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Peace, Love, and Terror

The investigation into a cop killing in the '70s leads to a law professor who helped launch Barack Obama's political career.

On the night of February 16, 1970, Brian McDonnell was sorting through bulletins on the Teletype machine at Park Police Station in the Upper Haight neighborhood of San Francisco. The respected 44-year-old sergeant was checking results from the recent union elections, in which he was running for station representative. Steady winter rain fell outside. At 10:45 p.m., a bomb planted on the ledge outside a nearby window went off.

Bill Ayers and Bernardine Dohrn, photographed in 2001, are now professors in Chicago.
Todd Buchanan
Bill Ayers and Bernardine Dohrn, photographed in 2001, are now professors in Chicago.
Brian McDonnell was killed by shrapnel in the 1970 bombing of Park Police Station.
San Francisco Police Department
Brian McDonnell was killed by shrapnel in the 1970 bombing of Park Police Station.

McDonnell took the brunt of the blast to his body and face. The bomb was packed with inch-long industrial fence staples, which severed his jugular vein and lodged in his brain. He would die two days later without regaining consciousness.

Investigators would later surmise that the explosion had been intended to coincide with the 11 p.m. turn of the watch, when roughly two dozen officers would be coming on or going off duty. As it was, many were still changing in the second-floor locker room. Rushing downstairs, they found Officer Frank Rath, who had been in the business office with McDonnell, stumbling dazedly around the room with his gun drawn. Blood and staples covered the floor.

"I was a Vietnam veteran. I'd been in a war," recalled retired police sergeant James Pera, then a 24-year-old patrol officer, who was one of the first on the scene in the minutes after the bombing. "But I never expected this to happen in my hometown, in a police station. It was something we never expected to see in our own country."

Awash in revolutionary and antiwar fervor, the Vietnam era was a dangerous time for cops. McDonnell was not American law enforcement's first casualty, and he would not be its last. Police continue to investigate his murder, which remains unsolved.

Information in the long-running investigation into the Park Station bombing has been closely held by law enforcement officials, who still cling to hopes of bringing charges in the nearly 40-year-old case. Yet rumors have circulated for decades that the Weather Underground, a militant leftist group, was involved in the attack.

National interest in the Weather Underground was revived last year during the presidential campaign, when Republicans and conservative bloggers tried to smear Barack Obama for his ties to the group's former leaders, Bill Ayers and Bernardine Dohrn. A married couple now comfortably ensconced in the ranks of Chicago's liberal intelligentsia, Ayers and Dohrn were early political patrons of Obama's, hosting a campaign event for the future president in 1995 when he ran for the state Senate in Illinois.

Ayers and Dohrn assert today that the group deliberately avoided killing people in a campaign of "symbolic" bombings of empty government buildings. They and other former Weathermen have dismissed as a right-wing conspiracy theory any suggestions that their organization was responsible for the Park Station bombing.

Now, speaking publicly for the first time about the investigation, former FBI agents have told Village Voice Media the basis for their belief that the Weather Underground was behind McDonnell's murder. The agents have revealed that two credible eyewitnesses — both former left-wing radicals tied to the Weathermen — gave detailed statements to investigators in the 1970s alleging that Dohrn and Howard Machtinger, another member of the group, were personally involved in organizing the deadly attack. Both witnesses claimed to have participated in meetings where the bombing was planned, and one confessed to having cased the police station for the Weathermen prior to the explosion.

Working from these statements, authorities have quietly devoted far more attention to the Weather Underground in recent years than was previously known. Dohrn, Machtinger, and Ayers were all targets of a secret federal grand jury investigation in 2003 into McDonnell's killing, according to San Francisco criminal defense lawyer Stuart Hanlon, who has become familiar with the Park Station case while defending a client charged in another 1970s police murder. While indictments against the three were never issued, Hanlon said, "it was clear they were the targets. They weren't called — other people were called about them. The Weather Underground was the target of Park Station [investigators]."

The case against the Weathermen is far from complete. Still, given the multiple witnesses tying the group's former members to the killing of a police officer, some investigators say they are troubled by the impunity with which Ayers and Dohrn have peddled a version of the past wiped clean of bloodshed.

"I don't think they should be besmirched. I just think the truth should come out," said retired FBI Special Agent Willie Reagan, who investigated the Weathermen in the 1970s and served on a task force that reopened the investigation into McDonnell's murder in 1999. "There's so much there. If you've ever been in a courtroom, you know defense attorneys can create doubt about anything. But common sense tells you something. Who else could it be?"

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Reagan, 68, has little in common with the partisan hacks who tried to make hay from Ayers's militant past during the 2008 election season. A gruff career undercover investigator who now lives in retirement north of San Francisco, he has deployed his talents for disguise and detection to help bring down extremist groups of all political stripes.

In the 1970s, Reagan grew out his hair and mastered the counterculture shibboleths of the New Left. His work as an undercover agent, or "beard," as they were known at the FBI, helped disrupt a 1977 plot by the Weathermen to bomb the office of John V. Briggs, a conservative California state senator. Years later, Reagan again grew a beard — this time for a stint undercover with the Freemen, a group of armed right-wing radicals who sequestered themselves on a Montana compound at the height of the militia movement in the 1990s. In between, he infiltrated drug organizations and the Mob.

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  • Robbie Mac 09/19/2009 6:20:00 AM

    I was a bit puzzled when I picked up the latest issue(Sept.17-23), with the "Say Goodbye to My Little Friend" title on the cover, when it should have been about the Peter Jamison, "Peace, Love and Terror" story. Unfortunately many Americans either dismiss or are ignorant of the connection, however large or small, between former Weather Underground leader Bill Ayers and his wife Bernardine Dohrn(F.B.I. ten most wanted list for bombings inside the United States), and our President Barack Obama. Bill Ayers helped launch President Obama's political career in Chicago some years ago by endorsing him among his political friends and allies at a rally. Ayers has gone on record to say he participated in the bombings of NYC Police Headquarters in 1970, the United States Capitol Building in 1971, and the Pentagon in 1972. He also describes himself as a "radical, leftist, communist". This is just one of Obama's "friends". The Rev. Jeremiah Wright, an avowed anti-semitist was another, until his rantings went over the top and Obama had to "denounce" him to save his political career. Van Jones, who has gone on record to say he is a "radical" and a "communist" is also a "favorite" of Michelle & Barack Obama. These are but a few among many others who count themselves as friends or as part of his group of "czars", who are close to and advising our President. Are you starting to see a thread here? What does this say about the leanings of President Obama and what does it mean for our country in the future? I don't know about you, but it kinda' scares the shit outa' me, brother...

  • Mark Groubert 09/18/2009 4:23:00 PM

    �Obama Associate Implicated in Murder Plot� is how Accuracy In Media is headlining this story. As part of its COINTELPRO designed to discredit and infiltrate radical New Left groups, the FBI also launched phony underground newspapers such as the Armageddon News at Indiana University Bloomington, The Longhorn Tale at the University of Texas at Austin, and the Rational Observer at American University in Washington, D.C. The FBI also ran the Pacific International News Service in San Francisco, the Chicago Midwest News, and the New York Press Service. From his article, �Journalism and the CIA: The Mighty Wurlitzer� by Daniel Brandt �The next article was by Carl Bernstein of Watergate fame. In a long piece in Rolling Stone, he came up with the figure of 400 American journalists over the past 25 years, based primarily on interviews with Church committee staffers. This figure included stringers and freelancers who had an understanding that they were expected to help the CIA, as well as a small number of full-time CIA employees using journalism as a cover. It did not include foreigners, nor did it include numerous Americans who traded favors with the CIA in the normal give-and-take between a journalist and his sources. In addition to some of the names already mentioned above, Bernstein supplied details on Stewart and Joseph Alsop, Henry Luce, Barry Bingham Sr. of the Louisville Courier-Journal, Hal Hendrix of the Miami News, columnist C.L. Sulzberger, Richard Salant of CBS, and Philip Graham and John Hayes of the Washington Post.� �The (NY) Times reported that over the last twenty years, the CIA owned or subsidized more than fifty newspapers, news services, radio stations, periodicals and other communications facilities, most of them overseas. These were used for propaganda efforts, or even as cover for operations. Another dozen foreign news organizations were infiltrated by paid CIA agents. At least 22 American news organizations had employed American journalists who were also working for the CIA, and nearly a dozen American publishing houses printed some of the more than 1,000 books that had been produced or subsidized by the CIA. When asked in a 1976 interview whether the CIA had ever told its media agents what to write, William Colby replied, "Oh, sure, all the time."� Peter Jamison says that the Weathermen saw charges against them dropped �because of questionable FBI tactics used against them.� Among these �tactics� were illegal break-ins, withholding evidence from defense attorneys, and wiretapping among other illegalities. Here�s an excerpt from Time Magazine: Nation: Sad and Sorry Chapter for the FBI Monday, Apr. 24, 1978 �In June 1976, one of the team members has disclosed to TIME, they swooped down on Washington's J. Edgar Hoover Building, "virtually with guns drawn," in hopes of seizing evidence before it could be hidden or destroyed. The raiding party took control of a number of rooms, and "we combed the place." Nonetheless, they came away empty-handed. By granting immunity to 53 FBI agents in exchange for information, Pottinger eventually built a case against members of the FBI's Squad 47, based in the bureau's New York office, which spearheaded the Weatherman investigation.� Read below how FBI agent William D. Reagan infiltrated the Silver Lake-Echo Park Women�s Movement in 1978 to stalk his unsuspecting prey. http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,912056,00.html According to Time, �Ralph and Dick knew their stuff. Avid readers of Marx and Mao, Lenin and Trotsky, they impressed Clayton Van Lydegraf with their grasp of revolutionary ideology.� �Dick� was apparently very well versed in literature and writing. �Dick� was FBI agent William D. Reagan. He wrote well enough so to fool famous Old Left organizer Van Lydegraf who was a strong writer and author himself as well as the intellectual father figure of the Weathermen. Reagan was a member of the �Beards� a group of FBI agents who dressed as hippies and infiltrated left-wing causes as Jamison points out. But apparently not all Beards are alike. In Cril Payne�s 1979 book Deep Cover: An FBI Agent Infiltrates the Radical Underground (Newsweek Books) he explains how he began to have second thoughts about the FBI�s various illegal operations regarding the Left. He is finally convinced when he was brutally beaten by police at the Republican convention in Miami. In the end he left the FBI disenchanted with the Beards and his COINTELPRO operations. �The same Republican appointees who endorsed implementation of the Huston Plan and actively prosecuted political activists in the name of internal security can suddenly recall nothing about the FBI�s use of questionable investigative techniques,� he wrote. In the Jamison article Reagan says of the Weathermen that �the press kisses their asses and a lot of information isn�t out there.� But it�s not for lack of trying by Reagan. Almost all of the case related to the death of Brian McDonnell is based on the book sited by Jamison. That is Larry Grathwohl�s 1976 infamous memoir Bringing Down America: An FBI Informer with the Weathermen. (Published by the now defunct extreme right fringe press Arlington House, publishers of such classics as �America�s Emerging Fascist Economy� and �Kissinger on the Couch� by Phyllis Schlafly and �The Pseudo-Science of B.F. Skinner�). The Grathwohl book is chock full of phony Marxist dogma and simplified revolutionary ideas, as if written by someone who is well versed in sounding like revolutionary as a disguise. Or a beard, for that matter. Larry Grathwohl was a juvenile delinquent since the age of 12 and a high school dropout at 16. He is essentially illiterate. A former gang member from Cincinnati, Grathwohl honed the art of lying at an early age. It would come and serve him well later with his cover stories as an informant. No, Larry Grathwohl alone couldn�t have written Bringing Down America. On the back jacket of the book the co-author is described as �a public relations executive residing in the New York metropolitan area.� This vernacular was common when FBI and CIA operatives would �ghost� a propaganda book under COINTELPRO, the FBI�s dirty tricks campaign against the Left. The book is credited to a co-writer along with Grathwohl. The co-writer�s name is �Frank� Reagan. A deep search of the Internet will demonstrate that no author or PR man named Frank Reagan exists or did exist. It is obvious that �Frank� in all likelihood is FBI undercover agent William Reagan, the main source of Peter Jamison�s story. According to Jamison, �Regan�s account was confirmed by Max Noel, another retired FBI agent.� You can see Noel here on Fox News: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s-xfLSskzyo You can watch Grathwohl with Bill O�Reilly on Fox here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UXDVLSDvL5w Most of these anti-Obama-linked-to-Weathermen operations are today controlled by Cliff Kincaid, a leader of the Birther movement and of Accuracy In Media, a right wing fringe group he heads that publishes documents such as �Obama: Stealth Candidate� and runs videos featuring Grathwohl, that allege �that in exchange for a glowing review of Bill Ayers book, A Kind and Just Parent, Obama received help in writing his own semi-fictional autobiographies from Ayers.� In addition, Grathwohl goes on to say that �scientific comparative analysis of Ayer�s books with Obama�s clearly demonstrate common authorship� The group also includes Jim Pera the SF cop featured in Jamison�s article. It is kind of a traveling nut bag circus that has apparently gotten Jamison caught in their net. Why the Miami New Times would ever publish such Drudge-like material is another question. That question deserves to be answered.

 
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