Tuesday, April 7, 2015

Surveillance & MLK


Folks: as promised, I wanted to share the uncensored FBI letter sent to MLK that clearly outlines the risks of domestic surveillance. From the NYT's article about the letter: 
The unnamed author suggests intimate knowledge of his correspondent’s sex life, identifying one possible lover by name and claiming to have specific evidence about others. Another passage hints of an audiotape accompanying the letter, apparently a recording of “immoral conduct” in action. “Lend your sexually psychotic ear to the enclosure,” the letter demands. It concludes with a deadline of 34 days “before your filthy, abnormal fraudulent self is bared to the nation.” 
“There is only one thing left for you to do,” the author warns vaguely in the final paragraph. “You know what it is.” 
When the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. received this letter, nearly 50 years ago, he quietly informed friends that someone wanted him to kill himself — and he thought he knew who that someone was. Despite its half-baked prose, self-conscious amateurism and other attempts at misdirection, King was certain the letter had come from the F.B.I. Its infamous director, J. Edgar Hoover, made no secret of his desire to see King discredited. A little more than a decade later, the Senate’s Church Committee on intelligence overreach confirmed King’s suspicion.
Something to chew on this week while we discuss privacy rights and surveillance.