Home / Full timeline / The Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) issued a report that charged that Black elected officials were “victims” of harassment by various prosecutorial branches of government and the White-controlled media in disproportionate numbers.
The Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) issued a report that charged that Black elected officials were “victims” of harassment by various prosecutorial branches of government and the White-controlled media in disproportionate numbers.
1987 (Sep 24)
The Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) issued a report that charged that Black elected officials were “victims” of harassment by various prosecutorial branches of government and the White-controlled media in disproportionate numbers. The report concluded that while the number of Black elected officials had almost doubled between 1977 and 1987 and "some of the names in the drama... changed... the circumstances remain[ed] essentially unchanged.” The CBC contended that while black officials were rightfully scrutinized, their “scrutiny... too often issue[d] from ignoble motives; it [was] designed not to protect the public interests but to prevent the public's interest from being represented by persons of the public's choosing." An appendix to the report listed seventy-eight cases of "harassment” against Black elected officials, but almost half of the cases occurred before 1977 and several did not involve investigations by government or the press. For example, Lloyd Edwards, who ran for president of the St. James Parish in Louisiana in 1983, and Katie Jackson Booker, who ran for mayor of Ditmoor, Illinois, in 1985, were not included because of cross-burnings on their lawns. The report included, however, at least a dozen cases of Black politicians who were either brought before grand juries and never indicted or who were indicted and later acquitted since 1977. These included Kenneth Gibson, the former mayor of Newark, New Jersey, whom the study said was indicted in 1982 on 146 counts of “conspiracy misuse of funds and misconduct” and was acquitted of all the charges; Mayor Marion Barry of Washington, D.C., who was the target of an investigation of cocaine use and whose administration was probed extensively by the FBI and the U.S. Attorney's Office for alleged corruption in the letting of contracts to minority businesses; and that of Mayor Andrew Young of Atlanta, Georgia, who appeared before a federal grand jury investigating whether he "tampered” with a witness during a probe into allegations of drug abuse by several well-known Atlanta citizens. Of Young, the report said, "for him even to have become the subject of an investigation, was widely perceived as a totally inappropriate and abusive use of prosecutorial discretion by the U.S. Attorney." The CBC report also claimed that the harassment of Black officials occurred through audits and investigations by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS); electronic surveillance, burglaries, and covert disruptive activity by various intelligence agencies; and grand jury investigations and indictments by criminal justice agencies. However, John Russell, a spokesman for the U.S. Department of Justice, labeled the CBC report “nonsense.” He said, “I don't think those allegations can be substantiated in any way." Jackie Greene, regional director for the National Association of Black Journalists and director of editorial services at USA Today in Washington declared, “I think that Black politicians should be held to the same scrutiny that any other politician faces by the media. . . . For the most part that is being done." The CBC report was written by Mary Sawyer, a professor of religion at Iowa State University, who wrote a similar report in 1977, and was published by Voter Registration Action Inc. in Washington, D.C.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.