There are about 7 links at the site that provide about 5 Megs at a time. In the first link, go to page 70 and read how the SDS worked with the enemy killing our troops in Vietnam.
It gets worse as it goes along.
“420” pages.
Appropriate given the perps I guess.
CORRECTION: Go to page 26, not 70.
Are there any pictures?....Keep thinking that if Ayers and OB attending the same rallies in NYC there might be a picture of them together as part of the FBI file.
They are incomplete though. The Committee of Liaison With Families of Servicemen as well as the Mobilization Committee to End the War were part of the Weathermen. The FBI sent out a release announcing the files being available and yet they are not hyperlinked on their site. See release here:
US Department of State
International Information Programs
Washington File
_________________________________
02 March 2000
FBI Adds New Subjects to Electronic Reading Room
(Electronic versions of files on spies, politicians, authors) (2140)
Suspected spies, gangsters, politicians, authors, and a group of
student activists from the 1960s are among the latest subjects added
to the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Freedom of Information Act
(FOIA) Electronic Reading Room, according to a February 25 FBI news
release.
These documents had been available in paper format for several years
and now can be accessed electronically, the release said.
Among the latest subjects for which investigative information is now
available electronically:
— American POWs/MIAs in Southeast Asia
— Nathan Silvermaster, leader of a post-World War II Soviet espionage
ring.
(snip)
HISTORICAL INTEREST
— American POWs/MIAs in Southeast Asia — 4,888 pages
In 1970-1973 the FBI investigated the Committee of Liaison with
Families of Servicemen Detained in North Vietnam (COLIFAM), a U.S.
antiwar group acting as “liaison” between POWs and their families. The
group was alleged to be a vehicle of North Vietnamese propaganda whose
activities were believed to be detrimental to the health and welfare
of the prisoners held in North Vietnam. No information was developed
warranting prosecution of COLIFAM for solicitation under the Foreign
Agents Registration Act. In 1982, the FBI compiled information
concerning American prisoners of war or American citizens in Viet Nam.
In 1992, the FBI provided assistance to the Senate Select Committee on
POW/MIA Affairs by furnishing information and/or performing
investigations on behalf of the Committee on all facets of POW issues.
(snip)