FBI Index: Difference between revisions
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{{short description|System used to track American citizens and other people}} |
{{short description|System used to track American citizens and other people}} |
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[[File:Fbi index form1.png|right|thumb|upright|Notable American singer [[Paul Robeson]]'s index card update form from the 1970s]] |
[[File:Fbi index form1.png|right|thumb|upright|Notable American singer [[Paul Robeson]]'s index card update form from the 1970s]] |
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The '''FBI Indexes''' |
The '''FBI Indexes''', or Index List, are a system used to track American citizens and other people by the [[Federal Bureau of Investigation]] (FBI) before the adoption by the FBI of computerized databases. The name signifies that the Index List was originally made on paper index cards, first compiled by [[J. Edgar Hoover]] at the [[Bureau of Investigations]] before he was appointed director of the FBI.<ref name="Gentry91"/> The Index List was used to track U.S. citizens and others believed by the FBI to be dangerous to [[national security]], and was subdivided into various divisions which generally were rated based on different classes of danger the subject was thought to represent. There is no indication the FBI stopped adding names onto its Index List before September 11, 2001.<ref>Curt Gentry, "J Edgar Hoover : The Man and the Secrets". New York; W W Norton &Company, 2001.</ref> |
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After September 11, 2001, the date which the FBI folded its Index List into the [[Terrorist Screening Database]] (TSDB) is unknown, while the FBI consolidates the TSDB from other lists and manages its information. The TSDB blacklist is currently available to all U.S. national security agencies, while select information contained on the TSDB is forwarded to other nation states and international security agencies.<ref>https://theintercept.com/2014/07/23/blacklisted/</ref> |
After September 11, 2001, the date which the FBI folded its Index List into the [[Terrorist Screening Database]] (TSDB) is unknown, while the FBI consolidates the TSDB from other lists and manages its information. The TSDB blacklist is currently available to all U.S. national security agencies, while select information contained on the TSDB is forwarded to other nation states and international security agencies.<ref>https://theintercept.com/2014/07/23/blacklisted/</ref> |
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== General Intelligence Division == |
== General Intelligence Division == |
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Around the time of [[World War I]] and the [[First Red Scare]], [[William J. Flynn]] of the Bureau of Investigation had [[J. Edgar Hoover]]{{ |
Around the time of [[World War I]] and the [[First Red Scare]], [[William J. Flynn]] of the Bureau of Investigation had [[J. Edgar Hoover]]{{citation needed|date=September 2012}} set up a General Intelligence Division (GID). Hoover used his experience working as a [[librarian|library clerk]] at the National Archives to set up the system using extensive [[cross-referencing]]. |
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The GID took files from the Bureau of Investigations (later renamed the Federal Bureau of Investigation) and 'systematized' them via index cards; according to Walker and contrary to evidence, the cards covered 200,000 people.<ref name=walker1/> But by 1939, Hoover had more than 10 million people 'Indexed' in the FBI's domestic file system.<ref name="Gentry91"/> |
The GID took files from the Bureau of Investigations (later renamed the Federal Bureau of Investigation) and 'systematized' them via index cards; according to Walker and contrary to evidence, the cards covered 200,000 people.<ref name=walker1/> But by 1939, Hoover had more than 10 million people 'Indexed' in the FBI's domestic file system.<ref name="Gentry91"/> |
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|publisher=[[University of Vermont]] personal homepage |
|publisher=[[University of Vermont]] personal homepage |
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|accessdate=18 April 2020 |
|accessdate=18 April 2020 |
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}}</ref> According to the press releases at the beginning of the war, one of the purposes of the program was to demonstrate the diligence and vigilance of the government by following, arresting and isolating a previously identified group of people with allegedly documented sympathies for [[Axis powers]] and potential for [[espionage]] or [[fifth column]] activities. The list was later used for [[Japanese American internment]] after Roosevelt's [[Executive Order 9066]].{{ |
}}</ref> According to the press releases at the beginning of the war, one of the purposes of the program was to demonstrate the diligence and vigilance of the government by following, arresting and isolating a previously identified group of people with allegedly documented sympathies for [[Axis powers]] and potential for [[espionage]] or [[fifth column]] activities. The list was later used for [[Japanese American internment]] after Roosevelt's [[Executive Order 9066]].{{citation needed|date=October 2018}} Although some say Hoover actually opposed those measures,<ref>{{cite web |
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|url=http://www.asian-nation.org/internment.shtml |
|url=http://www.asian-nation.org/internment.shtml |
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|title=Construction and Destruction: Japanese American Internment |
|title=Construction and Destruction: Japanese American Internment |
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== Reserve Index/Security Index == |
== Reserve Index/Security Index == |
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The Security Index pertained to the FBI list of dangerous individuals who might commit acts inimical to the national defense and public safety of the United States in time of emergency.<ref name="Zinn2012"/> The list also included those who could be arrested upon the order of a U.S. President invoking the Emergency Detention Program. The Reserve Index, on the other hand, listed all left-wingers and individuals suspected of being a [[Communist Party USA|Communist]]. By 1950s, for instance, there were 5,000 names under the Security Index while the Reserve Index had 50,000 in the [[Chicago]] field office.<ref name="Swearingen1995"/> An individual in the Reserve Index could be transferred to the Security Index if such individual posed a threat to U.S. interests in a period of national emergency.<ref name="Babson2010"/> A difference between these indices involved their color scheme. The files of those under the Security Index were all in white while the Reserve Index varied in colors depending on the occupation of the subject.<ref name="Swearingen1995"/> |
The Security Index pertained to the FBI list of dangerous individuals who might commit acts inimical to the national defense and public safety of the United States in time of emergency.<ref name="Zinn2012"/> The list also included those who could be arrested upon the order of a U.S. President invoking the Emergency Detention Program. The Reserve Index, on the other hand, listed all left-wingers and individuals suspected of being a [[Communist Party USA|Communist]]. By 1950s, for instance, there were 5,000 names under the Security Index while the Reserve Index had 50,000 in the [[Chicago]] field office.<ref name="Swearingen1995"/> An individual in the Reserve Index could be transferred to the Security Index if such individual posed a threat to U.S. interests in a period of national emergency.<ref name="Babson2010"/> A difference between these indices involved their color scheme. The files of those under the Security Index were all in white while the Reserve Index varied in colors depending on the occupation of the subject.<ref name="Swearingen1995"/> |
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Prominent figures listed in the Reserve Index include [[Martin Luther King Jr.|Martin Luther King]]. The FBI had been monitoring his activities with the [[Southern Christian Leadership Conference]] since 1957 and by 1962, he was finally listed in the FBI index due to the involvement of two of his advisers with the U.S. Communist Party, although he failed to meet the criteria for inclusion in the Security Index.<ref name="Athan1999"/> |
Prominent figures listed in the Reserve Index include [[Martin Luther King Jr.|Martin Luther King]]. The FBI had been monitoring his activities with the [[Southern Christian Leadership Conference]] since 1957 and by 1962, he was finally listed in the FBI index due to the involvement of two of his advisers with the U.S. Communist Party, although he failed to meet the criteria for inclusion in the Security Index.<ref name="Athan1999"/> |
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|pages=[https://archive.org/details/fbicomprehensive0000theo/page/123 123] |
|pages=[https://archive.org/details/fbicomprehensive0000theo/page/123 123] |
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|url=https://archive.org/details/fbicomprehensive0000theo/page/123 |
|url=https://archive.org/details/fbicomprehensive0000theo/page/123 |
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}}</ref> |
}}</ref> |
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<ref name="Babson2010">{{Cite book |
<ref name="Babson2010">{{Cite book |
Revision as of 04:23, 20 July 2020
The FBI Indexes, or Index List, are a system used to track American citizens and other people by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) before the adoption by the FBI of computerized databases. The name signifies that the Index List was originally made on paper index cards, first compiled by J. Edgar Hoover at the Bureau of Investigations before he was appointed director of the FBI.[1] The Index List was used to track U.S. citizens and others believed by the FBI to be dangerous to national security, and was subdivided into various divisions which generally were rated based on different classes of danger the subject was thought to represent. There is no indication the FBI stopped adding names onto its Index List before September 11, 2001.[2]
After September 11, 2001, the date which the FBI folded its Index List into the Terrorist Screening Database (TSDB) is unknown, while the FBI consolidates the TSDB from other lists and manages its information. The TSDB blacklist is currently available to all U.S. national security agencies, while select information contained on the TSDB is forwarded to other nation states and international security agencies.[3]
General Intelligence Division
Around the time of World War I and the First Red Scare, William J. Flynn of the Bureau of Investigation had J. Edgar Hoover[citation needed] set up a General Intelligence Division (GID). Hoover used his experience working as a library clerk at the National Archives to set up the system using extensive cross-referencing.
The GID took files from the Bureau of Investigations (later renamed the Federal Bureau of Investigation) and 'systematized' them via index cards; according to Walker and contrary to evidence, the cards covered 200,000 people.[4] But by 1939, Hoover had more than 10 million people 'Indexed' in the FBI's domestic file system.[1]
Although the GID was shut down in 1924 after objections from people such as William J. Donovan who called into question its constitutionality,[5] Hoover and the FBI continued to expand the Index system for use by the agency, by Hoover, and by Hoover's political associates well into the 1970s. Today, the Index files covering untold numbers of Americans are still accessible by the FBI and its 29 field offices.
Titles to numerous Index catalogs include:[1] The Reserve Index, for influential people to be "arrested and held" in case of a national emergency; The Custodial Index, which included 110,000 Japanese Americans that were held in internment prison camps during World War II; The Sexual Deviant Index; The Agitator Index; The Communist Index; and The Administrative Index, which compiled several other earlier indexes.
Even though a complete list of Index titles is currently unavailable, Hoover and the FBI used their Index system to catalog Native American and African American liberation movements during the 1960s and 1970s, as well as Vietnam War protesters and other college students.
Custodial Detention Index
The Custodial Detention Index (CDI), or Custodial Detention List was formed in 1939–1941, in the frame of a program called variously the "Custodial Detention Program" or "Alien Enemy Control".
J. Edgar Hoover described it as having come from his resurrected General Intelligence Division in Washington. According to Hoover, it created large numbers of files on "individuals, groups, and organizations engaged in subversive activities", including espionage, and enabled the Bureau to immediately identify potential threats.[1] Congressmen Vito Marcantonio called it "terror by index cards". Senator George W. Norris complained as well.[1]
The Custodial Detention Index was a list of suspects and potential subversives, classified as "A", "B" and "C"; the ones classified as "A" were destined to be immediately arrested and interned at the outbreak of war. Category A were leaders of Axis-related organizations, category B were members deemed "less dangerous" and category C were sympathizers. The actual assignment of the categories was, however, based on the perceived individual commitment to the person's native country, rather than the actual potential to cause harm; leaders of cultural organizations could be classified as "A".
The program involved creation of individual dossiers from secretly obtained information, including unsubstantiated data and in some cases, even hearsay and unsolicited phone tips, and information acquired without judicial warrants by mail covers and interception of mail, wiretaps and covert searches. While the program targeted primarily Japanese, Italian, and German "enemy aliens", it also included some native-born American citizens. The program was run without Congress-approved legal authority, with no judicial oversight and outside of the official legal boundaries of the FBI. A person against which an accusation was made was investigated and eventually placed on the index; it was not removed until the person died. Getting on the list was easy; getting off of it was virtually impossible.[6] According to the press releases at the beginning of the war, one of the purposes of the program was to demonstrate the diligence and vigilance of the government by following, arresting and isolating a previously identified group of people with allegedly documented sympathies for Axis powers and potential for espionage or fifth column activities. The list was later used for Japanese American internment after Roosevelt's Executive Order 9066.[citation needed] Although some say Hoover actually opposed those measures,[7] Hoover and the FBI created the list from which 110,000 people were interned, 70,000 of which were American-born.
Attorney General Francis Biddle, when he found out about the Index, labeled it "dangerous, illegal" and ordered its end. However, J. Edgar Hoover simply renamed it the Security Index,[8] and told his people not to mention it.
Rabble Rouser Index
Records of people added to the Rabble Rouser Index are available online from The Vault, which hosts the FBI's FOIA Library, under FBI case file 157-HQ-7782.[9] The Internet Archive maintains a copy of this information with additional explanatory material.[10] In addition, a repository of FBI files obtained under FOIA request, including the Rabble Rouser Index, is maintained at the National Archives.[11]
People
Notable people include:
- Saul Alinsky — political theorist
- James H. Madole — National Renaissance Party
- Floyd B. McKissick — SNCC
- Jerry Rubin — anti-war activist
- Adam Clayton Powell Jr. — NY Congressman
- John A. Wilson — Washington DC council member
Categories
Notable categories listed on FBI form FD-307 include:
- American Nazi Party
- Anti-Vietnam
- Black Nationalist
- Black Panther Party
- Communist
- Congress of Racial Equality
- KKK organization
- Latin Americans
- Minutemen
- Nation of Islam
- National States Rights Party
- Progressive Labor Party
- Independence movement in Puerto Rico
- Revolutionary Action Movement
- Southern Christian Leadership Conference
- Students for a Democratic Society
- Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee
- Socialist Workers Party
- Workers World Party
Reserve Index/Security Index
The Security Index pertained to the FBI list of dangerous individuals who might commit acts inimical to the national defense and public safety of the United States in time of emergency.[12] The list also included those who could be arrested upon the order of a U.S. President invoking the Emergency Detention Program. The Reserve Index, on the other hand, listed all left-wingers and individuals suspected of being a Communist. By 1950s, for instance, there were 5,000 names under the Security Index while the Reserve Index had 50,000 in the Chicago field office.[13] An individual in the Reserve Index could be transferred to the Security Index if such individual posed a threat to U.S. interests in a period of national emergency.[14] A difference between these indices involved their color scheme. The files of those under the Security Index were all in white while the Reserve Index varied in colors depending on the occupation of the subject.[13]
Prominent figures listed in the Reserve Index include Martin Luther King. The FBI had been monitoring his activities with the Southern Christian Leadership Conference since 1957 and by 1962, he was finally listed in the FBI index due to the involvement of two of his advisers with the U.S. Communist Party, although he failed to meet the criteria for inclusion in the Security Index.[15]
The Security Index itself was merged with the Agitator Index and the Communist Index. Renamed to the Reserve Index in 1960, this index included a Section A for teachers, doctors, lawyers, entertainers, and other people considered influential and not politically conservative.[citation needed] Hoover had Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. added to the Reserve Index, Section A, in retaliation for his civil rights work and worldwide popularity.[1]
Renamed again to the Administrative Index (ADEX) in 1971, and allegedly discontinued in 1978, the records are still kept as inactive at FBI headquarters and 29 field offices.
Administrative Index
ADEX, or Administrative Index, lasted from 1971 to January 1978. It integrated the Security Index, the Agitator Index, and the Reserve Index.[17] It was used to track people "considered to be a threat to the security of the country".[16] ADEX had four 'categories'.[18]
An illustrative example of these files and the rationale for categorization can be seen in the case of historian Howard Zinn, a noted government critic. In his FBI files, there are two separate pages in which an agent says he should be in category III:[18]
He has been a member of the Communist Party, 1949–1953. A chief critic of the United States Government policies. A familiar figure at anti-war demonstrations up to 1972. Organized a protest rally to protest serious indictments against Father Berrigan and other members of the East Coast Conspiracy in the Summer of 1971
It is recommended that subject be included in ADEX, Category III, because he has participated in activities of revolutionary organizations within the last five years as evidenced by overt acts and statements established through reliable informants
Singer Paul Robeson was also on ADEX as Category III: "because of his long time close contact with CPUSA leaders. He was honored by the CP as recently as 1969".[19]
See also
- FBI projects:
- FBI Silvermaster Files — from the 1940s
- Investigative Data Warehouse — late 20th century
- NSA projects:
- SHAMROCK — 1945; telegraphic data
- MINARET — 1962; electronic communications containing names of predesignated U.S. citizens
- ECHELON — 1971; global surveillance Five Eyes collaboration
- Turbulence — 2005; Internet, cell phone, e-mail; successor to Trailblazer and Thinthread
- PRISM — 2007; FISA warrants to big data providers
- Main Core
- DCSNet
- Japanese American internment
- Italian American internment
- German American internment
References
- ^ a b c d e f Gentry, Curt (1991). J. Edgar Hoover: The Man and the Secrets. W. W. Norton & Company. p. 231 and following. ISBN 0393024040.
- ^ Curt Gentry, "J Edgar Hoover : The Man and the Secrets". New York; W W Norton &Company, 2001.
- ^ https://theintercept.com/2014/07/23/blacklisted/
- ^ Walker, Samuel (1999). In defense of American liberties: a history of the ACLU. SIU Press. p. 65. ISBN 0809322706.
- ^ Riebling, Mark (1994). Wedge: The Secret War Between the FBI and CIA. Alfred A Knopf. ISBN 978-0-7432-4599-9.
- ^ Preston, Audra. "Taken Into Custody: the Internment of German and Italian Americans during World War II". uvm.edu. University of Vermont personal homepage. Archived from the original on 28 November 2003. Retrieved 18 April 2020.
- ^ Le, C.N. (2020). "Construction and Destruction: Japanese American Internment". asian-nation.org. Dr. C.N. Le's personal website. Retrieved 18 April 2020.
- ^ Kelly, Jack (2002). "The Most Dangerous Institution". Vol. 53, no. 4. American Heritage Magazine. Archived from the original on 9 November 2010. Retrieved 23 April 2011.
{{cite magazine}}
: Cite magazine requires|magazine=
(help) - ^ "FBI Records: The Vault". vault.fbi.gov. Federal Bureau of Investigation. Retrieved 18 April 2020.
- ^ Lazar, Ernie (5 July 2018). "FBI Rabble Rouser: Agitator Index — HQ 157-7782, Sections 1 thru 4". archive.org. Internet Archive's lazarfoia collection. Retrieved 18 April 2020.
- ^ "Digitized FBI Files: Freedom of Information Act". archives.gov. National Archives and Records Administration. Retrieved 18 April 2020.
- ^ Zinn, Howard (2012). The Indispensable Zinn: The Essential Writings of the "People's Historian". New York: The New Press. pp. 142. ISBN 9781595586223.
- ^ a b Swearingen, M. Wesley (1995). FBI Secrets. Boston, MA: South End Press. pp. 41. ISBN 0896085015.
- ^ Babson, Steve; Elsila, David; Riddle, Dave (2010). The Color of Law: Ernie Goodman, Detroit, and the Struggle for Labor and Civil Rights. Detroit: Wayne State University Press. p. 321. ISBN 9780814334966.
- ^ Poveda, Tony; Rosenfeld, Susan; Powers, Richard Gid (1999). Theoharis, Athan (ed.). The FBI: A Comprehensive Reference Guide. Phoenix: Oryx Press. pp. 123. ISBN 9780897749916.
- ^ a b FBI FOIA on Surreptitious Entries (Black Bag Jobs), File 62-117-166, part 13&14 of 30, Hearings Before the Select Committee on Intelligence, Staff Interview, Nov 5 1975, Washington DC, Present: James Oliphant, John Atkisson, Richard Vermeire, and Wannall.
- ^ FBI Central Records System, from FBI, by way of Federation of American Scientists, by way of archive.org
- ^ a b FBI FOIA files on Howard Zinn, Part 3 of 4, page 86-92 of the PDF
- ^ FBI FOIA file on Paul Robeson Senior Page 29 of the PDF file.