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Hoover Planned on Arresting 12 Thousand “Traitors”
Javno ^ | December 23, 2007 | Joseph Stedul

Posted on 04/04/2008 11:24:46 AM PDT by SpaceBar

After 50 years, an American state secret has been revealed, about the arrest of 12,000 people because of Hoover’s “red” paranoia.

The former director of the FBI, Edgar Hoover made plans for the arrest of 12,000 American citizens which he considered to be threats to national security – documents reveals that no longer bear the status of state secret.

Hoover sent this request to the president at the time Harry Truman at the beginning of the Korean war during the 50s.

He justified the move as necessary for protection from “treason, spies and sabotage”. For now there is no evidence to whether these arrests actually occurred in practice or not.

Changes of laws due to “exceptional circumstances”

Hoover asked Truman to suspend the century old right to a defence in court that protected the individual citizens from unlawful arrest (better known as Habeas Corpus). Hoover planned on breaking this law and putting 12,000 people in military and federal prisons. The list of suspects took years to make, and the moment came to implement the plans of illegal confinement. The American Congress authorised the law in July 1950 after the Korea was broke out.

Truman said that an exceptional situation was at hand, and that his changes must be implemented.

Today, those secret documents no longer carry the marking of state secret, and the public has had an opportunity to see their contents. As mentioned, 12 thousand people were in question, of which 97 percent were American citizens.
(more at link...)


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: coldwar; communismkills; evilempire; harrytruman; jedgarhoover; koreanwar; nationalsecurity; stalinists; truman; unclejoestalin; usefulidiots; ussr
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To: RoadTest

The left will scream about this, but remain curiously silent about over 100 million killed by left wing governments.


21 posted on 04/04/2008 11:50:19 AM PDT by MtnClimber (Not liking my choices in this election!)
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To: SpaceBar

So far as I can tell, the direct source is a Croatian(?) site and the date of the report is December 23, 2007. In turn, it appears to be based on an earlier New York Times report.

I suspect this is a pretty bent version of the NYT’s report; certainly we’d have heard about it endlessly if the Times had reported something very much like this.


22 posted on 04/04/2008 11:53:09 AM PDT by Grut
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To: Grut

I found it linked from Michael Savage’s website. His people are pretty good at finding oddball stories.


23 posted on 04/04/2008 11:54:43 AM PDT by SpaceBar
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To: Squawk 8888; BenLurkin
Habeas Corpus writs are issued by the courts, not the executive. Any citizen in custody has the right to apply for one in court.

I spoke infelicitously.

There are two documents in question: the court, or the petitioner via the court, requiring the executive to provide evidence justifying the arrest and producing the accused before the court for examination.

It would be better to say the executive "responds" to the petition rather than "provides."

In any case, the way a suspension of heabeas corpus would work in practice is that the executive detains someone, the court is petitioned to require the executive to produce the accused and its evidence, and the executive ignores the summons, pleading that because of public emergency it is released from this obligation.

24 posted on 04/04/2008 11:55:29 AM PDT by wideawake (Why is it that those who call themselves Constitutionalists know the least about the Constitution?)
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To: SpaceBar

J. Edgar Hoover, Director of the FBI, requested that 12,000 communist be held in jail. Was Harry Truman one of the 12,000?


25 posted on 04/04/2008 11:57:10 AM PDT by ricks_place
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To: RoadTest
They’ve installed Gorbachev right here in the United States

He's in San Francisco, that's scarcely part of the United States.

26 posted on 04/04/2008 12:02:30 PM PDT by null and void (If you thought Congress was bad you ought to see what the folks who admit they are criminals can do)
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To: SpaceBar

They would have to bump that number to about 12 million today.


27 posted on 04/04/2008 12:03:16 PM PDT by Hacklehead (Crush the liberals, see them driven before you, and hear the lamentation of the hippies.)
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To: SpaceBar
What is Javno? What are its biases? Hoover was merely doing his job. The final decision rested with Truman.

As for Hoover being "paranoid" and a cross-dresser/homo, careful study of the period's history leads me to believe he was just one more victim of vicious lies spread by the anti-anti-Communists to cover their real crimes. It boggles my mind that so-called "conservatives" are so ready to believe lies spread by the Far Left.

28 posted on 04/04/2008 12:11:14 PM PDT by Bernard Marx
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To: Brilliant

“It’s a drop in the bucket.”

I wonder how much better off we’d be today if all the commies back in the old days had been rounded up and hung.


29 posted on 04/04/2008 12:16:37 PM PDT by demshateGod (the GOP is dead to me)
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To: BenLurkin

yes they did (supreme court) stopped him.


30 posted on 04/04/2008 12:16:37 PM PDT by tampacon ( NO more Bushes or Clintons!)
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To: wideawake
"In any case, the way a suspension of heabeas corpus would work in practice is that the executive detains someone, the court is petitioned to require the executive to produce the accused and its evidence, and the executive ignores the summons, pleading that because of public emergency it is released from this obligation."

Correct. But the right to do that is granted to Congress, not to the President. It wouldn't make much sense to grant the President the right to suspend judicial oversight of himself.

31 posted on 04/04/2008 12:19:31 PM PDT by BitBucket
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To: SpaceBar

I don’t believe a word of this.


32 posted on 04/04/2008 12:19:53 PM PDT by donna ("Women are not little men, and men are not big women".)
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To: LibWhacker
Bingo! But since that would have meant arresting Eleanor Roosevelt, Lillian Helman, etc., as well as other Rat party members and activists, Truman did nothing.

So Bush really is like Truman: both failed utterly to combat the 5th column within.

33 posted on 04/04/2008 12:30:18 PM PDT by pierrem15 (Charles Martel: past and future of France)
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To: newnhdad

A good place to start would be outside the DNC convention. Just wrap the place in razor wire, put guards on the doors and be done with it ;-)
It would look like the scene from Red Dawn! Harry Reid (Played by harry Dean Stanton) would be screaming to his boy (played by Patrick Swayze) “Avenge me son! Aveeeenge Me!!!!”


34 posted on 04/04/2008 12:36:58 PM PDT by Holicheese (Hillary deserves the CMoH for her time in Tuzla!)
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To: wideawake

I tend to agree.


35 posted on 04/04/2008 12:37:54 PM PDT by onedoug
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To: wideawake
If the President suspends habeas corpus, as Hoover asked him to, it would in no way be breaking the law since it is a presidential prerogative explicitly enshrined in the Constitution.

With limitations on when it can be used, specifically in the case of rebellion or invasion, when the public safety requires it. There was no rebellion and the U.S. wasn't invaded when Truman was in office.

36 posted on 04/04/2008 12:41:40 PM PDT by Non-Sequitur
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To: Abathar
I am betting that it would be an entirely different world we would be living in today if he did it though...

I'm sure it would be. But life in a police state has no attraction for me.

37 posted on 04/04/2008 12:42:47 PM PDT by Non-Sequitur
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To: ChurtleDawg
the president has NO authority to suspend Habeaus Corpus. Congress can ONLY overturn Habeaus during a rebellion or an invasion.

The Constitution says under what circumstances habeas corpus can be suspended. It is silent on who may suspend it.

38 posted on 04/04/2008 12:43:57 PM PDT by Non-Sequitur
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To: LibWhacker
If he had done it and gotten rid of them, we might not have 100 million plus traitors today.

Living under a police state, how would we know?

39 posted on 04/04/2008 12:44:43 PM PDT by Non-Sequitur
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To: Holicheese

Most of them wouldn’t have the sense to ask anyone to avenge them- they would be burning up the phone lines to the ACLU and their attorneys. I agree that would be a great place to start.


40 posted on 04/04/2008 12:45:58 PM PDT by Tammy8 (Please Support and pray for our Troops, as they serve us every day.)
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