February 10, 2009
by Chris Steele, Denver Progressive Examiner
February is Black History Month and Fred Hampton definitely holds a
place in history. Fred Hampton was a political activist born August
30, 1948. In Junior college he became active in the civil rights
movement. Hampton eventually met Huey P. Newton and started his own
chapter for the Black Panther Party in 1968. Fred Hampton was the
chairman of the Chicago Black Panther Party and set up the free
breakfast for children program in Chicago. Fred Hampton fought for
racial and economical equality. Hampton also spoke out about police
corruption and brutality.
When the Weather Underground called for the four "Days of Rage" in
Chicago, Fred Hampton condemned the idea. Fred Hampton did not
advocate unnecessary violence where people were unjustly targeted. In
Fred Hampton's speech at Olivet church in 1969 titled "Power Anywhere
Where There's People" he said, "As a matter of fact, even though you
have on a uniform it doesn't make me any difference. Because I don't
care if you got on nine uniforms, and 100 badges. When you step
outside the realm of legality and into the realm of illegality, then
I feel that you should be arrested."
On the FBI's official website it states that, "Fred Hampton, age 21,
was allegedly shot and killed by the Cook County State Attorneys
Police, Chicago, Illinois, on December 4, 1969, when the police
conducted a raid on the Black Panther Party (BPP) Headquarters
located at 2337 West Monroe Street, Chicago, Illinois." Fred Hampton
was shot and killed and the police claimed that they were firing in
self defense because he was armed and approaching them. People from
the neighborhood and other Black Panther Party members stated that he
was shot in his bed because that is where the blood stains were. To
prove their point they held public walk through tours of Hampton's
home, hours after the shooting.
I spoke briefly with Roz Payne who is one of the most qualified
individuals on the history of the Black Panther Party and the FBI's
COINTELPRO. She released her well received four disc documentary
about the Black Panther Party titled, What we want, what we believe:
the Black Panther Party Library. The fourth disc of her documentary
contains scanned FBI documents in PDF format. The FBI files have
incriminating evidence of the illegal actions of the FBI's COINTELPRO.
During my brief interview with Roz Payne this is what she had to say:
"While I was reading and making a computerized index to the FBI
COINTELPRO Chicago files on Fred Hampton and the Chicago Black
Panther Party I found an entry by a FBI agent that said, 'An informer
William O'Neil had added sleeping medicine into the kool-aid that
Fred would drink each night. So that he would be passed out when the
police attacked the house where Fred and others were sleeping.'
William O' Neil did the deed. The police lied about the bullet holes
in the house, trying to say that Fred with other Panthers had shot
out of the house to try to kill the police and it took a very smart
brave newspaper reporter to see that all the bullet holes showed the
entry of the bullets all came from the outside into the house. O'Neil
was given a $300.00 bonus for his deed. He later took his life by
jumping off an overpass."
Fred Hampton was right when he said, "You can kill the revolutionary
but you can't kill the revolution." People like Roz Payne, Assata
Shakur and countless others are the existing part of the revolution
that you cannot kill. Witnesses and FBI documents both provide proof
that Fred Hampton was murdered by the police. Fred Hampton was known
for being a poignant brilliant and inspirational speaker; his words
and actions still live today. Indeed Fred Hampton was correct when he
said, "I believe I'm going to die doing the things I was born to do.
I believe I'm going to die high off the people. I believe I'm going
to die a revolutionary in the international revolutionary proletarian
struggle."
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