Martin Luther King and the Secret Police

J. Edgar Hoover was the Deep State, but it did not die with him.

James Leroy Wilson
3 min readJan 16, 2023

Former FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover at his desk, ca 1930s-1940s. Source: FBI.gov

Today (January 16, 2023) is the Martin Luther King Jr. federal holiday. It’s a good day to remember the man, his principles, and his courage. It’s a good day to celebrate his ideals of equality, peace, and justice.

And freedom.

This brings to mind one aspect of King’s life that should never be forgotten. It’s his relationship with America’s Secret Police, the Federal Bureau of the Inquisition, er, Investigation.

In the early 1960s, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover decided that Martin Luther King Jr. was an “enemy” of the United States. He persuaded President John F. Kennedy and Attorney General Robert Kennedy that one of King’s advisors was a communist. They gave Hoover permission to investigate King, and Hoover bugged King’s bedroom.

Hoover used the recordings, which contained evidence of adulterous sexual activity, to try to threaten King into withdrawing from public life if not drive him to suicide. King ignored this “anonymous” blackmail attempt even as Hoover sent the tapes to others in politics and the media. No one but Hoover was obsessed with King’s private…

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James Leroy Wilson

Former activist. Writer with a range of interests from spirituality to sports.