Dan Kennedy of Northeastern University

'Ayer Head' Professor Lies Again

http://canadafreepress.com/index.php/article/10051

By Cliff Kincaid
April 8, 2009

A curious thing happened after my column, "'Ayer Head' Professor 
Defends Bill Ayers," was posted on Sunday night. An FBI document 
about the Weather Underground, which was hyperlinked in the column, 
was changed by the FBI to delete a reference to the terrorist group. 
The "Ayer Head" Professor, Dan Kennedy of Northeastern University in 
Boston, admits he is the one who prompted the FBI to make the curious 
change. It is all part of an effort to try to separate Ayers, a 
leader of the Weather Underground, from the murders that his group 
was responsible for.

Kennedy, a journalism professor, has come to Ayers defense on at 
least two occasions. The latest was when the communist was 
invited--and then disinvited--to speak at Boston College. Kennedy 
continues to claim that the Ayers group never killed or injured 
anyone, except their own members. This is a flat-out monstrous lie, 
which ignores the admitted and well-documented involvement of the 
Weather Underground in the 1981 Brinks robbery that left two police 
officers and a security guard dead.

To Kennedy, Ayers is a "respected education reformer" whose life has 
been put "in danger because of the pounding he's been subjected to 
over his ties to Barack Obama."

Can you believe it?

The controversy over the FBI website is a side issue to the question 
of why Kennedy is spending so much time defending Ayers. But his 
success in getting the FBI to make a change to a web entry raises the 
far more serious issue of the FBI's understanding of the terrorist 
threat, past and present.

The threat posed by Ayers is not over. Now a professor at the 
University of Illinois, he is still a communist and travels abroad, 
especially to Venezuela, where authoritarian ruler Hugo Chavez hosts 
members of terrorist groups like the Revolutionary Armed Forces of 
Colombia. Through the Movement for a Democratic Society, Ayers and 
other Weather Underground members are trying to resurrect another 
"student movement" on the campuses. This makes the controversy one of 
more than academic interest.

Friends of the FBI?

The controversy over Kennedy's involvement with the FBI comes at a 
time when the Bureau is under fire for its engagement with the 
Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR), considered by many 
security experts to be a front for terrorist groups. The FBI had a 
formal relationship with CAIR until the group's terrorist ties were 
exposed in a court case. Then the FBI, according to John Miller, 
Assistant Director in the Office of Public Affairs, "suspended any 
formal engagement" with CAIR. Rep. Frank Wolf wants to know if there 
is still informal contact going on with CAIR.

What happened in the Weather Underground case was that conservative 
Boston radio talk-show host Michael Graham had linked to an item on 
the FBI website in making the case that Katherine Ann Power, one of 
those convicted of murdering Boston Police Officer Walter Schroeder, 
was a member of Ayers' Weather Underground group. The item originally 
identified Power and Ayers' wife Bernardine Dohrn as members of the 
Weather Underground. But Kennedy then announced the news on Monday, 
April 6, on the same day that my column started appearing on other 
Internet sites, that the item had been changed to remove a picture of 
Power and to claim that she had been previously "inaccurately" linked 
to the Weather Underground. There was no explanation of why this 
change had been made, raising even more questions. It raises the 
specter of whether pressure could be applied to the Bureau to 
sanitize other aspects of the history of the Weather Underground--or 
perhaps stop ongoing investigations of terrorism itself.

On the other hand, there appears to be some internal pressure in the 
Bureau to forget the past. Weather Underground terrorist Mark Rudd 
was actually invited to lecture to the FBI Training Academy in 2005 
by FBI Special Agent Andrew Bringuel. Rudd is now out with a memoir 
celebrating and trying to cash in on his terrorist past.

Obama's new Attorney General, Eric Holder, was involved in the 
much-criticized Clinton Administration pardons of members of the 
Weather Underground. What's more, the political career of Obama 
himself was launched in the Chicago home of Ayers and Dohrn, who are 
facing increasing scrutiny over their reported roles in the 1970 
bombing murder of San Francisco Police Sergeant Brian V. McDonnell. 
The FBI and local law enforcement officials have confirmed that the 
investigation into McDonnell's death is still open and that evidence 
continues to be gathered and analyzed.

The "Controversial" FBI Report

My column had also linked to the "controversial" FBI item, although 
the bulk of my case that Power and Susan Saxe (also involved in the 
Schroeder murder) were members of the Weather Underground consisted 
of references from a detailed Senate Internal Security Subcommittee 
report, an interview with former FBI official Oliver "Buck" Revell, 
and a report by and interview with former Congressional investigator 
Herbert Romerstein.

Revell, who was involved in the search for Power and Saxe, said that 
both women were considered members of a Weather Underground spin-off, 
the United Freedom Front. As the Senate Internal Security 
Subcommittee noted (and I linked to this report twice in my column), 
Power and Saxe were clearly considered members of the Weather 
Underground. They were explicitly identified this way. Power was also 
specifically identified as a member of a Weatherman group at Brandeis 
University. The Weatherman was a forerunner to the Weather Underground.

Incredibly, Kennedy has written a new article insisting that the 
168-page Senate report is wrong! Kennedy wants to dismiss a report 
which was based on "an inventory and analysis of all information with 
respect" to the Weather Underground in the possession of the 
subcommittee, and which was endorsed by Senators from both political 
parties. This committee had investigators and confidential 
information. Instead, Kennedy wants to rely on a quick revision of an 
FBI webpage. Why? Because it suits his political agenda and his 
defense of Ayers against charges that his group murdered people. And 
this guy is teaching journalism!

Interestingly, Kennedy has absolutely nothing to say about former FBI 
Official Oliver "Buck" Revell's comments to me on the involvement of 
Power and Saxe in the Weather Underground spin-off group. Revell rose 
to the position of Associate Deputy Director in Charge of 
Investigations, with jurisdiction over all FBI operations, including 
counter-terrorism. He was an obvious authority on this matter. And 
yet Kennedy ignores him! Amazing.

As experts have tried to emphasize, one has to understand the Weather 
Underground organization as a network or movement, not a membership 
organization. The Weather Underground had a core group but also 
operated through numerous fronts, factions, spin-offs, and 
off-shoots, including the SLA, New World Liberation Front, 
Revolutionary Armed Task Force, and United Freedom Front.

In light of all this evidence, why did the FBI change that item about 
Power's membership in the group?

After being alerted to the change by Kennedy himself, I sent him an 
email raising the question of whether he had had any contacts with 
the FBI about it. Kennedy ridiculed the idea, saying, "Regular 
readers of Media Nation [his blog] know what great pull and clout I 
have with the FBI." But he subsequently acknowledged, when someone on 
his blog raised the issue, that "The FBI changed its page within the 
past few days. In fact, it was done after I started making inquiries."

In his latest article, he admits exchanging e-mails with FBI 
spokesman Paul Bresson and quotes him as saying the change was made 
because "When she [Power] was announced on our Top 10, we made no 
reference to her association with the WU [Weather Underground] then. 
Seems like we would have."

Seems? Let's examine this rationale.

If you examine this FBI "Wanted Poster" of Bernardine Dohrn, you will 
find no reference to her membership in the Weather Underground. Does 
this mean she wasn't a member? We all know that she was a prominent 
member and leader of the group. In such public statements, the FBI 
focused on the alleged criminal acts, not their membership in 
different groups. FBI spokesman Bresson doesn't seem to understand this.

I talked to an FBI spokesman who wasn't very forthcoming with details 
and wouldn't even confirm that Kennedy was the one who made the 
inquiries, which he said started about a week ago. The item had been 
on the FBI webpage since 2004. He said internal research was 
conducted and the FBI historian, John Fox, was consulted. But in 
terms of what records were examined, he made the claim, also given to 
Kennedy, that when Power was put on the FBI "Most Wanted" list, her 
membership in the Weather Underground was not mentioned in a press 
release. Hence, they concluded in retrospect that she had not been a member.

This is absurd. This slip-shod approach is to be given priority over 
a report from a Senate committee? And the views of a former top FBI 
official and congressional investigators?

I have submitted a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request asking 
for any information about the Bureau's contacts with Kennedy over 
this change. It is indeed troubling that a Bill Ayers apologist has 
this kind of contact and sway with the FBI, and that a low-level 
official can make such a change without adequate research.

We will know more when the results of my FOIA request are complied 
with. But what we do know suggests something is seriously wrong in 
the public affairs office of the FBI, which is run by John Miller, a 
former correspondent and anchor for ABC News.

Sadly, the FBI spokesman seemed completely unfamiliar with the report 
of the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee. References to Power can 
be found on pages 33, 36, and 92, while references to Saxe are on 
pages 33 and 36.

How a Terrorist Network Operates

Contacted on Monday, Revell was surprised that the reference to Power 
being involved in the Weather Underground had been deleted. "They 
didn't have membership lists. They didn't carry membership cards," he 
reiterated. "But the fact of it is that they did associate with and 
support the Weather Underground on the campuses. She [Power] was 
never charged as such and they may not have any official 
documentation. But there was ample information of them being associated."

Revell compared the activities of the Weather Underground and its 
factions to the Al Qaeda Islamic terrorist network. "Everybody is not 
in Al Qaeda Central but they are essentially working under the 
mandates put out by Al Qaeda. The Weather Underground was a network 
but some of the violent groups split off with their own name but they 
were still associated with and were supported by the Weather Underground."

Regarding the involvement of Power and Saxe, he said their United 
Freedom Front was a "specific organization off on its own but they 
made contact with Weather Underground elements at various 
universities and locations around the country."

Pulling the item from the FBI website because "they can't tie down a 
membership list or a membership card" seems to be "caving in," he 
said. Katherine Power "was considered part of the Weather Underground 
but in this specific organization," he added.

The mistake being made by the FBI public affairs office in this case 
unfortunately was made by the Bureau before, with disastrous 
consequences. In a pamphlet titled, "Who is Tracking the 
Terrorists?," former FBI Assistant Director W. Raymond Wannall has 
written about how the FBI had once come to the erroneous conclusion 
that the Weather Underground had ceased to function, not realizing at 
first that it had developed a new identity and strategy of working 
through fronts and factions under different names. Only after the 
1981 Brinks robbery did this change, he said.

Terrorism in the Family

The Brinks robbery, which left two police officers and a security 
guard dead, was carried out by another Weather Underground front, the 
Revolutionary Armed Task Force, including Ayers/Dohrn associates 
David Gilbert and Kathy Boudin and members of the Black Liberation 
Army. Ayers and Dohrn adopted the child of Gilbert and Boudin and 
raised him as their own, after the parents went to jail for murder in 
the Brinks case.

As former Providence Journal reporter John Castellucci has 
documented, Dohrn was "suspected of supplying the radical gang that 
committed the Brink's robbery with false identification" and spent 
eight months in jail rather than tell a grand jury what she knew 
about the terrorist assault. Castellucci wrote the book, The Big 
Dance, about the case.

Regarding Ayers, Castellucci wrote, "He set off bombs and said he 
didn't regret it. He rioted in the streets of Chicago and thumbed his 
nose at the authorities after the charges were dropped." Ayers would 
tell an interviewer, "Guilty as hell. Free as a bird. America is a 
great country."

Rather than seek justice for the victims of Weather Underground 
terrorism, Northeastern University has a professor on its payroll 
named Dan Kennedy, who is determined to run a protection racket for 
this "guilty as hell" communist terrorist. Kennedy is a disgrace to 
academia and journalism. It is tragic that the FBI would take his 
inquiries seriously.

What the FBI should be doing, rather than responding to a far-left 
professor, is providing authorities with all of the available 
evidence concerning the reported involvement of Ayers and Dohrn in 
the murder of McDonnell at the San Francisco Park Police station.

Former FBI informant Larry Grathwohl, who has testified under oath 
that Ayers told him that Dohrn planted that bomb, says that he called 
Kennedy on Monday, offering information about this case and the 
Weather Underground. Kennedy had written a column for the British 
Guardian linking to a magazine article saying that the involvement of 
the Weather Underground in that bombing had not been conclusively 
demonstrated.

"Kennedy stated that he didn't know who I was and that he hadn't 
researched the Park Police station bombing," Grathwohl said. "I told 
him who I was and he seemed surprised. I told him I wanted to afford 
him the opportunity to ask me whatever questions he might regarding 
Bill and the Weatherman. He has my number and indicated he would be 
in touch. I doubt it."

Kennedy's Terrorist "Sources"

This is because Kennedy is not interested in the facts and is 
dedicated to whitewashing terrorists. It speaks volumes that in his 
article posted on Tuesday he says nothing about getting the call from 
Grathwohl.

Kennedy does, however, say that he sent an e-mail to Katherine Ann 
Power, who spent only six years in prison for her crimes, "but did 
not receive a response."

Kennedy's idea of journalism is to ignore an FBI informant in the 
Weather Underground and contact the convicted killer of a Boston 
Police Officer for her side of the story. I'm sure that, if she had 
said that Ayers had nothing to do with her group or the murder, that 
Kennedy would have dutifully reported that.

So how did you get that e-mail address anyway, Professor?

His email address is [email protected] His office telephone number 
is 617-373-5187.

.


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