing greater.
A liberated mind was really slavery’s greatest enemy and it
was ultimately the BPP’s mindset that made the government so uneasy. In my
article, I explained: “The BPP did not believe in pleading, begging, praying or
patiently waiting for equal rights to be conferred. They felt equality was a
birthright, demanding it was a duty, having it delayed was an insult and
compromise was tantamount to social and political suicide.”
They refused to accept inequality and injustice. If they had succeeded in
awakening the inner slave in marginalized Americans, there would have been
important political change in the US. COINTELPRO was undertaken to prevent
these positive changes, to therefore “neutralize” the BPP and to quell their
ability to awaken the populace from a self-inflicted state of bondage.
A3N: This leads us
to the next core argument of your article: that the US government’s response to
the growth of the BPP, largely associated with COINTELPRO, was itself
‘terrorist.’ Can you please explain how and why you reached this conclusion?
AB: I reach
the following conclusion in my article: “If a domestic terrorist engages
in acts that are dangerous to human life and does so on American soil for the
purpose of intimidating people or coercing people through mass destruction,
assassination or kidnapping, then there is an argument to be made that the BPP
is a victim of something akin to domestic terrorism—and perhaps more—and there
has been no official accountability.”
As mentioned in the article, The Patriot Act defines
domestic terrorism. The first part of the definition requires the existence of
an activity occurring primarily within the US. As for establishing an
‘activity,’ the FBI had declared ‘war’ on the BPP. In an effort to establish
that the activity occurred primarily within the US, the article mentions that
all COINTELPRO activity was first approved by high ranking, executive level
officials who were acting under the badge of official authority and as arms of
the US government.
The second part of the definition involves acts dangerous to
human life. The article documents how every aspect of the government’s covert
operations against the BPP was dangerous to human life, including both the
lives of the Panthers and the many innocent people who suffered collateral
damage. The baseless raids where officers were over armed (such as the raid on the NewOrleans
Panthers), the pretextual stops used to justify illegal arrests or to
incite violence, and the periods of unjust incarceration were all extremely
dangerous to human life.
The third part of the definition involves a violation of the
criminal laws of the United States. The article chronicles a number of official
actions that were in violation of criminal laws, such as assassinating individuals
who are in no way posing a physical threat, engaging in torture, and
manufacturing criminal cases.
The final part of the definition requires that the act
appears to be intended to intimidate or coerce civilians, influence government
policy by intimidation or coercion, or affect the conduct of a government by
mass destruction, assassination, or kidnapping. Then FBI Director J. Edgar
Hoover demanded that the FBI “destroy what the [BPP] [stood] for and “eradicate
its serve the people programs.”
My article details the numerous ways this dictate was implemented then found
that there “are but a few explanations for the stated techniques and that is to
intimidate people into conforming to a single belief system, to influence
government policy, by intimidation or coercion, so as to eliminate alternative
approaches or to affect the conduct of government by mass destruction,
assassination or kidnapping.”
A3N: Along with the
story of the NOLA Panthers, you also examine the case of the Angola 3 and the
Angola Prison BPP chapter started by Herman Wallace and Albert Woodfox (Robert King joined the BPP chapter
upon arrival at Angola in 1972). Given that the Angola BPP organized
non-violent work and hunger strikes, as well as multiethnic and collective
self-defense against the widespread rape epidemic, how do these activities
contrast with or resemble ‘terrorism?’
AB: As
noted, one aspect of the definition of domestic terrorism is the violation of
the criminal laws of the US. The Angola 3 case was used in the article as an
illustration of a possible violation of the criminal laws of the US committed
by official actors in their terrorism against the BPP.
The Angola 3’s BPP organizing was behind the walls of
Louisiana State Penitentiary (commonly referred to as, “Angola.”). Beginning in
the 1960s, at this former
slave plantation, select inmates were provided arms and used as guards to
oversee inmates working the fields. These inmates were given authority to shoot
anyone who stepped outside of an imaginary boundary.
In addition to this, Angola was segregated in the early 1970s and was the
subject of regular litigation. Multiple courts found that state and federal
constitutional violations were rampant and violence was comparable to that
found in a warring territory.
Instead of engaging in predatory behavior, the Angola 3
courageously chose to teach their newly discovered Panther awareness to fellow
inmates. They did this in an attempt to change the culture from one of
violence, corruption and predatory behavior to one of mutual respect. They
hoped to create a sense of community amongst the men and they hoped to hold the
administration to a standard.
They wanted an institution that was safe and one that
afforded inmates all the rights promised to them under state, federal and
international law. They actively organized against inmate-on-inmate violence
and rape. They successfully litigated many favorable changes for prisoners. I
have observed many parents thank them for various transforming acts of service
done on behalf of other inmates. Their intentions were noble, their efforts
were heroic and their accomplishments were far-reaching. In essence, they did
for no pay what state officials were paid to do: better conditions behind bars.
The only thing that resembles terrorism in this case is the
conduct of some of the government’s official actors, such as the prosecutors
who have engaged in years of documented misconduct and those who have engaged
in and defended the use of torture.
A3N: The Angola 3
and supporters have always argued that the convictions of Herman and Albert for
the
murder of prison guard Brent Miller, were a frame-up orchestrated in
retaliation for Herman and Albert’s political activities as BPP organizers. Do
you consider this to be a credible argument? Do you consider their convictions
and placement in solitary confinement to be politically motivated?
AB: Yes to
both. One should not overlook the timing of the government’s plot to
neutralize the BPP and the timing of the (post-incarceration) convictions of
Robert King, Albert Woodfox and the late Herman Wallace. They were openly
acting as BPP members at a time when the government was on a mission to
neutralize the BPP.
Years removed, we have learned of many BPP members who were
framed for crimes they did not commit and who were subsequently submitted to
prolonged solitary confinement while in prison. Some of these are referenced in
the article. False convictions were used as a means of neutralization and
solitary confinement was used to break their wills and end their activism. This
is no longer speculation. This is now a documented fact.
When one looks at the lack of credible evidence in the
Angola 3 case and couples it with the public statements of official actors,
which cement (not suggest) the belief that the Angola 3 have been treated as
inhumanely as they have because of their BPP involvement, one can’t help but
entertain the thought that there is more at work than the murder of an innocent
guard who was met with a fate he absolutely did not deserve.
(PHOTO: BPP collage
by Its About Time BPP.) |
A3N: On a personal
level, after researching the BPP and writing your article, what do you find
most inspiring about the BPP legacy? What lessons do you think today’s
activists can learn from studying BPP history?
AB: The late
Derrick Bell is one of my favorite authors. He teaches that courage can’t be
gauged until the act that we think is courageous is viewed in context. Putting
the actions of the BPP in its proper social context makes a case for how
courageous they were.
They watched Martin Luther King attempt change through
nonviolent means. They had seen the emergence of the Deacons for Defense. They
had witnessed the Freedom Riders, who were young and innocent children harmed
as well as many other protesters who were savagely beaten, killed and/or jailed
for doing nothing more than attempting to make America a just place (and doing
so in a nonviolent way and without being armed). They knew that law enforcement
often acted to uphold segregationist laws and policies. Police regularly
treated activists, protestors and those practicing civil disobedience as common
criminals and many dished out violence in generous portions at civil rights
events. Not intimidated by this, the Panthers still took center stage. They
teach us penetrating lessons in courage.
Most of the Panthers were very young. They had nothing more
than a thirst for change, a will to work hard in service to others and a
commitment to studying other change agents in an effort to craft a strategy for
change in this country. They illuminate the point that, to make meaningful and
eternal change, one does not have to be a certain age and one does not have to
have titles or credentials. They also teach us that world changers can’t be
impulsive, reactionary or emotional people. Instead, they must be visionaries
and wise strategists who are measured in their reactions and deliberate in
their actions. The Panthers were proponents of (legitimate) education and
everything they did was done after much study and deliberation. This should not
be overlooked.
Most inspiring is their selflessness and genuineness. They
served the people out of love. They did not seek payment or votes. They did not
come with an agenda. They teach us a lot about our current leaders who will often
do nothing without the promise of pay, glory or
promotion.
A3N: Based upon your
research and examination of the topic, why do you think Cain and others like
him continue to misrepresent what the BPP was about?
AB: There is
an explanation for why the misrepresentation of the BPP has continued all these
years, but it is complex.
The initial reason for the perception of the BPP being
violent and racist is the government itself. The declassified documents
verify that a part of its neutralization strategy was to discredit them in the
public’s eye. This was done in an attempt to stop people from joining,
following or supporting the party. The article lists the myriad of ways this
plan was brought to fruition. One way was to use infiltrators and informants to
join the party then have these individuals behave badly and violently so it
would appear that the BPP was nothing more than a group of thugs and outlaws.
Another way the government contributed to the negative perception of the
Panthers is in the way they often responded with exaggerated force where the
Panthers were concerned and often initiated violent encounters and when
violence erupted, sole fault was assigned to the Panthers. Mainstream history
will have you believe they always directed violence towards the police who were
always innocent and honorable in their interactions with the Panthers. Evidence
simply does not bear this out.
A second reason for the negative image was the media. The
declassified documents also establish that certain members of the media worked
with the government to publicize only negative images and adverse press about
the BPP. It is a known fact that repetition is one of the most effective
advertising tools. And so certain media outlets went to work in reporting as
much bad as it could and made certain not to air anything positive about the
BPP. The impact of this is generations of people who have no idea that the BPP
was a service organization that laid the groundwork for many social programs
that we currently enjoy, such as community policing, health care for the poor,
sickle-cell anemia treatment and testing, free meals in school and food
distribution to poor families. Their acts of service to the community was quite
extensive—they served as watchdogs over the police, escorts to the elderly,
community organizers and a host of other things that are discussed in detail in
my article.
The third reason for the misrepresentation is the sanitized
history that we are taught in schools. History has never been presented
honestly where the Panthers are concerned. As a result, many people perceive
them as an anti-government, violent, gun-toting militia group. The practical
impact of this is that anything associated with the BPP is still vilified. We
saw this recently in the instances of BPP member Joanne Deborah Chesimard (also
known as Assata Shakur) being placed on the terrorist watch list and Debo Patrick Adegbile,
a respected lawyer who was never a Black Panther, but he recently suffered the
same ostracizing that they have. As head of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund,
he acted on behalf of Mumia
Abu-Jamal, a former Panther whose death sentence was recently overturned
after spending nearly 30 years in solitary confinement on death row. Senators
blocked President Obama’s nomination of Mr. Adegbile to lead the Justice
Department’s civil rights division because of this.
Until history is accurately told, this type of
misinformation will live on and we will all suffer as a result of it. This is
exactly why I wrote the article and it is why I am working so passionately on
this topic.
(PHOTO: Herman
Wallace's memorial service on Oct. 12, 2013. Image by Ann
Harkness) |
A3N: Any closing
thoughts?
AB: Yes, a
few brief points.
At the memorial
service for the late Herman Wallace, BPP member Malik Rahim commented that
we would not see black-on-black crime as we do today if the Panthers were allowed
to do the work they started in the community. I would add the same to be true
when it comes to many other social ills. Along these same lines, it is quite
intriguing that the Panthers started in response to police violence. They often
followed police to ensure the public was safe in their interactions with the
police. Years removed, we still find ourselves in need of such intermediaries.
If their work had not been cut short, would we find ourselves better off?
Redress is broader than justice. I strongly believe redress
is in order and I believe we have reached the appointed time. I do not advocate
for a monetary payout. I advocate for amnesty, release of BPP members who
remain in custody as a result of their BPP involvement, and for the correction
and memorializing of history where the BPP is concerned.
I would be honored if folks would read the
article in its entirety. I end with this excerpt from the conclusion of my
article:
“Of course, this article is written with all the benefits
that accompany hindsight. It is only fair to recognize that the government, at
the time of the BPPs activism, was littered with competing forces, interests
and pressures and the advent of new demands being placed upon it. Not only were
these things taxing, but the situation intensified because there were no breaks
in tensions. They came simultaneously and in close proximity so as not to allow
time for rational thought to take command and there was no precedent to serve
as a blueprint. Add to this gumbo mixture, a government being confronted with
the likes of the BPP for the first time in history. When one comes to terms
with the complexities of the situation and can appreciate how they were
magnified by the setting within which these developments unfolded, one is
forced to bear a degree of understanding for how such a tragedy was set in
motion. While these things must be taken into account if the discussion is to
remain honest and impartial, they must not serve as exit points or escape
routes for those seeking a way out of this conversation vis-a-via the path of
least resistance.”
--Angola 3 News is an official project of the
International Coalition to Free the Angola 3. Our website is www.angola3news.com, where we provide the
latest news about the Angola 3. Additionally we are also creating our own media
projects, which spotlight the issues central to the story of the Angola 3, like
racism, repression, prisons, human rights, solitary confinement as torture, and
more. Our articles and videos have been published by Alternet, Truthout,
Counterpunch, Monthly Review, Z Magazine, Indymedia, and many others.