I can't take it anymore. If
one more person sends me that e-mail about Hillary and the Black
Panthers, I'll have to be dragged away screaming in a straitjacket.
You know the e-mail I'm
talking about. It accuses Hillary of helping the Black Panthers get
away with torture and murder during the early 1970s. With the 2004
presidential race drawing near, the spam mills are creaking to life,
flooding the Internet once more with this agitprop classic.
Unfortunately, the e-mail
mingles good information with bad, sowing more confusion than
enlightenment. Some versions, for instance, carry the byline of radio
talk jock Paul Harvey, who says he did not write it. Such
misrepresentations help Hillary defenders dismiss the e-mail as a
hoax.
The story is no hoax, though.
Its basic elements can be found in respected Hillary biographies and
exposes such as Barbara Olson's "Hell to Pay," David Brock's "The
Seduction of Hillary Rodham," Joyce Milton's "The First Partner" and
Carl Limbacher's "Hillary's Scheme."
Here are the facts.
In May 1969, fishermen
discovered the body of Black Panther Alex Rackley floating in
Connecticut's Coginchaug River. Rackley's captors had clubbed him,
burned him with cigarettes, scalded him with boiling water and stabbed
him with an ice pick before finally shooting him in the head.
New Haven detectives learned
that the Panthers suspected Rackley of being a police informer.
Panther enforcers had tied him to a chair and tortured him for hours.
Police arrested eight Panthers and later extradited Panther leader
Bobby Seale from California, after a witness accused Seale of ordering
Rackley's death. (1)
Campus radicals supported the
Panthers. They organized mass protests in support of the so-called
"New Haven Nine." Hillary was right in the thick of it.
By the time she entered Yale
Law School in 1969, Hillary was already a radical celebrity on campus.
Life magazine had featured Hillary in a piece titled, "The Class of
'69," which showcased three student activists whom Life's editors
deemed the best and brightest of the year. A line Hillary used in her
Wellesley College commencement speech appeared under her photo:
"Protest is an attempt to forge an identity." (2)
At Yale, Hillary helped edit
the Yale Review of Law and Social Action – a left-wing journal which
promoted cop-killing and featured cartoons of pig-faced police. (3)
A series of hard-Left mentors
introduced Hillary to the brass-knuckle realities of revolutionary
activism. As a Wellesley undergraduate, she met and interviewed
radical o'rganizer Saul Alinsky, whose Machiavellian tactics she
admired. Hillary's senior thesis supported Alinsky's call for class
warfare. (4)
At Yale, Hillary found a new
Svengali in the form of left-wing law professor Thomas Emerson, known
around campus as "Tommy the Commie." Emerson recruited Hillary and
other students to help monitor the trial of the New Haven Nine for
civil rights violations. Hillary took charge of the operation,
scheduling the students in shifts, so that student monitors would
always be present in the courtroom. She befriended and worked closely
with Panther lawyer Charles Garry. (5)
Some believe that the
enormous pressure exerted by the Left helped ensure light sentences
for the New Haven Nine. Whether or not this is true, the punishments
were mild.
"Only one of the killers was
still in prison in 1977," reports John McCaslin in the Washington
Times. "The gunman, Warren Kimbro, got a Harvard scholarship and
became an assistant dean at Eastern Connecticut State College. Ericka
Huggins, who boiled the water for Mr. Rackley's torture, got elected
to a California school board." (6)
Hillary's defenders argue
that she played no "significant" role in the New Haven Nine's defense.
This is semantic hairsplitting. Obviously, Hillary was less
"significant" than Charles Garry or "Tommy the Commie" Emerson. But
Hillary served as a trusted lieutenant to these movers and shakers.
Moreover, she had a national profile as a campus activist. Hillary was
no rank-and-file student protester, as her apologists claim.
Indeed, Hillary's work for
the Panthers won her a summer internship at the Berkeley office of
attorney Robert Treuhaft in 1972. A hardline Stalinist, Treuhaft had
quit the Communist Party in 1958 only because it was losing members
and no longer provided a good platform for his activism. (7) "Treuhaft
is a man who dedicated his entire legal career to advancing the agenda
of the Soviet Communist Party and the KGB," notes historian Stephen
Schwartz. (8)
The defense of the New Haven
Nine marked Hillary's initiation into the sinister underworld of the
hard-core, revolutionary Left. To my knowledge, Hillary has never
publicly renounced nor apologized for her role in that movement.
References
1.
Joyce Milton, The First Partner: Hillary Rodham Clinton. William,
Morrow and Company, Inc., New York, 1999, p. 35. Barbara Olson, Hell
to Pay: The Unfolding Story of Hillary Rodham Clinton. Regnery
Publishing, Washington, D.C., 1999, p. 55.
Much of the
information found on these pages was emailed to me, often without credit
to the original author. Credit will be given to the author and links to
the original material when known