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Tag: J. Edgar Hoover

  • ‘The Most Dangerous Negro’: 3 Essential Reads on the FBI’s Assessment of MLK’s Radical Views and Allies

    Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. relaxes at home in May 1956 in Montgomery, Alabama. Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

    Howard Manly, The Conversation

    Left out of GOP debates about “the weaponization” of the federal government is the use of the FBI to spy on civil rights leaders for most of the 20th century.

    Martin Luther King Jr. was one of the targets.

    As secret FBI documents became declassified, The Conversation U.S. published several articles looking at the details that emerged about King’s personal life and how he was considered in 1963 by the FBI as “the most dangerous Negro.”

    1. The radicalism of MLK

    As a historian of religion and civil rights, University of Colorado Colorado Springs Professor Paul Harvey writes that while King has come to be revered as a hero who led a nonviolent struggle to build a color blind society, the true radicalism of MLK’s beliefs remain underappreciated.

    “The civil saint portrayed nowadays was,” Harvey writes, “by the end of his life, a social and economic radical, who argued forcefully for the necessity of economic justice in the pursuit of racial equality.”

    2. The threat of being called a communist

    Jason Miller, a North Carolina State University English professor, details the delicate balance that King was forced to strike between some of his radical allies and the Kennedy and Johnson administrations.

    As the leading figure in the civil rights movement, Miller explains, King could not be perceived as a communist in order to maintain his national popularity.

    As a result, King did not overtly invoke the name of one of the Harlem Renaissance’s leading poets, Langston Hughes, a man the FBI suspected of being a communist sympathizer.

    But Miller’s research reveals the shrewdness with which King still managed to use Hughes’ poetry in his speeches and sermons, most notably in King’s “I Have a Dream” speech which echoes Hughes’ poem “I Dream a World.”

    “By channeling Hughes’ voice, King was able to elevate the subversive words of a poet that the powerful thought they had silenced,” Miller writes.

    3. ‘We must mark him now’

    As a historian who has done substantial research regarding FBI files on the Black freedom movement, UCLA labor studies lecturer Trevor Griffey points out that from 1910 to the 1970s, the FBI treated civil rights activists as either disloyal “subversives” or “dupes” of foreign agents.

    Screenshot from a 1966 FBI memo regarding the surveillance of Martin Luther King Jr. National Archives via Trevor Griffey photo

    As King ascended in prominence in the late 1950s and 1960s, it was inevitable that the FBI would investigate him.

    In fact, two days after King delivered his famous “I Have a Dream” speech at the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, William Sullivan, the FBI’s director of intelligence, wrote: “We must mark him now, if we have not done so before, as the most dangerous Negro of the future in this Nation from the standpoint of communism, the Negro and national security.”

    Editor’s note: This story is a roundup of articles from The Conversation’s archives.

    Howard Manly, Outreach Editor, The Conversation

    This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

    The Conversation

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  • Is it closing time for DC’s ‘ugliest’ building? – WTOP News

    The FBI is relocating its headquarters from the J. Edgar Hoover Building to the Ronald Reagan Building, after decades in one of D.C.’s most polarizing examples of brutalist architecture.

    File photo of the J. Edgar Hoover Building. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)(AP/Andrew Harnik)

    FBI Director Kash Patel said on social media Friday that the FBI’s main headquarters will be leaving the J. Edgar Hoover Building and moving a few blocks down Pennsylvania Ave. to the Ronald Reagan Building, something first announced back in July.

    That means our long national nightmare is nearly over.

    The Hoover building marked its 50th anniversary back in September, and since then, it’s been called everything from an eyesore to one of the ugliest buildings in the world.

    While President Richard Nixon personally directed the building to be named after the FBI’s first and longest director J. Edgar Hoover, two days after Hoover’s death in 1972, it was another commander-in-chief who was responsible for the building itself and its style.

    “JFK actually commissioned this idea of a style of federal architecture,” Caitlin Bristol, the National Building Museum’s director of exhibition development, told WTOP. “Patrick Moynihan wrote this sort of treatise about what federal architecture should be at the time, and that’s when a lot of these buildings sprung up.”

    Bristol said brutalist buildings were economical and quick to construct, compared to the neoclassical grand buildings like the U.S. Capitol and White House.

    During the Building Museum’s exhibit on the brutalist architecture in D.C., she said the Hoover building was the most polarizing.

    “People have a lot of feelings about the Hoover building,” Bristol said. “A lot of reasons people are conflicted about brutalism are that they are very stark, they are very heavy. Sometimes, there is not a lot of light or air movement. They are very severe looking.”

    On Sept. 30, 1975, President Gerald Ford dedicated the 2.8 million-square-foot building that covers more than 6.5 acres to the FBI’s first and longest director.

    Shortly after the Hoover building was completed, it did not receive kind reviews, and a certain word kept being mentioned: ‘drab’.

    Whether it was from the Pulitzer Prize-winning Paul Gapp from the Chicago Tribune, who described it as “Federal Drab,” or The Washington Post’s Wolf Von Eckardt, who not only said it was a “perfect stage set for a dramatization of George Orwell’s ‘1984’,” but described the interior as “a drab factory with harsh light, endless corridors, hard floors and no visual relief.”

    While not as grand as many of the other buildings in the nation’s capital, that did not stop tourists from wanting to visit.

    At one point, the Hoover building would receive a half million people a year for tours. The FBI even met with executives from Disney, seeking guidance on how to handle the big crowds.

    The link to take the FBI Experience tour is still working, but reservations must be booked a month in advance.

    It’s still unclear what will happen to the decades-old building, but it will remain one of the most talked-about architectural designs in D.C.

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    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Jimmy Alexander

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  • In new $40M lawsuit, man cleared of Malcolm X slay blames FBI for hiding evidence of real killers

    In new $40M lawsuit, man cleared of Malcolm X slay blames FBI for hiding evidence of real killers

    An innocent man exonerated in the assassination of Malcolm X says in a $40 million lawsuit that the FBI and J. Edgar Hoover hid evidence pointing to the real killer to protect the agency’s undercover operations to undermine the civil rights movement.

    In a lawsuit filed against the U.S. Thursday, Muhammad Aziz, 85, describes a string of FBI reports and evidence bolstering his innocence in the 1965 Audubon Ballroom killing, and lays out how Hoover and the FBI kept that evidence secret during his trial and for years after.

    “FBI employees concealed this information for the purposes of…  protecting and concealing the scope, nature, and activities of its domestic ‘Counterintelligence Program,’ also called ‘COINTELPRO,’ and to divert blame from individuals whom certain FBI employees did not want to see prosecuted for their crimes,” Aziz’s lawsuit alleges.

    Through COINTELPRO, the FBI infiltrated and co-opted domestic political and social movements, with Hoover directing the bureau to “expose, disrupt, misdirect, discredit, and otherwise neutralize” Black activist groups.

    J. EDGAR HOOVER

    AP

    J. Edgar Hoover (AP)

    Aziz, a U.S. Navy veteran who served multiple tours of duty, was 26 and a father of two when he was arrested for Malcolm X’s murder. He and his late co-defendant, Khalil Islam, were railroaded in a Manhattan Supreme Court trial rife with misconduct. Islam’s estate filed a similar lawsuit Thursday.

    Malcolm X

    Malcolm X speaks to reporters in Washington, D.C., May 16, 1963.

    AP

    Malcolm X speaks to reporters in Washington, D.C., May 16, 1963.

    Aziz spent 20 years in prison, and Islam, who died in 2009, served 22 years. Both men were exonerated in 2021 after an investigation by then Manhattan D.A. Cyrus Vance’s office.

    Last year, the city and state agreed to pay Aziz and Islam’s estate $36 million in settlement money.

    “The worst offender of all was the FBI, and they have never acknowledged their role in this case let alone done anything to atone for it,” Aziz’s lawyer, David Shanies, told the Daily News. “It’s about compensating a person whose life was destroyed, and that’s something no about of money can fix.”

    Three gunman, one of them using a shotgun, murdered Malcolm X on Feb, 21, 1965, inside the Washington Heights Ballroom in front of a horrified crowd of 400 that included NYPD and FBI informants and undercover officers.

    One of the killers, Mujahid Abdul Halim, was captured by a group of civilians as he fled the scene.

    Police arrested Aziz and Islam days later, even though the FBI had evidence pointing to another suspect, a Nation of Islam leader named William Bradley, as the man holding the shotgun, according to the lawsuit.

    The lawsuit refers to “evidence of a significant ongoing relationship between Bradley and the FBI,” and is seeking to unearth those ties.

    Bradley, who died in 2018, denied his involvement in the killing.

    John Annese

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