[lbo-talk] AP 12/22/07: Report: Hoover had plan for mass arrests

Chip Berlet c.berlet at publiceye.org
Sat Dec 22 15:57:10 PST 2007


Hi,

This was part of what is called the "Brown Scare," which set up the precedent for the "Red Scare."

Leo P. Ribuffo, The Old Christian Right: The Protestant Hard Right from the Great Depression to the Cold War (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1983)

http://hnn.us/blogs/comments/9623.html

Nice to get some documentation. Liberals bought into the Brown Scare, and then promoted the Red Scare.

See:

Keller, William W. (1989). The Liberals and J. Edgar Hoover. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

-Chip Berlet

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From: lbo-talk-bounces at lbo-talk.org on behalf of Rick "Kisséll Sent: Sat 12/22/2007 6:57 PM To: Progressive Wisconsin list Subject: [lbo-talk] AP 12/22/07: Report: Hoover had plan for mass arrests

Report: Hoover had plan for mass arrests AP 12/22/07 Former FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover had a plan to suspend the rules against illegal detention and arrest up to 12,000 Americans he suspected of being disloyal, according to a newly declassified document.

Hoover sent his plan to the White House on July 7, 1950, less than two weeks after the Korean War began. But there is no evidence to suggest that President Truman or any subsequent president approved any part of Hoover's proposal to house suspect Americans in military and federal prisons.

Hoover had wanted Truman to declare the mass arrests necessary to "protect the country against treason, espionage and sabotage," The New York Times reported Saturday in a story posted on its Web site.

The plan called for the FBI to apprehend all potentially dangerous individuals whose names were on a list Hoover had been compiling for years.

"The index now contains approximately twelve thousand individuals, of which approximately ninety-seven percent are citizens of the United States," Hoover wrote in the now-declassified document. "In order to make effective these apprehensions, the proclamation suspends the writ of habeas corpus."

Habeas corpus is the right to seek relief from illegal detention, and is a bedrock legal principle.

All apprehended individuals eventually would have had the right to a hearing under Hoover's plan, but hearing boards comprised of one judge and two citizens would not have been bound by the rules of evidence.

The details of Hoover's plan was among a collection of Cold War-era documents related to intelligence issues from 1950-1955. The State Department declassified the documents on Friday.

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