
FBI Tracked Every Move of Many In Puerto Rico
November 06, 2003 | By Matthew Hay Brown
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico -- Tucked away amid the 1.8 million pages the FBI compiled on Puerto Rican activists during decades of surveillance are the hospital records of nationalist leader Pedro Albizu Campos, down to his
nurses' daily notes on his heart rate, blood pressure and visits to the bathroom.
And there are more than 100 pages on a young man from the mountain town of Lares named Ramon Bosque Perez, who had protested the war in Vietnam and advocated Puerto Rican independence.
"I was a high school student. I wasn't even a senior," Bosque Perez says. "It surprised me that it was relevant enough for an agency like that to open a file, to devote resources to investigate a high school student who was just engaging in political activities."
Now Bosque Perez is working to preserve the evidence of a little-known chapter of U.S. history: the federal government's long, secret campaign to monitor, infiltrate and sabotage the lawful pro-independence movement of this U.S. commonwealth in the Caribbean.
A researcher at the Center for Puerto Rican Studies at New York's Hunter College, he is cataloging thousands of FBI documents from the 1930s to the 1990s for release on the Internet.
Among the revelations:
FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover directed agents to plumb the personal lives of members of the independence movement. "We must have information concerning their weaknesses, morals, criminal records, spouses, children, family life and personal activities other than independence activities," Hoover wrote in one memo.
The agency maintained a list of suspected subversives to be rounded up for "custodial detention" in case of a national emergency - a list that at one time included Luis Munoz Marin, the Popular Democratic Party founder and a
four-term governor. A psychological profile of Munoz Marin diagnoses the architect of modern Puerto Rico as an intellectual with a "bad case of `Puerto Rican inferiority complex.'"
As an enfeebled Albizu Campos lay dying in 1965, agents tapped the telephone of an associate in an apparent attempt to intercept last words, final instructions or plans for violence after his passing.
"There are many lessons to be learned here about the excesses that can take place," Bosque Perez says. "There are lessons to learn about the many mistakes that can happen when you don't make the proper balance between the need for the state to be secure and the responsibility of the state to respect the individual rights guaranteed by the Constitution."
The files came to light three years ago, when U.S. Rep. Jose Serrano, D-N.Y., asked then-FBI Director Louis Freeh at a budget hearing whether he could confirm longstanding rumors of their existence. Freeh surprised Serrano with an acknowledgement that the agency had engaged in "egregious illegal action, maybe criminal action."
"Particularly in the 1960s, the FBI did operate a program that did tremendous destruction to many people, to the country and certainly to the FBI," Freeh said.
Within weeks, the FBI began turning over documents to Serrano's office. To date, the agency has released about 120,000 pages, about half the total that officials expect to make public.
Of particular interest are the thousands of pages devoted to Munoz Marin. The son of journalist and statesman Luis Munoz Rivera, he began his political life as an independentista before founding the Popular Democratic Party in 1938, becoming the island's first elected governor in 1948 and negotiating commonwealth status in 1952.
Early records label Munoz Marin a subversive. An FBI report in 1943 said he was "alleged to have used Communist Party leaders and principles to gain political power," and that while he was "not considered dangerous to the point of acts against the United States," he was "known to be personally completely irresponsible."
The FBI paid particular attention to Munoz Marin's relationship with Gov. Rexford G. Tugwell, the island's last U.S. administrator, a politically liberal advocate of Puerto Rican self-determination known in Washington as "Red Rex."
An informant in 1940 claimed that Munoz Marin was "the ranking official of the Communist Party in the West Indies and the Caribbean Sea area" - a false claim that nonetheless triggered an investigation because he was about to visit the White House as a guest of Eleanor Roosevelt.
But by the 1960s, when Munoz Marin had established friendships with both Hoover and President Kennedy, the agency had turned its attention to his security, producing reports on suspected plots against him.
Hoover opened San Juan's first permanent FBI office in 1935. Agents found an impoverished plantation economy with a starving population in which the Nationalist Party of Albizu Campos was gaining a following.
Conflict between the U.S. colonial authorities and the nationalists occasionally turned violent, as in the Ponce Massacre of 1937, when police fired on an apparently unarmed crowd in a confrontation that left 20 people dead and more than 100 wounded.
During the 1950s, nationalist gunmen attacked the governor's mansion in San Juan, Harry Truman's residence in Washington, D.C., and the U.S. House of Representatives. During the 1970s, the offices of nationalist, pro-independence and leftist organizations were bombed and several members were assassinated.
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Copyright © 2003 by The Hartford Courant
November 6, 2003, page A1
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