The Persecution Of Rakem Balogun Proves This Is Still J Edgar Hoover’s FBI

in #government6 years ago (edited)

The Bureau of Investigation was founded in 1908 by a man named Charles Joseph Bonaparte, the great nephew of Napoleon. It remained a relatively marginal slice of the US Department of Justice until an ambitious sociopath named J Edgar Hoover rode a Red Scare panic to the top of the law enforcement food chain and used blackmail and illegal wiretapping to exponentially expand its size, scope and power under its new name, the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

Hoover ruled over America with an iron fist for nearly five decades as the head of the FBI. He bullied, blackmailed and crushed anyone who stood in between him and his insatiable drive to acquire more power, eventually forming the frequently Constitution-violating Counter Intelligence Program (COINTELPRO) in the 1950s.


COINTELPRO was used to infiltrate and undermine any activist groups Hoover personally disliked under the pretense of protecting the nation from violence, targeting everyone from feminist groups to antiwar activists.

Hoover, who once called Martin Luther King, Jr "the most notorious liar in the country" and kept files on him in which he'd scribble hateful comments, reserved a particular disdain for black activist groups. A 1967 FBI document titled "BLACK NATIONALIST-HATE GROUPS" explicitly establishing a new counterintelligence program designed to "expose, disrupt, misdirect, discredit, or otherwise neutralize the activities of black nationalist, hate-type organizations and groupings, their leadership, spokesmen, membership, and supporters, and to counter their propensity for violence and civil disorder."

These aggressive campaigns against black activist groups, particularly those which supported the Second Amendment rights of black Americans, led to the FBI's assassination of Black Panther Party leaders Fred Hampton and Mark Clark. Crime scene evidence and FBI documents showed the killings which occurred during the predawn raid to have been premeditated, and in part motivated by the fact that Hampton had been running (of all things) a Black Panther Breakfast for Children program which FBI leadership wanted destroyed. A $1.85 million settlement was eventually paid out by the city of Chicago, Cook County and the federal government, but nobody from the Bureau ever went to prison for the premeditated assassination of dissident US citizens.

This is just one of many unforgivable evils that the FBI was guilty of inflicting upon the American people under Hoover's rule. Others include the attempt to blackmail Martin Luther King, Jr into committing suicide, which we discussed prior to the 50th anniversary of King's assassination (which compelling evidence suggests Hoover was also likely involved in).

But after J Edgar Hoover's death in 1972, the FBI he'd built from the ground up and inflated to immense power and influence wasn't scrapped. It wasn't rolled back to the size it was before Hoover arrived. It remained exactly as it was, because the US power establishment had every intention of carrying on Hoover's work.

And indeed, that is exactly what has happened. There is an abundance of evidence that these COINTELPRO tactics continue to this day, decades after COINTELPRO was ostensibly dissolved, and black rights activist groups are still to this day being surveilled, infiltrated and targeted by the FBI.

In October of last year, Foreign Policy obtained an FBI Intelligence Assessment titled "Black Identity Extremists Likely Motivated to Target Law Enforcement Officers". A few days later, a man named Rakem Balogun made a Youtube video giving his thoughts on this new "Black Identity Extremism" scaremongering.

"The United States, you know after September 11 they passed the Patriot Act," Balogun says in the video. "And the Patriot Act allows the federal government to violate the privacy of anybody that might be a potential terrorist. With this 'Black Identity Extremists', they will be able to label black empowerment groups as potential terrorists."

"They are finding ways to criminalize you," Balogun adds later in the video. "They are finding ways to demonize you. And they are finding ways to, most importantly, neutralize you. The future is going to be definitely interesting, how this is going to play out. We've seen it happen with the Panthers, we've seen it happen with Marcus Garvey, Martin Luther King, Malcolm X, so we understand how far this system will go to push this agenda and to keep us subservient."

Two months later, as he describes in a new interview with The Guardian, Rakem Balogun became the first American to be arrested and prosecuted as a "Black Identity Extremist". It was a predawn raid. The FBI had been surveilling him for years.

They tried to get him to plead guilty (97 percent of federal convictions come via plea deal, not trial), but he refused, fought, and won. Balogun was held without bail for five months on a bogus firearm charge that the judge ended up throwing out. He lost his car, his home, his job, and the experience of his newborn daughter's early infancy. Now free and trying to get his legs back underneath him after an ordeal he should never have been put through, Balogun has a GoFundMe that an organization he is affiliated with has confirmed is his.

Obviously a firearms offense wouldn't make someone a "Black Identity Extremist" even if it were true; that was just a charge the FBI threw at him while digging for reasons to charge him as a terrorist. Do you want to know what their reason was for prosecuting Balogun as a "Black Identity Extremist"? He had made some angry Facebook posts about police following the brutal deaths of Philando Castile and Alton Sterling. His entire arrest and prosecution arose from legally exercising the First and Second Amendment rights granted to him by the US Constitution.

At a time when the same Americans who claim to support the civil rights of minorities are championing US intelligence agencies and elevating former FBI Directors like Robert Mueller and James Comey to deified rock star celebrities, it is good to remember that the FBI has always been a depraved Orwellian institution that targets the nation's most disempowered groups for oppression, and that J Edgar Hoover's legacy lives on uninterrupted. Robert Mueller and James Comey are no friends of the American people, and neither is the FBI.

To learn more about the FBI's persecution of Rakem Balogun, check out his interview with The Guardian here and his video interview with BlackNews102 here.

To contribute to Balogun's GoFundMe, click here.


Internet censorship is getting pretty bad, so best way to keep seeing my daily articles is to get on the mailing list for my website, so you'll get an email notification for everything I publish. My articles and podcasts are entirely reader and listener-funded, so if you enjoyed this piece please consider sharing it around, liking me on Facebook, following my antics on Twitter, checking out my podcast, throwing some money into my hat on Patreon or Paypal, or buying my new book Woke: A Field Guide for Utopia Preppers.

Bitcoin donations:1Ac7PCQXoQoLA9Sh8fhAgiU3PHA2EX5Zm2

Sort:  

See, this is why people like Colin Kaepernick would kneel. Police brutality and power abuses are a very real and growing issue. The fact that those issues get masked by the fake outrage machine is infuriating. Fuck respecting the flag!! How about we start respecting the consitution!!!

Yet more white people are killed by cops every year then blacks, most are out doing stupid stuff like blacks. I hear white people complain all the time about cops and stuff they do to them or their relatives. The only difference is white people aren't out making videos of all the stupid stuff their friends and family are doing that got the cops called in the first place.

Does it matter to you that he did nothing illegal? It doesn't seem like you understand the situation very well. The FBI did what's called parallel reconstruction. They raided and arrested him on bogus charges and then work backward to try to find something they can make stick. Claiming that someone is a terrorist for voicing their thoughts is absurd. Do you think this was justified?

No I don't this is justified at all. Everyone knows he was brought up on bogus charges, being such the UK should drop their absconding warrant. In my personal opinion I think he should just come out and take care of that, as far as the US is concerned unless they can prove he actually stole the documents he distributed they can't get him on anything. If they went after him for publishing those documents they'd have to jail publishers who also printed those documents. If they did arrest him millions of Americans would be glad to contribute millions to his defense since he's basically a hero to all of us he saved from a Hillary presidency.

Thank you for posting this - since few are talking about it and we're not likely to know if we don't go and intentionally look up his name. Much appreciated. Momz

Quote from one of the links in the article:

"Not everyone is convinced, however, that the FBI is singling out black Americans. JJ MacNab, a domestic terrorism expert, said that rhetoric of the sort employed by Daniels and appearing in public or on social media with guns would get anyone investigated, regardless of their race or affiliation. MacNab added that she was aware of FBI investigations into the predominantly white American militia movement, saying that she did not believe there was a disproportionate focus on black groups."

Enough said.

Did anyone from the Moocher Rebellion go to jail for pointing firearms at federal officers, staking out sniper positions and fomenting a Social Media firestorm aimed at the Bureau of Land Management fascists that wanted him to pay for the use of public land for Bundy's profit?

Nuff said indeed.

I googled what was the Moocher Rebellion and nothing came up. The only way someone wasn't arrested for pointing fire arms at federal officers is if federal officers went to question someone and was told by them to get off their land, to which they'd have every right to hold a firearm but not point it at anybody. If the federal officers didn't have a warrant there is nothing they can do if someone stands on their property with a rifle in hand and telling them to get off their land. In the end though things didn't work out for the Bundy situation either....did it.

The Moocher Rebellion WAS the Bundy thing. His cattle (moo) were grazing on public land for decades. He owed US Citizens millions of dollars and whipped up a rebellion via social media >> MOOcher Rebellion.

They pointed weapons at federal officers, staked out sniper positions, and IIRC, nobody ever went to jail over it.

Two of the domestic terrorists from the riotous camp straight up executed a cop in WA State. But they were just crazy white folk. Not representative of dangerous cop killers like the BIE.

Have a nice day.

I think you need to read up on those trials and convictions a bit better. It was the Mulheur National Wildlife Refuge not Moocher. Two people who Bundy kicked off his land for being to radical ended up losing their lives (one committed suicide the other killed by police) after shooting two police officers in Las Vegas, another guy got 68 years in prison, assorted others involved got prison time, the stand off where you mentioned they pointed guns was halted because after the federal agency called for back up the sheriff showed up and told the feds the warrant was no good, it had expired, the Bundys case was dropped because the feds didn't give evidence demanded by the judge to be given. So it's a lot more complex then what you seem to be think and it went on for years.

The first criminal case resulting from the standoff, against six Bundy supporters, was declared a mistrial by U.S. District Judge Gloria Navarro on April 24, 2017. Six men had been charged with conspiring with Cliven Bundy to prevent a court-ordered cattle seizure. The mistrial was declared hours after the jury convicted two men of some of the 10 counts in the indictment. The jurors reported to the court they were “hopelessly deadlocked” on the remaining counts and defendants, despite the judge having sent them back to deliberate further but they were unable to reach any unanimous verdicts for four defendants, described by prosecutors as the "least culpable" of the 17 who were charged, and on the remaining counts for the two who were convicted. Over 50 prosecution witnesses testified in the two-month trial. Former militia group member, Gregory Burleson, of Arizona, who has also been a paid FBI informant, was convicted of assault upon and threatening of a federal officer, aiding extortion via both interstate commerce and travel, obstruction of justice, plus multiple gun counts. He faces a 57-year mandatory minimum sentence. Idaho activist Todd Engel was found guilty of obstruction of justice and interstate travel in aid of extortion. Representing himself at trial, he may be sentenced to as much as 30 years in federal prison on the first two charges. At his July 26 sentencing, Burleson was given 68 years for recruiting others in Arizona to join the standoff, and posting "alcohol fueled' rants encouraging others to do the same.[170] Engel was to be sentenced on the following day with Cliven, Ammon and Ryan Bundy and two others expected to be tried later in 2017.[171] Retrials of the first six and the trials of the remaining eleven defendants were originally scheduled for June 26th by Judge Navarro.[172]

The retrial for the four defendants for whom no verdict was reached in April began on July 11, 2017, in Las Vegas.[173] The Jury began deliberations on August 15, 2017.[174] On August 22nd, they found two of the defendants not guilty on all charges and cleared the other two of most charges, but they could not reach verdicts on four charges against Eric Parker and two charges against Scott Drexler.[175]

The first defendant to be sentenced is Gerald "Jerry" DeLemus of Rochester, New Hampshire who tried to change his guilty plea to "not guilty." He received a little more than seven years from Judge Navarro, for conspiracy and interstate travel in aid of extortion, with credit for the 16 months he has already served.[176]

A verdict of not guilty was returned on two defendants August 22, 2017 by the jury after 3 days of deliberation. Two others were found not guilty of several of the charges and unable to come to a decision on other charges. Ricky Lovelien and Steven Stewart were acquitted of all 10 charges and ordered released. There were not-guilty findings on most charges against Scott Drexler and Eric Parker.[177][178] On August 23, 2017, the court scheduled a retrial for September 25, 2017 on both Drexler and Parker and ordered them released to return to Idaho, pending retrial.[179][180] On August 31, 2017 the court scheduled a trial date for October 10, 2017 for Cliven Bundy, Ammon Bundy, Ryan Bundy, Ryan Payne and Peter Santilli. Included with this group will be the retrial of Scott Drexler and Eric Parker.[181] On October 6, 2017, the court rescheduled to October 30, 2017 the trial for 6 of the 7 defendants. Peter Santilli pled guilty to conspiracy to injure or impede federal officers by blocking BLM law enforcement officers in with his car, and was released pending sentencing in January 2018.[182][4] On October 23, 2017, Scott Drexler and Eric Parker each pled guilty to a single count of obstruction of a court order, a misdemeanor charge. Both men will be sentenced on February 2, 2018.[183] On November 14, 2017, Micah McGuire pled guilty to a single charge of conspiracy to impede federal officers, and was released pending sentencing on February 14, 2018[184]

During a sealed court hearing on November 29, 2017 judge Gloria M. Navarro considered multiple defense motions seeking dismissal of the case due to alleged withholding of exculpatory evidence by the federal government. After the sealed hearing, judge Navarro granted pretrial release to Cliven Bundy, his son Ammon Bundy, and co-defendant Ryan Payne.[185]

On December 4, 2017, U.S. Magistrate Judge Peggy Leen ordered the pretrial release of the remaining defendants.[186]

On December 20, 2017, Judge Navarro declared a mistrial, stating that federal prosecutors had willfully violated evidence rules and failed to turn over pertinent documents to the defense. Both sides were instructed to submit legal briefs by December 29 on whether the government should be allowed to pursue a new trial with a hearing to be held on January 8, 2018. A new tentative trial date was set for February 26, 2018.[187]

On December 21, 2017, United States Attorney General Jeff Sessions ordered an examination into the federal prosecution's mishandling of the Bundy case.[188]

On January 8, 2018, U.S. District Court Judge Gloria Navarro dismissed with prejudice the criminal charges against Cliven Bundy, his sons Ammon and Ryan, and co-defendant Ryan Payne regarding the standoff. At that time she also scheduled a February 26, 2018 trial date for "Tier 3" defendants Melvin Bundy, Dave Bundy, Jason Woods and Joseph O'Shaughnessy.[189] On February 7, 2018, the federal government motioned the court to dismiss with prejudice the indictments against the remaining defendants "in the interests of justice."[190]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bundy_standoff

Did you copy and paste this from Wikipedia?

Black guy goes to prison for 5 months for talking about pointing guns.

White guys get squat for pointing guns.

Feds adhere to legal procedure with white guys, warrant, proper evidence gathering and whatnot. Black guy, goes to jail for 5 months with little to no due process.

Several "white" people went to jail, two crazy right wingers died, another guy died after leaving the scene of the stand off, another gets 67 years in prison, others also got jail time....they didn't get away with anything, if the government wouldn't turn over evidence requested by the judge there's no case.

Coin Marketplace

STEEM 0.27
TRX 0.12
JST 0.032
BTC 56858.44
ETH 2919.14
USDT 1.00
SBD 3.60