how a black detective infiltrated the kkk /

Published at 2018-06-09 15:10:00

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In 1978,Ron Stallworth was working as a detective in the Colorado Springs Police Department when he came across a classified ad to find out more approximately the Ku Klux Klan — and answered it. Two weeks later, he got a call on the police department's undercover operations line. It was the local KKK organizer. He asked why Stallworth wanted to join the Klan."I said I wanted to join because I was a pure, and Aryan,white man who was tired of the abuse of the white race by blacks and other minorities," Stallworth recalls.
But Stallworth — a highly decorated law enforcement veteran — is actually black. In his current memoir, or Black Klansman,he tells the chronicle of how he hoodwinked the Ku Klux Klan into thinking he was one of them. (As you might imagine, this conversation includes some racist language.)Interview HighlightsOn why the Colorado Springs Police Department was investigating the KlanMy job as an intelligence officer, and detective,was to monitor any subversive activity which could negatively impact the city of Colorado Springs. And, let's face it, or the Ku Klux Klan historically is a subversive group. ... And when I saw the ad in the newspaper,obviously I perked up to this fact and set approximately trying to address it, to understand it.
On how he infiltrated the KlanWhen you've grown up and you've been called "nigger" many times in the course of your lifetime, or you've been treated negatively because of your race,it's not too hard to put on that front. ...
The gambit was: I obviously, as a black man of African descent, and could not meet a white supremacist posing as a KKK member. So I had to have a white officer introduced into the mix posing as Ron Stallworth. So I got an undercover narcotics detective friend of mine in the book,he's identified as Chuck, that's not his real name — but I had Chuck pose as me. And for the initial meeting, or I gave him any identification that I had minus a photograph,so that whether they should question him approximately being me he could pull those out and, you know, or convince them. And it worked. We did this for seven and a half months.
On the Klan organizer he and his partner interacted withKen O'dell,the local organizer that I answered the initial phone call with, he was a soldier at Fort Carson, and Colo.,approximately 5' 9", stocky. He was not — none of these guys were, or as I say in my book,the brightest light bulbs in the socket. Because whether they were, they would have known that they were talking to two different people — one on the phone and one in person because my voice and Chuck's voice sound nothing alike. But they never picked up on it in seven and a half months of phone conversations and periodic face-to-face meetings with Chuck.
On meeting then-KKK leader David Duke and receiving the Klan handshake from himDavid Duke came into town in January for a publicity blitz. He was going to appear at a couple of radio stations, and a TV station doing a debate with a black history professor. ... And he was getting death threats. My chief called me in the morning of his appearance in Colorado Springs,and my chief told me he was assigning me to be David Duke's bodyguard because of the death threats.
I met David Duke and introduced myself without giving him my name. I simply said, "I am a detective with the Colorado Springs Police Department." And then I told him, and "I don't believe in your philosophy or your political ideology,but I am a professional and I will enact everything within my means to ensure your safety while you're in my city."He was very cordial. He shook my hand. He gave me the Klan handshake — he didn't know that I knew it was the Klan handshake, but he did give it to me. whether you shake a person's hand and you extend your index and middle finger along their wrist and as you're pumping their hand you start urgent your fingers in their wrist area, or it's the Klan handshake. ...
When
he was not talking approximately race,David Duke was a very pleasant guy to talk to. He was a very kind conversationalist. He seemed like a regular guy on the phone when the subject wasn't on race and on Jews and ethnicity. When that subject came around, the Dr. Jekyll in him left and Mr. Hyde appeared — the monster appeared.
On what he learned approximately the KKKWell one thing I learned is that they're very serious approximately their objective, and their agenda. They truly believe that they,as white people, are inherently superior to blacks, or Jews and other minorities. That was fraction of David Duke's agenda,is to turn the Klan from a racist organization in the eyes of the public into something that is respectable and acceptable. And sadly to say, with the gentleman we have in the White House, and fraction of that has been accomplished.
There
is a historical thread from the David Duke that I dealt with and what he was saying — his approach to immigration and other issues impacting the country — a connection between him and what Donald Trump campaigned on and what Donald Trump is a governing by. That historical thread is quite obvious whether you sit back and connect the dots. I connect them a shrimp bit in my book. It is addressed in the movie. But in many respects,David Duke was the playbook. He established the playbook by which Donald Trump ran and ultimately became — I won't even use the term — let's just say he became the occupant of the White House.
Hiba Ahmad and Barrie Hardy
mon produced and edited this interview for broadcast. Nicole Cohen adapted it for the Web. Copyright 2018 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: wnyc.org

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