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Embargoed - Office of Investigations
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Riots
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Time Period >
Presidential (Nov. 22, 1963-Jan. 20, 1969)
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13 results
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was not
these
and
to provide
Wozencraft
the
Warren
setting
letter
answers.
of Disorders;
of a letter
Justice
~e
with
we felt
a draft
for
Control
state
conversation,
question·s.
clear
in
I spoke
that
is
arrangement
to
able
In early
co.ntr·o1
-
pe1;'S• mov~ against· the poli~~.vanished_th.rough the alleys. •of candidates in 1!JG.1.
they can depend upon .the co-. By nmlmght, Monday~ they The Revcrcind Cle~gue was·
:
had set up a telephone squad the pal'ty"s canclid~itefor go\·cr-·
whose job
- for
the first
time by telephone this morning that they had
scheduled a meeting for tomorrow (Wednesday, January 3, 1968)
in Washington, n.c., to be attended by the undersigned,
Stanford Research, Hill and Knowlton, and the Presidents
of
Winchester and Remingtono
- heard
several shots fired ·from ._the roof of .the motel., followed by more shooting and
windows breaking.
• •
Cleveland Reed w~s :on tie telephone talking t~ his girlfriend,
Glenda
Tucker, 15/.F, when someone f'orcedthe
apartment door and two or three
-
the
state's
Commissioner
a za phone call
received
Boczner
night.
At abourti-"dawn on Sunday,
Community Affairs
~nee
~ a result,
the city
,J
v-N~~
telephoned
to request
·~ation.
night
requesting
to Plainfield
of
from a member of
him
-
Italiap; _the persons they arrested largely Negro.
Community
leaders agreed that, as in most police forces, there was a
small minority of ·o fficers who abused their responsibility.
This, conversely, gave .an aura of credibility to malefactors
- and delaying calls .. Telephone op~rators
can eavcsdriop on important conversations an~ the!'l mfo~
the opposition of the conversations without disdosmg their
names. Mailmen can destroy letters and steam open those
addressed to influential persons, read
-
that
he was
blind.
He was later
released
when it was discovered
that
the man was in fact
blind.
After
my conversation
with Judge Brennan 1 I spoke with the
Special
Assistant
Prosecutor
in charge
of riot
cases,
a
Mr. Nolan.
This gentleman
was doubly