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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: tampacon; ChurtleDawg

Ah!


61 posted on 04/04/2008 1:15:17 PM PDT by BenLurkin
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To: BitBucket
Sure. They just happened to stick it in a list of things Congress can and can't do, in the article that defines and establishes Congress, and before the article establishing and defining the executive.

And right next to that section in the same article that says what states may and may not do, so it's clear that Article I did not apply solely to Congress. In other sections of the same article, the Constitution clearly states that Congress shall or shall not. So such words were used in section 9. Until the matter is brought before the Supreme Court then the question of who exactly may suspend habeas corpus remains undecided.

What sense would it make to give the President the ability to unilaterally suspend oversight of himself? Can you really see the founders of this country doing that?

Yes. You have to remember that up until the middle of the 20th century Congress was a part time occupation, usually meeting for only a few months out of the year. In the event of a rebellion or invasion when Congress was not in session then the president should have the power to act to protect the country. That is why, I believe, the specifics of who may suspend the writ were not specified. And also why the Constitution specifically limits the reasons why it may be suspended.

62 posted on 04/04/2008 1:21:46 PM PDT by Non-Sequitur
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To: ChurtleDawg
You are right...but the Supreme Court has always upheld that standard, particularly in the case of Lincoln’s suspension of the writ circa 1862, which was struck down on those grounds.

The Supreme Court has never ruled that the president cannot suspend habeas corpus. What I believe you are thinking of is the 1865 case of Ex Parte Milligan, where the court limited the circumstances where habeas corpus could be suspended regardless of who suspended it. Specifically, the court ruled that where local and district courts operate freely and openly then the writ cannot be suspended regardless of whether other parts of the country are in rebellion or have been invaded.

63 posted on 04/04/2008 1:24:56 PM PDT by Non-Sequitur
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To: ChurtleDawg
The Supreme Court did.

The circuit court did. The Supreme Court never heard the case because it was not in session at the time.

64 posted on 04/04/2008 1:25:59 PM PDT by Non-Sequitur
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To: Non-Sequitur
And right next to that section in the same article that says what states may and may not do, so it's clear that Article I did not apply solely to Congress.

But those clauses describing restrictions on state powers are really just defining powers belonging to Congress.

In the event of a rebellion or invasion when Congress was not in session then the president should have the power to act to protect the country.

Sorry. I don't buy it. Every state had a militia. But the Federal government had virtually nothing. There was no need for the President to personally have the power to suspend habeas corpus.

65 posted on 04/04/2008 1:43:20 PM PDT by BitBucket
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To: ansel12
“Hoover was not a cross-dresser.”

Nor was he a homosexual, as the MSM has repeatedly insinuated. About the worst thing one can say about Hoover along these lines is that he was a “mama's boy.” He lived with her until she died.

66 posted on 04/04/2008 1:51:05 PM PDT by riverdawg
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To: BitBucket
But those clauses describing restrictions on state powers are really just defining powers belonging to Congress.

Not entirely, no. Some restrictions are also prohibited of Congress. Congress can't pass ex post facto laws, for example, or bills of attainder.

Sorry. I don't buy it. Every state had a militia. But the Federal government had virtually nothing. There was no need for the President to personally have the power to suspend habeas corpus.

Congress disagreed with you. In 1792 they also gave the president the power to call up the militia on his own authority, should Congress not be in session, if invasion or insurrection required it.

It is likely that the founders intended that only the Congress be authorized to suspend habeas corpus. Should the matter ever appear before the Supreme Court I expect that the court would uphold that position. But the founders didn't say who may suspend it and the court hasn't ruled on the matter.

67 posted on 04/04/2008 1:52:18 PM PDT by Non-Sequitur
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To: elpadre

Yeah I would not think the FBI would have the power to suspend HC...but it would be interesting to see what is in the FBI files during this period...


68 posted on 04/04/2008 1:59:22 PM PDT by iopscusa (El Vaquero. (SC Lowcountry Cowboy))
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To: Non-Sequitur
Not entirely, no. Some restrictions are also prohibited of Congress. Congress can't pass ex post facto laws, for example, or bills of attainder.

But that's still just defining the role of Congress. I don't see a way to infer that any of the article applies to the president.

...
Congress disagreed with you. In 1792 they also gave the president the power to call up the militia on his own authority, should Congress not be in session, if invasion or insurrection required it.

I don't see the disagreement. The Militia Act gave the president the power to call up state militia's under certain circumstances. It didn't grant a power to suspend habeas corpus and I don't see how it may have implied that power. The Militia Act was an extraordinary amount of authority to give a president though. You are right about that. If it had been anyone but Washington in the White House I doubt it would have passed.

It is likely that the founders intended that only the Congress be authorized to suspend habeas corpus. Should the matter ever appear before the Supreme Court I expect that the court would uphold that position. But the founders didn't say who may suspend it and the court hasn't ruled on the matter.

Agreed.

69 posted on 04/04/2008 2:22:20 PM PDT by BitBucket
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Truman and his administration were no slouches when it came to imposing regulations during the Korean War.

1. The most severe wartime news censorship in memory was imposed six months into the Korean War while Truman was president.*
2. The military draft was re-invigorated.

30,000 American lost their lives in 30 months in Korea in a war that would not have occurred if troops had remained in S. Korea in 1949.**

*The press could not criticize the allied war effort. Dispatches were screened to eliminate reports that could harm morale. Correspondents were placed under the jurisdiction of the army and were subject to court martial. Casualties could not be reported and officers could not be quoted without authorization.

**"Most everyone agrees that had the U.S. troops remained, there would have been no war. U.S. troops remained in West Germany and Communist East Germany did not invade. Clearly, the Korean War could have been prevented by an adequate peacetime defense budget." (A Brief Account of the Korean War)

70 posted on 04/04/2008 3:32:14 PM PDT by syriacus (Wright's non-prophet chickenhood came home to roost in a million dollar mansion in a gated community)
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To: SpaceBar

bttt


71 posted on 04/04/2008 4:19:44 PM PDT by ADemocratNoMore (Jeepers, Freepers, where'd 'ya get those sleepers?. Pj people, exposing old media's lies.)
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To: Non-Sequitur
Well, no I'm not. You seem to have accepted the left-wing notion that the protection of our liberties requires the removal of our intellects and big game of charades where we all pretend (especially the courts) that we don't know what giving aid and comfort to the enemy is.

The SCOTUS and the courts are not the ultimate guarantor of our liberties: we are, through the most effective check on the abuse of power-- elections. If the arrests had gone through, Truman would have been held accountable in '52, or even earlier through the impeachment system. If the threat had been deemed credible, then Truman would have likely suffered no penalty, just as Wilson did not during WWI.

72 posted on 04/04/2008 11:25:11 PM PDT by pierrem15 (Charles Martel: past and future of France)
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To: null and void

“They’ve installed Gorbachev right here in the United States
He’s in San Francisco, that’s scarcely part of the United States.”

Unfortunately, it still is.


73 posted on 04/05/2008 3:53:09 AM PDT by RoadTest ( None calleth for justice, nor any pleadeth for truth: they trust in vanity, and speak lies - Isaiah)
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To: SpaceBar

Sorry. I didn’t mean you.


74 posted on 04/05/2008 3:54:12 AM PDT by RoadTest ( None calleth for justice, nor any pleadeth for truth: they trust in vanity, and speak lies - Isaiah)
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