Richard Aoki - The man who armed The Black Panthers may have been an FBI informant

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The man who gave the Black Panther Party some of its first firearms and weapons training - which preceded fatal shootouts with Oakland police in the turbulent 1960s - was an undercover FBI informer, according to a former bureau agent and an FBI report.

One of the Bay Area's most prominent radical activists of the era, Richard Masato Aoki was known as a fierce militant who touted his street-fighting abilities. He was a member of several radical groups before joining and arming the Panthers, whose members received international notoriety for brandishing weapons during patrols of the Oakland police and a protest at the state Capitol.

Aoki went on to work for 25 years as a teacher, counselor and administrator at the Peralta Community College District, and after his suicide in 2009, he was revered as a fearless radical.

But unbeknownst to his fellow activists, Aoki had served as an FBI intelligence informant, covertly filing reports on a wide range of Bay Area political groups, according to the bureau agent who recruited him.

That agent, Burney Threadgill Jr., recalled that he approached Aoki in the late 1950s, about the time Aoki was graduating from Berkeley High School. He asked Aoki if he would join left-wing groups and report to the FBI.

"He was my informant. I developed him," Threadgill said in an interview. "He was one of the best sources we had."

The former agent said he asked Aoki how he felt about the Soviet Union, and the young man replied that he had no interest in communism.

"I said, 'Well, why don't you just go to some of the meetings and tell me who's there and what they talked about?' Very pleasant little guy. He always wore dark glasses," Threadgill recalled.
[h3]Book details role[/h3]
Aoki's work for the FBI, which has never been reported, was uncovered and verified during research for the book by this reporter, "Subversives: The FBI's War on Student Radicals, and Reagan's Rise to Power." The book, based on research spanning three decades, will be published Tuesday by Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

In 2007, two years before he committed suicide, Aoki was asked in a tape-recorded interview for the book if he had been an FBI informant. Aoki's first response was a long silence. He then replied, " 'Oh,' is all I can say."

Later during the same interview, Aoki contended the information wasn't true.

Asked if this reporter was mistaken that Aoki had been an informant, Aoki said, "I think you are," but added: "People change. It is complex. Layer upon layer."
[h3]FBI code number[/h3]
The FBI later released records about Aoki in response to a federal Freedom of Information Act request made by this reporter. A Nov. 16, 1967, intelligence report on the Black Panthers lists Aoki as an "informant" with the code number "T-2."

An FBI spokesman declined to comment on Aoki, citing litigation seeking additional records about him under the Freedom of Information Act.

Since Aoki shot himself at his Berkeley home after a long illness, his legend has grown. In a 2009 feature-length documentary film, "Aoki," and a 2012 biography, "Samurai Among Panthers," he is portrayed as a militant radical leader. Neither mentions that he had worked with the FBI.

Harvey Dong, who was a fellow activist and close friend, said last week that he had never heard that Aoki was an informant.

"It's definitely something that is shocking to hear," said Dong, who was the executor of Aoki's estate. "I mean, that's a big surprise to me."
[h3]Finding the informant[/h3]
Threadgill recalled that he first approached Aoki after a bureau wiretap on the home phone of Saul and Billie Wachter, local members of the Communist Party, picked up Aoki talking to Berkeley High classmate Doug Wachter.

At first, Aoki gathered information about the Communist Party, Threadgill said. But Aoki soon focused on the Socialist Workers Party and its youth affiliate, the Young Socialist Alliance, which also were targets of an intensive FBI domestic security investigation.

By spring 1962, Aoki had been elected to the Berkeley Young Socialist Alliance's executive council, FBI records show. That December, he became a member of the Oakland-Berkeley branch of the Socialist Workers Party, where he served as the representative to Bay Area civil rights groups. He also was on the steering committee of the Committee to Uphold the Right to Travel, which worked to give students the right to travel to Cuba. In 1965, Aoki joined the Vietnam Day Committee, an influential antiwar group based in Berkeley, and worked on its international committee as liaison to foreign antiwar activists.

All along, Aoki met regularly with his FBI handler. Aoki also filed reports by phone, Threadgill said.

"I'd call him and say, 'When do you want to get together?' " Threadgill recalled. "I'd say, 'I'll meet you on the street corner at so-and-so and so on.' I would park a couple of blocks away and get out and go and sit down and talk to him."
[h3]'He had guns'[/h3]
Threadgill worked with Aoki through mid-1965, when he moved to another FBI office and turned Aoki over to a fellow agent.

Aoki gave the Panthers some of their first guns. As Black Panther Party co-founder Bobby Seale recalled in his memoir, "Seize the Time," the group approached Aoki, "a Third World brother we knew, a Japanese radical cat. He had guns ... .357 Magnums, 22's, 9mm's, what have you."

In early 1967, Aoki joined the Black Panther Party and gave them more guns, Seale wrote. Aoki also gave Panther recruits weapons training, he said in the 2007 interview.

Although carrying weapons was legal at the time, there is little doubt their presence contributed to fatal confrontations between the Panthers and the police.
[h3]Deadly shootouts[/h3]
On Oct. 28, 1967, Black Panthers co-founder Huey Newton was in a shootout that wounded Oakland Officer Herbert Heanes and killed Officer John Frey. On April 6, 1968, Eldridge Cleaver and five other Panthers were involved in a firefight with Oakland police. Cleaver and two officers were wounded, and Panther Bobby Hutton was killed.

M. Wesley Swearingen, a retired FBI agent who has criticized unlawful bureau surveillance activities under Director J. Edgar Hoover, reviewed some of the FBI's records. He concluded in a sworn declaration that Aoki had been an informant.

"I believe that Aoki was an informant," said Swearingen, who served in the FBI from 1951 to 1977 and worked on a squad that investigated the Panthers.

"Someone like Aoki is perfect to be in a Black Panther Party, because I understand he is Japanese," he added. "Hey, nobody is going to guess - he's in the Black Panther Party; nobody is going to guess that he might be an informant."

Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/crime/article...-named-as-informant-3800133.php#ixzz247tN4Hhu

 
This is like that civil rights photographer who was a FBI rat:



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[size=+2]Mixed reactions to civil rights photographer's FBI ties[/size]

[size=-1]By Krissah Thompson
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, September 14, 2010; 10:35 PM [/size]

In many ways, civil rights photographer Ernest Withers would have been the perfect FBI informant, said leaders of the movement whom he photographed during quiet moments in their hotel rooms, at strategy meetings and in the midst of powerful street protests.

He was known to them as "Ernie" and later lionized as the "original civil rights photographer." It was Withers who took photos of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. the day he was slain on the balcony of the Lorraine Motel in Memphis, and it was Withers who documented the trial of the men who killed young Emmett Till.

The revelation this week by the Memphis Commercial Appeal that Withers also assisted an organization that many in the movement considered an enemy further exposes the desperation of the federal government to gain access to the highest levels of the civil rights leadership.

The FBI kept an extensive file on King and his aides, and distrust between the movement's leaders and the agency was great. Civil rights leaders knew their hotel rooms were bugged and were careful about what they said even on their home phones, knowing that federal agents were listening. They felt like people inside and outside of their organizations were always watching them.

"It was just par for the course," said Juanita Jones Abernathy, widow of King's close friend Ralph Abernathy. "They could be in strategy sessions, and the FBI had a way of calling almost immediately after they had made plans for something to inform them of what they had planned to do. They would check into hotels, and the FBI was in the room across the aisle."

"But they kept moving," she said.

Withers, who died in 2007 at 85, provided photographs, scheduling information and biographical sketches to two FBI agents in Memphis, according to files the Commercial Appeal attained through a Freedom of Information Act request. The photographer was a former police officer, and the Memphis newspaper noted that Withers had eight children and may have needed the money paid to informants to support them.

The Rev. Joseph Lowery, a founder of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, knew Withers well and said he is disappointed. The photographer moved freely in the tight circle of King's lieutenants, taking pictures and selling them to black magazines such as Jet and other outlets. He would give the photos free to the ministers who led the movement and could not afford to pay.

Those pictures have been collected in books and show a rare intimacy with civil rights leaders.

"He was very close," Lowery said from his home in Atlanta. "He was beloved. I'm surprised and I'm a little disappointed, but I suspect he did it with his tongue in check knowing that he was not doing anything to hurt the movement."

According to FBI files obtained by the Memphis newspaper during a two-year investigation, Withers worked closely with two FBI agents in the late 1960s.

"There was nothing he could report on us that would hurt us," Lowery said. "We were not an undercover group. We didn't have any need to hide. We weren't planning any ambushes or surprise attacks. We were quite open with what we were planning to do. We publicized it and invited people to join it. He probably knew that as well as anybody."

Julian Bond, a founder of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, said FBI agents came to the group's office at least once a week to get information. Most often it was a matter of agents looking for runaway kids.

"We felt there was nothing wrong with saying who we had or hadn't seen. Lots of people talked to the FBI and did so innocently," Bond said. "They believed that they were helping in some legitimate law enforcement reason."

When agents began asking questions about politics - who was a communist, or about specific political figures - the SNCC leaders became more wary.

"We know some people in the movement were informants. I grew up in a political culture in which an informant - somebody who told on his friends - was the lowest form of life," Bond said.

Withers's daughter, Rosalind Withers, told local news organizations that she did not find the newspaper report convincing. "This is the first time I've heard of this in my life," she told the Commercial Appeal. "My father's not here to defend himself. That is a very, very strong, strong accusation."

Abernathy said Withers's family has her sympathy and concern. Withers was closer than any other journalist when King traveled to Memphis in 1968 for the sanitation workers' strike. It was there that King was assassinated, and Withers, who lived in Memphis, captured the sad, bloody aftermath beyond police lines.

Many details of Withers's relationship with the FBI have not been disclosed. The bureau keeps information on all its informers but has declined repeated requests to release any files on Withers.

As a whole, journalists were largely supportive of the movement's aims, said former Washington Post columnist William Raspberry, who was part of the small cadre of black journalists who covered civil rights. "There's a distinction to be made between those informants who pretended to be something other than what they were and those who were pressured," said Raspberry, who noted that civil rights activist Julius Hobson - who ran the D.C. chapter of the Congress on Racial Equity - was later revealed in FBI files to have been an informant.

"His experience was that sometimes you have to throw them a little something to get them off your back," Raspberry said.

View all comments  that have been posted about this article.
 
The lengths that the US government went/goes to destroy the Black community
mean.gif
To their credit, don't take it SUPER personally. 

The black community wasn't the ONLY community they tried infiltrating. You should know that. 

I try to remind people that the Government is anti anything anti-government. I mean what government isn't? 

Anything that is a threat to the establishment will be dismantled from within...or they'll try.

I guess you all forgot about the Agent Provocateurs in Occupy Wall Street? 
 
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How do you know this guy is telling the truth though ? They could be trying to tarnish the mans reputation because he is dead now and cannot speak for himself. I saw a program on Natgeo (or was it discover ?) where the CIA basically said that they were planning on capturing Saddam, take over the Iraqi news station and basically play a false recording of Saddam saying that he was a homosexual to help damage his character so that the people would revolt and the country would fall into chaos so that they could swoop in and take over. For all we know this guy could be coming out now and calling Aoki an informant so that they could help downplay the black panther party as nothing but some terrorist. It's actually funny that in general, all these various accusations don't come out to the public until said person is dead and gone where they cannot defend themselves.
 
How do you know this guy is telling the truth though ? They could be trying to tarnish the mans reputation because he is dead now and cannot speak for himself. I saw a program on Natgeo (or was it discover ?) where the CIA basically said that they were planning on capturing Saddam, take over the Iraqi news station and basically play a false recording of Saddam saying that he was a homosexual to help damage his character so that the people would revolt and the country would fall into chaos so that they could swoop in and take over. For all we know this guy could be coming out now and calling Aoki an informant so that they could help downplay the black panther party as nothing but some terrorist. It's actually funny that in general, all these various accusations don't come out to the public until said person is dead and gone where they cannot defend themselves.
We'll never know.

They said Malcolm X had a gay relationship before his "militant" phase, so who knows. 

Smear campaigns are real but government informants are even more real. 
 
As of right now, i'm taking these accusations as what they are - accusations. If this accusation is false, does anyone know where Aoki supposedly got all the firearms from?
 
We'll never know.

They said Malcolm X had a gay relationship before his "militant" phase, so who knows. 

Smear campaigns are real but government informants are even more real. 
Didn't they say something of that sorts about Martin Luther king Jr ?
 
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