|
Elmer
Pratt | Leonard
Peltier | JJ Harper | Shaka
Sankofa | Dudley
George | Gangsta
profiling | Good-bye Johnny
Cochran
Fred Hampton

from Black
Commentator website
To members of Chicago's African
American community in the late 1960s, no leader was more inspiring,
more articulate, or more effective than Fred Hampton. He organized
food pantries, educational programs, and recreational outlets
for impoverished children, and he helped bring about a peaceful
coexistence among the city's rival street gangs. To civic leaders
in Chicago, the FBI, and many others, however, he was a dangerous
revolutionary leader, committed to the violent overthrow of the
white-dominated system. Hampton was killed in a 1969 raid on
the headquarters of the Illinois Chapter of the Black Panther
party, in what was almost certainly a planned assassination orchestrated
by Federal agents and city leaders, who feared that Hampton's
influence could lead to an all-out armed uprising by the city's
most disenfranchised residents.
Hampton was born in 1948 in
Chicago, and grew up in Maywood, a suburb just to the west of
the city. His parents had moved north from Louisiana, and both
held jobs at the Argo Starch Company. As a youth, Hampton was
gifted both in the classroom and on the athletic field. To those
who knew him, he seemed a likely candidate to escape the ghetto
and "make it" in the white-dominated world outside.
At Proviso East High School in Maywood, Hampton earned three
varsity letters and won a Junior Achievement Award. He graduated
with honors in 1966.
Following his graduation, Hampton
enrolled at Triton Junior College in nearby River Grove, Illinois,
majoring in pre-law. He also became active in the National Association
for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), assuming leadership
of the Youth Council of the organization's West Suburban Branch.
In his capacity as an NAACP youth organizer, Hampton began to
show signs of his natural leadership ability. From a community
of 27,000, he was able to muster a youth group 500-members strong,
an impressive size even for a constituency twice as large. Hampton
considered it his mission to create a better environment for
the development of young African Americans. He worked to get
more and better recreational facilities established in the neighborhoods,
and to improve educational resources for Maywood's African American
community. Through his involvement with the NAACP, Hampton hoped
to achieve social change through nonviolent activism and community
organizing.

At about the same time that
Hampton was successfully organizing young African Americans for
the NAACP, the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense started rising
to national prominence. Hampton was quickly attracted to the
Black Panther approach, which was based on a ten-point program
of African American self-determination. Hampton joined the Black
Panther Party and relocated to downtown Chicago, where he launched
the party's Illinois chapter in November of 1968.
Over the next year, Hampton
and his associates recorded a number of significant achievements
in Chicago. Perhaps his most important accomplishment was his
brokering of a nonaggression pact between Chicago's most powerful
street gangs. By emphasizing that racial and ethnic conflict
between gangs would only keep its members entrenched in poverty,
he was able to forge a class-conscious, multiracial alliance
of black, Puerto Rican, and poor white youths. In May of 1969,
Hampton called a press conference to announce that a truce had
been declared among this "rainbow coalition," a phrase
coined by Hampton and made popular over the years by Rev. Jesse
Jackson.
Equally important was Hampton's
work as a developer of community service programs. His leadership
helped create a program that provided free breakfasts for schoolchildren,
a program the Panters had initiated in several cities. Hampton
was also instrumental in the establishment of a free medical
clinic, and other programs accessible to poor African Americans.
By the tender age of 20, Hampton had become a respected community
leader among Chicago's black population.
Meanwhile, Hampton was growing
more militant in his political views. One factor in the increasing
intensity of his rhetoric was his 1969 arrest for the strong-arm
theft of $71 worth of Good Humor bars, which he then allegedly
gave away to neighborhood children. Hampton was initially convicted
and sentenced to two to five years in prison before the decision
was overturned. He came away from the experience with a reinforced
distrust of the American legal system, and a renewed conviction
that it must be completely overhauled.
Although he was still more
of an organizer than a revolutionary, Hampton's commitment to
non-violence seemed to weaken. He began carrying guns, and, in
a 1969 interview with the Chicago Sun-Times, openly declared
that "I'm not afraid to say I'm at war with the pigs."
Still, his position on violence was that it was necessary for
self-defense; African Americans needed to protect themselves
against the brutal tactics of the police and other white-dominated
institutions. "What this country has done to nonviolent
leaders like Martin Luther King--I think that objectively says
there's going to have to be an armed struggle," he was quoted
as saying in the Sun-Times article.
By all accounts, Hampton was
one of the most articulate and persuasive African American leaders
of his time. His quiet demeanor and restrained speaking style
belied the abrasive image most people attached to the Black Panthers.
The Rev. Thomas Strieter, a member of the Maywood village board
who knew Hampton from his earliest days as an organizer, was
quoted in a 1994 Chicago magazine article as saying that Hampton
"had charm coming out his ears. My impression of the Black
Panthers in Oakland (California) was that they were thugs. Fred
was not a thug." Former Chicago corporation counsel James
Montgomery called him "one of the most persuasive speakers
I've ever heard." Dr. Quentin Young, a member of Chicago
Mayor Harold Washington's inner circle, went even further. "He
(Hampton) was a giant, and this is not some idle white worship
of a black man," he was quoted in Chicago as saying. "This
is a terrible way to put it, but the people who made it their
business to kill the leaders of the black movement picked the
right ones."

Indeed, while Hampton impressed
many of the people with whom he came into contact as a great
leader and talented communicator, those very qualities marked
him as a major threat in the eyes of the FBI and other concerned
agencies. The FBI began keeping close tabs on his activities,
and subsequent investigations have shown that FBI chief J. Edgar
Hoover was determined to prevent the formation of a cohesive
Black radical movement in the United States. Hoover saw the Panthers,
and gang coalitions like that forged by Hampton in Chicago, as
frightening stepping stones toward the creation of just such
a revolutionary body.
Urged on by the FBI, the Chicago
police launched an all-out assault on the Black Panthers and
their allies, characterizing the group as nothing more than a
criminal gang. Over the course of the escalating conflict in
1969, eleven black youths from Chicago's South Side were killed
in separate skirmishes with police. During that year alone, shoot-outs
killed or wounded a dozen Panther members and almost as many
police officers. Over 100 Black Panthers were arrested during
the year, and Panther party headquarters at 2337 West Monroe
Street on the city's West Side were raided by police and FBI
agents four separate times. The last of these four raids was
the one in which Hampton was killed.
One of the individuals who
spent a lot of time at Panther headquarters in Chicago was William
O'Neal. It turned out that O'Neal, a convicted car thief, had
been recruited out of the county jail to be a paid informant
for the FBI. One of O'Neal's chief contributions to the FBI's
infiltration of the Black Panthers was to provide them with a
floor plan of the building. O'Neal's information was key to the
December 4, 1969, police raid that killed Hampton and fellow
party member Mark Clark. Four other Panthers were seriously injured.
Chicago Police entered the
building at 4:45 in the morning. The police version of the raid
claimed that the Panthers began firing guns at them the moment
they began knocking on the door. According to this version of
events, a ten-minute shootout ensued, resulting in the deaths
of Hampton and Clark. Subsequent investigations suggest otherwise;
it is likely, in fact, that the raid more closely resembled an
execution than a legitimate police action. For example, ballistic
evidence showed that at most one shot could have been fired by
a Panther. The police did virtually all of the shooting that
took place. Hampton died in bed. There is strong evidence that
he had been drugged that night, probably by O'Neal, and it is
likely that he slept through the entire ordeal.
Hampton's funeral was attended
by 5,000 people, and he was eulogized by such black leaders as
Jesse Jackson and Ralph Abernathy, Martin Luther King's successor
as head of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. In his
eulogy, Jackson noted that "when Fred was shot in Chicago,
black people in particular, and decent people in general, bled
everywhere."
The officers involved in the
raid were cleared by a grand jury of any crimes. The families
of Hampton and Clark filed a $47.7 million civil suit against
the city, state, and federal governments. More than a decade
later, the suit was finally settled, and the two families each
received a large but undisclosed sum. In 1990, the Chicago City
Council passed a resolution declaring "Fred Hampton Day"
in honor of the slain leader.
Since Hampton's death, the
Black Panthers have faded from the limelight, thanks in large
part to the concentrated efforts of the FBI and various other
police agencies. Hampton's memory lives on, however, in part
due to a scholarship fund set up in his name by Jackson and Abernathy.
Education may be a less dramatic path to social change than armed
revolt, but Hampton's idea of revolution was broad enough to
include it. As Hampton often said, according to The Nation, "You
can kill a revolutionary, but you cannot kill a revolution. You
can jail a liberation fighter, but you cannot jail liberation."
|
Truth can never be
told so as to be understood, and not be believ'd. William Blake, The Proverbs of Hell
Truth suppress'd, whether
by courts or crooks, will find an avenue to be told. Sheila Steele, injusticebusters.com
If you hold the mouth
of Truth, It will burst out its rib-cage. Somali proverb
Publisher : Sheila
Steele
Got something
to say about this or any other stories on this site? Go to injusticebustersblog Participate!
- injusticebusters
court advice :
- How to walk yourself through the justice system
-
- Why you should dump your preliminary hearing (written July 1998 and still valid)
-
- Sermonette:
The
Naked Truth -- (You
will find links to many more sermonettes in the sidebar on this
page
Another target
of Dueck's malice: : Wilf Hathway
Our activism
contributed greatly to the good vibes which happened around the
civil trial.
Index
to the stories on this website
This is not
regularly updated so if you are looking for a particular story
and you have a name or keyword, please use the site search engine(at
the bottom of the page) which IS regularly updated
Index to Saskatoon Police stories
This is a pretty good scrapbook
for the 1998-2002 period.

Inquiry into the malicious prosecution of David
Milgaard untanling 36 years of Saskatchewan police and Crown
misconduct: : Opening day 1 | 2
| 3 | 4
| 5 | 6
| 7 |
- Stephen
Williams: Canadian
writer subject to Stasi-like treatment by Canadian police
- Terry
Arnold: : Snitch a
suicide?
- RCMP
scenario stings: Brian
Hutchinson starts digging
- Gary
wells: Faulty eye-witness
testimony
- Tulia,
Texas
- Gilmer,
Texas
- Willie
Upshaw
- Wrongfully convicted in Canada
- Foster Parent false accusations
- Martensville
- Don
Smith obscenity trial: an obscene conviction
- James
Lockyer
- Hurricane
Carter
- Johnny Cochran speaks up for
Bill Sampson
- Vopnis
- Abdulai
Mohamed

The Terrible Story behind the Atif Rafay and
Sebastian Burns convictions

Trial
set for June 15
We
know part of this disclosure is a forged statement and perjured
affidavit from a Winnipeg cop
-
-
-
-

The
Crown is still fighting Fred Poirier -- and they are losing.
Secret Commissions Case from Northern B.C.
-
-
- 2005: In
the United States the proven wrongful convictions just keep coming
at us!
-
- Brandon Morin:
- Convicted in Oregon
- of rapes which did not happen
- This website has good information
about Measure 11 -- Oregon's Mandatory Sentencing requirements
which have been in place since 1994. In this case we see how
the combination of a flawed grand jury system and prosecutors
who seek not justice but convictions is a recipe for wrongful
convictions.
-
Canadians who
have been wrongfully convicted because of improper investigations
combined with zealous Crown
A round-up of wrongful convictions in Canada
- Robert
Baltovich
- Michael Burns
- Sebastian Burns
- Rodney
Cain
- Wilbert
Coffin
(hanged, 1953)
- Jason
Dix
- Jim
Driskell
- Jody
Druken
- Randy
Druken
- Hugues
Duguay
- Michel Dumont
- Peter
Frumusa
- Walter
Gillespie and Robert Mailman
- Clayton Johnson
- Yvonne Johnson
- Herman
Kaglik
- Darren
Koehn
- Kulaveeringsam
"Kulam" Karthiresu
- Stephen Leadbeater
- Donald Marshall
- Chris McCullough
- Michael
McTaggart
- Felix
Michaud
- David Milgaard
- Guy
Paul Morin
- Shannon
Murrin
- Jamie
Nelson
- Greg
Parsons
- Benoit Proulx
- Atif Rafay
- Louise
Reynolds
- Thomas
Sophonow
- Gary
Staples
- Billy
Taillefer
- Steven
Truscott
- Joe
Warren
- Leon
Walchuk
-
- AIDWYC
- Innocence Project (Canada)
- Innocence Project (U.S.)
- Northwest Law Center on Wrongful Convictions
-
- Kirstin Lobato
- Jeffrey
Scott Hornoff
- Willie
Upshaw
- Hurricane
Carter
- Guildford
4
- Birmingham
6
- Amirault
- Houston
- U.S. wrongful convictions:
Exonerateed
- Kirk
Bloodsworth
- Laurence
Adams
- Ludrate
Burton
- Stephen
Cowans
- Wilton
Dedge
- Albert
Johnson
- Kenneth
Marsh
- Dwayne
McKinney
- James Bernard Parker
- Peter
Reilly
- Peter
Rose
- Sylvester
Smith
- Clifford
St. Joseph
- John
Stoll
- Marty
Tankleff
- Wilton
Dedge
- Ray
Krone
-
- Still working on it:
- Dennis Deschaine
- Dennis
Perry
- Tim
Sandfort
|