So on a night nearly 43 years ago, while Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier
bludgeoned each other over 15 rounds in a televised title bout viewed
by millions around the world, burglars took a lock pick and a crowbar
and broke into a Federal Bureau of Investigation office in a suburb of Philadelphia, making off with nearly every document inside.
They were never caught, and the stolen
documents that they mailed anonymously to newspaper reporters were the
first trickle of what would become a flood of revelations about
extensive spying and dirty-tricks operations by the F.B.I. against
dissident groups.
The burglary in Media, Pa., on March 8, 1971,
is a historical echo today, as disclosures by the former National
Security Agency contractor Edward J. Snowden have cast another
unflattering light on government spying and opened a national debate
about the proper limits of government surveillance. The burglars had,
until now, maintained a vow of silence about their roles in the
operation. They were content in knowing that their actions had dealt the
first significant blow to an institution that had amassed enormous
power and prestige during J. Edgar Hoover’s lengthy tenure as director.
“When you talked to people outside the
movement about what the F.B.I. was doing, nobody wanted to believe it,”
said one of the burglars, Keith Forsyth, who is finally going public
about his involvement. “There was only one way to convince people that
it was true, and that was to get it in their handwriting.”
Mr. Forsyth, now 63, and other members of the
group can no longer be prosecuted for what happened that night, and they
agreed to be interviewed before the release this week of a book written
by one of the first journalists to receive the stolen documents. The
author, Betty Medsger, a former reporter for The Washington Post, spent
years sifting through the F.B.I.’s voluminous case file on the episode
and persuaded five of the eight men and women who participated in the
break-in to end their silence.
Unlike Mr. Snowden, who downloaded hundreds of
thousands of digital N.S.A. files onto computer hard drives, the Media
burglars did their work the 20th-century way: they cased the F.B.I.
office for months, wore gloves as they packed the papers into suitcases,
and loaded the suitcases into getaway cars. When the operation was
over, they dispersed. Some remained committed to antiwar causes, while
others, like John and Bonnie Raines, decided that the risky burglary
would be their final act of protest against the Vietnam War and other
government actions before they moved on with their lives.
“We didn’t need attention, because we had done
what needed to be done,” said Mr. Raines, 80, who had, with his wife,
arranged for family members to raise the couple’s three children if they
were sent to prison. “The ’60s were over. We didn’t have to hold on to
what we did back then.”
A Meticulous Plan
The burglary was the idea of William C.
Davidon, a professor of physics at Haverford College and a fixture of
antiwar protests in Philadelphia, a city that by the early 1970s had
become a white-hot center of the peace movement. Mr. Davidon was
frustrated that years of organized demonstrations seemed to have had
little impact.
In the summer of 1970, months after President
Richard M. Nixon announced the United States’ invasion of Cambodia, Mr.
Davidon began assembling a team from a group of activists whose
commitment and discretion he had come to trust.
The group — originally nine, before one member
dropped out — concluded that it would be too risky to try to break into
the F.B.I. office in downtown Philadelphia, where security was tight.
They soon settled on the bureau’s satellite office in Media, in an
apartment building across the street from the county courthouse.
That decision carried its own risks: Nobody
could be certain whether the satellite office would have any documents
about the F.B.I.’s surveillance of war protesters, or whether a security
alarm would trip as soon as the burglars opened the door.
The group spent months casing the building,
driving past it at all times of the night and memorizing the routines of
its residents.
“We knew when people came home from work, when
their lights went out, when they went to bed, when they woke up in the
morning,” said Mr. Raines, who was a professor of religion at Temple
University at the time. “We were quite certain that we understood the
nightly activities in and around that building.”
But it wasn’t until Ms. Raines got inside the
office that the group grew confident that it did not have a security
system. Weeks before the burglary, she visited the office posing as a
Swarthmore College student researching job opportunities for women at
the F.B.I.
The burglary itself went off largely without a
hitch, except for when Mr. Forsyth, the designated lock-picker, had to
break into a different entrance than planned when he discovered that the
F.B.I. had installed a lock on the main door that he could not pick. He
used a crowbar to break the second lock, a deadbolt above the doorknob.
No comments:
Post a Comment