William O'Neal, the
former FBI informant who infiltrated the Black Panthers in the late 1960s, died
after he apparently walked onto a busy expressway and was struck by a car, a
newspaper said Thursday.
O'Neal, 40, had been
living under the name William Hart since 1973 as part of the Federal Witness
Protection Program. O'Neal had lived in California until 1984, when he returned
to Chicago.His death Sunday on the Eisenhower Expressway has been ruled a suicide,
the Chicago Tribune reported Thursday. But Dr. Robert Kirschner, assistant Cook
County medical examiner, said the investigation was continuing.
After running up a
criminal record as a car thief on Chicago's West Side, O'Neal was recruited as
an FBI informant in 1966 by Agent Roy Martin Mitchell. In exchange for O'Neal's
help, Mitchell agreed to forget about a stolen car incident.
After infiltrating the
Black Panther Party, O'Neal served as the group's chief of security. He
supplied the FBI the floor plan to party headquarters, the target of a
controversial 1969 predawn raid in which Panther leaders Fred Hampton and Mark
Clark were killed by law enforcement officials.
Interview with ,
conducted by Blackside, Inc. on April 13, 1989, for . Washington University
Libraries, Film and Media Archive, Henry Hampton Collection. These transcripts
contain material that did not appear in the final program. Only text appearing
in bold italics was used in the final version of
QUESTION 1
INTERVIEWER: Bill, can
you describe to me the circumstances under which you began working for the FBI?
WILLIAM O'NEAL: Well,
it was probably 1967. I was with a guy one night, a friend of mine, one night
and we were drinking beer and we decided to go joy riding, and we jumped in a
car and stole it. And we were driving round the city of Chicago for, of,
forty-five minutes and decided to leave the city, and go visit a relative in
another state, and we had an accident out of state, and, prior to the accident,
we had walked into a pool hall, and we were shooting pool. And at this, at the
door, you had to register your phone number and address, and we wrote down our
names and phone numbers then went and shot a game of pool, and then came out
and had an accident. We fled the accident on, on foot, um, messed around in the
city awhile and then caught a bus back to Chicago. And, oh, about three or four
months later I got a call from this FBI agent by the name of Roy Mitchell, and
he told me that he knew what I had done, and we talke--we went around a couple
of times. And he said something like, "Well, you know, ain't no--there's
no need in you trying to bullshit me. I know you did it, but it's no big
thing." He said, "I'm sure we can work it out." And, um, I think
a few, few months passed before I heard from him again, and one day I got a
call and he told me that it was payback time. He said that, "I want you to
go and see if you can join the Black Panther Party, and if you can, give me a
call."
QUESTION 2
INTERVIEWER: Can I just
interrupt you here, and start that part about joining the Panther Party, but
tell me again how old you were and that it, got heated, that it was an FBI
agent.
WILLIAM O'NEAL: I think
I was about nineteen, eighteen, nineteen years old, and the FBI agent's name
was Roy Mitchell, and, um, called me up on the phone and, and, and recanted the
crime, pretty much. I tried to deny it, but he had the evidence and he said
basically it was no problem, that we could work it out, that I wasn't in any
serious problems that he couldn't deal with. And a few months, three mo--three
months maybe passed before he asked me to join the Black Panther Party.
QUESTION 3
INTERVIEWER: Now what
did Mitchell ask you to do?
WILLIAM O'NEAL: Well,
he didn't give me any specific instructions at that point. He just said-
INTERVIEWER: Can you
say "Roy" instead of "he"?
WILLIAM O'NEAL: Roy
said basically, "Just go and see if you can join the Black Panther Party.
I understand they, they are recruiting Panther members. So why don't you see if
you can go down to the office and join. If you get in, give me a call
back." So, the next day, I got on the bus and went down to the office of
the Black Panther Party. It was located on Western and Madison, and walked in
the office, about three or four Panthers in the office, and I think I was about
the fifth member in the Chicago Party to join. They had this big office
building on the, and up on the second floor they had about five or six offices
and very little personnel to run things. So positions, it was easy to get a
position. So they appointed me as, as the Security Captain. That was the first
time I met Fred Hampton, and he was the Chairman, the spokesman for the Party
and Bobby Rush was the Minister of Defense. He was Huey P. Newton's Deputy,
which was the top man in the, in the state of Illinois at that time.
QUESTION 4
INTERVIEWER: What did
you think about the Panthers at that time? What, what framework did you
understand them in, what did you think about the Civil Rights Movement? How did
they fit into your understanding of politics and--?
WILLIAM O'NEAL: I, I
grew up in a middle class neighborhood, and I had very little idea of, of--I
was apolitical. The Panthers I had heard of only from a recent article, I
think, that had occurred in the paper. Huey P. Newton had just been in a
shootout with the, with the Oakland Police Department and one of them had died,
and there was a lot press about that. But prior to the articles I had read
about Huey P. Newton, I knew nothing of the Black Panther Party. In fact, the
day I joined I was pretty sure it was just another gang, unlike, not unlike the
Blackstone Rangers, or, or the Cobras or something. I had no idea of, anything
about their politics.
QUESTION 5
INTERVIEWER: What did
you begin to learn as you, as you did join? And, and, what kind of information
were you, were you able to give back to Mitchell?
WILLIAM O'NEAL: Well,
almost immediately after I joined the Panthers, probably within ten days, I
began to realize that the Black Panther Party was a little bit more
sophisticated than a gang. The orientation process, the attention they gave to,
to the political climate around the country, had me going there for awhile. And
at one point-
INTERVIEWER: Could you
be specific, please?
WILLIAM O'NEAL: Well-
INTERVIEWER: And also,
if you could, if you could look at me?
WILLIAM O'NEAL: Yeah,
OK. They had, I think the first set of reference books I saw inside the Black
Panther Party was _The Selected Works of Mao Tse-tung_, which I had, began to
associate with Communism. And it wasn't too long after that, that I started
seeing books like the Manifesto, _The Communist Manifesto_, Karl Marx and then
The Selected Works of, Collected Works of Lenin, and every night after the
office would close the Panthers would sit down and, and they would study these
books. We would go through political orientation. We would read certain
paragraphs and then Fred Hampton and Rush would explain to us, the new
membership, basically what it meant, and what was happening, and they drew
parallels to what was going on in the past revolutions in the various
countries, like, for instance China or Russia, and they was drawing parallels to
what was going on in the current political scene within the United States. So
they were drawing associations between the revolutions in, in, in the Communist
countries, as I understood it, as to what was happening in the United States.
And, and so I understood them to be a little bit more sophisticated than a
gang. I expected that there would be weapons, and we would be out there doing
turf battles with the, the local gangs, but they, they weren't about that at
all. They were into the political scene: the war in Vietnam, Richard Nixon, and
specifically freeing Huey. That was their thing.
QUESTION 6
INTERVIEWER: Now you
would, I assume, report this information back to Mitchell? Did he have a, a
response? Did he react to this?
WILLIAM O'NEAL: Well,
initially, Agent Mitchell requested very little information from me. It was a
one-way street for probably about six months. I think, he was, in every meeting
that I had with him, he listened more than he asked questions. He would, a typical
meeting would be, "OK, what are they doing today?" And then I would
just tell him what was going on around the office in general conversation. He'd
say, "OK, what are you doing?" And then I'd tell him what I was doing
and then he'd make mental notes, sometime he took shorthand notes and, and then
we'd depart. He said, "OK, just keep me informed.' And so we had a very
loose relationship at that point because the Panthers weren't too active
militarily. OK, they were politically organizing at that point. They were
recruiting, at that point, the Panthers were trying to, well, they, they had
speaking engagements at the, at the different colleges and so forth, so we
were, we were in the organizing process, and there was very little criminal
activity as I could determine that was going on. Very little to report to the
FBI, in my mind, you know, because I felt like since the FBI was a, a, a, an
investigative body investigating federal crimes that crimes were what they were
looking at, and so--
QUESTION 7
INTERVIEWER: Tell me a
little bit about how you felt about working for the FBI. What motivated you and
what you thought you were, what ends you thought you were serving?
WILLIAM O'NEAL: Well,
in my community, the policemen were, I mean, it was the quickest way to gain
respect. I mean, I think I grew up wanting to be a policeman, admiring and
respecting policemen, although I always thought it was outside of my reach. I,
my neighborhood was not unlike most people that grew up in Chicago, most young
people, we were very mischievous and did a lot of juvenile-type, petty,
criminal-type things, but stealing a car and all of a sudden having the FBI,
having a case with the FBI, the thought of be--having, really going to jail got
my attention. And, so when he asked me to join the Black Panther Party, and he
used terms, he never used the word informant. He always said, "You're
working for me," and I associated him as the FBI. So all of a sudden I was
working for the FBI, which, in my mind, at that point, I associated with being
an FBI agent. So I felt good about it. I felt like I was working undercover for
the FBI doing something good for the finest police organization in America. And
so I was pretty proud.
INTERVIEWER: Yeah,
great, OK.
INTERVIEWER: The camera
had--
QUESTION 8
INTERVIEWER: Did you
ever think, or did Mitchell ever try to convince you, that the Black Panthers
were a threat to national security? I mean, you understand what, what the FBI's
position was?
WILLIAM O'NEAL: Well, I
think Mitchell, the relationship between I and Mitchell concentrated on the
local activities. We talked very, very little about what was going on
nationally early on in the game. Later on, when Bobby Seale and the guys would
come to town, it took on a national scope, but right then and there we were
concentrated on the local chapter. And later on I understood that his thinking,
in that regard. He wanted me to build up some credibility within the Black
Panther Party, so he gave me a lot of room, a lot of leash at that point. He
let me become a Panther before I became an FBI informant. I mean, I didn't just
go right in, rifling drawers, he, he directed me into the Panthers and then
when I got there he backed off, and he let them work on me a while. And slowly
it worked, I became a Black Panther in a way. I forgot the, the, the scope of
me being there. In fact, I didn't really know why I was there, I just knew I
was to report, but I really didn't have anything to report, early on in the
game, so I concentrated mainly on Panther duties. I lived the life of a
Panther. I li--
QUESTION 9
INTERVIEWER: Tell me
about that. How, how did you, how, how did you, what, what was the work that
you did? And how did you rise up through the, the ranks of the party?
WILLIAM O'NEAL: Well,
mainly, from, from day one, we had very little personnel and a lot of spots to
fill, there were a lot of activity, a lot of things to do, and so naming
positions at that point and filling those positions were really the
leadership's responsibility at that point. And because of my knowledge of
electronics and, you know, I was just a handy-man basically around the office,
and we had this office building that they fel--felt like wasn't too secure. I
started working right away to secure the building, and in that regard I fell right
into the security position. And it got more sophisticated as donations
start--started to flow. As the membership increased as a result of speaking
engagements on school campuses and so forth, my responsibilities doubled and so
I, I was given a staff of security people. And, and I just advanced from that
point on.
QUESTION 10
INTERVIEWER: What, what
were the major developments during that, that year of the Panther Party that
you saw? Was it the programs? Was it the alliances that the Party was building?
What were, what was the Panther agenda as you came to understand it?
WILLIAM O'NEAL: To free
Huey basically was the agenda of the Black Panther Party all along. Let it be
no mistake, Huey P. Newton was locked down, the Black Panther Party was Huey P.
Newton, and Huey P. Newton was the Black Panther Party. And no matter how
powerful or strong our membership got in the, in the Illinois chapter of the
Black Panther Party, no matter how many speaking engagements Hampton had, how
many donations we had, how many papers, there was always a national office out
there to remind us that we were subservient to the national office, that we
were just a chapter and we weren't the Illinois Black Panther Party, we was the
Illinois Chapter of the Black Panther Party, and their goals at that point were
to free their leader, who was locked down in Alameda County Jail facing the
death penalty for killing a, a police officer. The party recognized at, at that
point that they needed liaisons, they needed alliances with various groups in
order to survive, basically, in the climate in Chicago. So they embraced the
various political issues that was of the day. They got involved in all types of
causes, mainly to fortify their position and to free their leader, Huey P.
Newton, and he was effectively running the Black Panther Party from inside of
the jails. Most of our political direction was mandated, came out through his
lawyers and was passed on nationally through the chapters. It was Huey speaks.
INTERVIEWER: OK, let's
stop just for a second.
QUESTION 11
INTERVIEWER: OK, you
tell me about how things changed as the, as, as--
WILLIAM O'NEAL: Well,
I'd say from about February, 1969, the activities within the party was high
speed. We were in our bloom. We had about 500 members, we were selling probably
about 25,000 newspapers in the city of Chicago every week, of the Panther
newspaper that is. We had various members of our Party, of the Black Panther
Party going to the colleges all over the state, speaking engagements, donations
were coming in to the tune of about 1,500-2,000 dollars a day, but at the same
time, the Chicago police had stepped up their activities also. A lot of our, a
lot of the members were being arrested on petty charges, so the money we were
bringing in on the one hand in donations, money that came through the mail
anonymously, blank checks and money orders, was going right out in bail money.
So it was, it was intense. And in that regard, the Black Panther Party was
everywhere, and doing everything. We had 500 members and everybody was
aggressive, and it was hard for me to report on all of the activities that were
current. I could only concentrate on what my little group was doing. I was, as
Security Captain, I was in what was called the Defense Cadre. It was technically
under Bobby Rush's command because he was the Deputy Minister of Defense, and
then during that year we considered we were in a state of war, our leader was
locked down, the police was attacking our offices all over the country, they
was trying to break us financially through bail, and so the Minister of Defense
takes over in a situation like that. Fred Hampton was in charge mainly with the
speaking engagements, public relations, reaching the people, recruiting, and
things of that nature. He was the chief spokesman. He was the one that the
cameras saw all the time. Bobby Rush and our group was the operations. We were
activities at that point. It was our job to defend the offices against the
police, to get members out of jail, to discipline the members, to kind of, you
know, maintain a police control of the organization, to deal with informants
and so forth.
QUESTION 12
INTERVIEWER: Now, as
the party was growing, though, what was, what was Mitchell starting to ask you
about, or how was your relationship with Mitchell changing? If you could recap
that story.
WILLIAM O'NEAL: Well,
Mitchell was part of a squad, in my opinion, of about five or ten agents, and
each one of them had their little, they had, had their little activities within
the Black Panther Party. Mitchell's questions were defined mainly to my area.
We ne--he never asked me how many newspapers that, that someone else was
selling, or how's, who got the Kellogg's for the breakfast with children
program or who's going to open up the medical center. He wasn't concerned with
that. He was concerned with my activities in the Panthers, which at that point
was exclusively security issues. We were buying weapons at that point. We
weren't, we didn't have any type of working relationship with the larger street
gang at that time which was the Blackstone Rangers. They had about 2,000
members and were well-armed, and at some point a meeting was arranged. We met
with Jeff Fort of the Blackstone Rangers, and at that meeting, we were in a
Catholic church, I remember that night, we were setting up, and Jeff Fort told
Fred Hampton, "There, there is not going to be any Black Panthers in the
city of Chicago. You guys either join the Blackstone Rangers or get out of the
city." And Hampton came away from that meeting feeling like we were going
to eventually have to do battle with these guys. There was no compromise. They
didn't, they couldn't associate, they, the Blackstone Rangers, couldn't
associate our purpose politically with their gang turf thing, so we were going
to have to deal with them. So the word went out to me to basically start buying
weapons. We also knew that the state's attorney had declared war on us, and
pretty soon we were going to face a, a raid in one of our offices. And the
mentality at that time was that we know it's coming. Our job is to set an
example for the people. We, we, we must be ready. And so we started fortifying
the offices and buying guns and training our soldiers for security people.
QUESTION 13
INTERVIEWER: I want to
talk now about the events--
INTERVIEWER: Oh, all
right I thought you would need
WILLIAM O'NEAL: Well,
I, he didn't say that, but he--
QUESTION 14
INTERVIEWER: Tell me
about your recruitment to the FBI.
WILLIAM O'NEAL: OK, am
I ready now?
INTERVIEWER: Yes.
WILLIAM O'NEAL: Well,
simply, I stole a car and took it across the state line. The FBI had a case on
me. They could either prosecute me and put me in jail or decline to prosecute
because I assisted them in one of their investigations. I think I understood
that. So the day he called and asked me to join the Black Panther Party, I
understood what my role was to be, and that's what I did. Was that good enough?
INTERVIEWER: Yeah,
except you didn't say Mitchell. Will you try it one more time?
WILLIAM O'NEAL:
Mitchell, OK.
INTERVIEWER:
WILLIAM O'NEAL: OK,
it's simple. I stole a car and went across the state line, which violated
federal law. Mitchell, an agent from the FBI had a case on me. He had a choice
of either prosecuting me and sending me to jail or declining to prosecute as a
result of me aiding him in another case. And I decided to take the latter. When
he asked me to join the Black Panther Party, I did so and I understood what my
role was to be.
INTERVIEWER: We didn't
quite catch it I think, but, I mean--
INTERVIEWER: we can do
it again.
WILLIAM O'NEAL: Well,
we can do it again.
QUESTION 15
INTERVIEWER: Tell me
about a typical meeting, and tell me again that Mitchell was the FBI agent.
WILLIAM O'NEAL: Well, a
typical meeting between my FBI contact Mitchell would be downtown Chicago at
11, 12-noon, at, down in the basement of, at some bar, some dark bar. I would
meet him at the bar, he'd already ge--he'd be there when I got in there, and
he'd have a drink, and I'd have a drink, and we'd sit there and, and talk for
15 or 20 minutes, and it was very casual. I mean, it was like I'd come in and
he'd say, "Oh, what you up to?" And then I'd say, "Well, I'm
going down to Champaign for a speaking engagement with Fred, and I'm taking
such and such with me, and, and we're carrying guns, and we're driving in this
car, and license, and I'd just rattle it off. Ten or 15 minutes I'd tell him
everything I knew. He didn't, he, he, didn't have to say very much because when
I joined the Black Panther Party, most of the information that I was giving him
at that time was new information to him, so as I grew inside of the Pa--Party,
and beginni--and began to learn things, he grew also so he knew the members
better than I did. We'd talk about the, the girlfriends and who was, you know,
pregnant, and who had a venereal disease, you know, and this was just casual
conversation between he and I, he wasn't always writing. What he put in his
files, I still don't have the benefit of. But I know after a while, he and I
became friends, and we talked in casual conversation about what I was doing in
the Black Panther Party. Well, the whole nature of that relationship changed
right around November, maybe November 13, when two police officers were killed
by a Black Panther member named Jake Winters on the South Side of Chicago. That
night, as I understand the, the gun battle, Jake Winters straddled one of the
officers who were wounded in the shootout, and performed a coup de grace, a
mercy killing. He straddled the officer aft--the officer, after the officer was
down, and, and put a shotgun to his head and put him out of his misery, or at
least that's the way the newspaper described it. And, I think the whole city, I
think the Black Panthers took the rap for that one when they really didn't
deserve it because Jake Winters was out there on his own, he wasn't out there
on any official member, mission for the Black Panther Party. He was out there
on his own, and he got into a altercation with a guy, and the guy called the
police, and the police came, and a shootout broke out, and two police officers
were killed and Jake Winters were killed. Well, the Panthers took the heat
because Jake Winters was a Black Panther, and past that point, I noticed, maybe
a couple of days after this officer were killed, Mitch--Mitchell had this, this
grim, solemn atmosphere about hisself[SIC], and I could tell he was looking for
specific, he wanted specific criminal violations. He wanted something that he
could move on, and I think he may have implied or expressed that at one or two
points. He, he expressed his anger over what had happened, how, I mean, the
total disregard for life, and, I mean, he, it was the first time I ever saw him
express his personal opinion about what he thought the Black Panthers were
doing.
QUESTION 16
INTERVIEWER: OK, I want
to get you focused now. It's November 1969, can you describe to me the kind of
information you were giving Mitchell about, about what was going on?
WILLIAM O'NEAL: Well,
he started, Mitchell became more specific during that time. He wanted to know
the locations of weapons caches, he wanted to know if we had explosives. He
needed, he needed to know who was staying at what locations, who spent the
night where. His information didn't change so much as he requested more detail.
And, I knew why: the, the, the shootout on the South Side had pretty much laid
the foundation within the Party, within the Black Panthers, we knew that the
police would react in some type of way.[1] Interview gathered as part of Eyes
on the Prize II: America at the Racial Crossroads 1965-1985; Episode 206-19 We
could just feel the stepped up surveillance. We could feel the pressure all the
way around, and we knew something bad was going to happen, and I think we were
all prepared for it. During that time, Fred was conducting quite a few speaking
engagements, but even his attitude had changed somewhat within the Black
Panther Party. He, he was becoming less, he was becoming more reluctant to, to
speaking engagements, to making those outward appearances. He became more
reserved, more protective of hisself[SIC]. He very seldom traveled anywhere by
hisself[SIC], and he began taking five and six bodyguards with him, and so I
f--he felt it also. Also, he felt like he was going to prison. He was pretty
sure that the robbery conviction was going to take him out of the game, so he
started preparing other members to take his role, um, pretty much.
QUESTION 17
INTERVIEWER: There's a
floor plan of the apartment on Monroe street, and there are FBI memos that I've
seen that don't identify, but the implication has always been that some of the
information came from you, on reports about weapons being in Monroe Street. Did
you give that information to Mitchell? And if so, could you describe it for me?
WILLIAM O'NEAL: Well, I
routinely supplied whatever floor plans or diagrams I could to the FBI. I, that
started in June 1969. I mean, they had a floor plan and keys to the Black
Panther headquarters. The specific apartment on Monroe, I supplied that floor plan.
Perhaps not the one you saw, but I do remember meeting with Mitchell at, at one
point and, and drawing up a diagram of the apartment. The one I've seen in, in,
in court, that was a little bit more fine-tuned than the one that I, you know,
drew.
QUESTION 18
INTERVIEWER: Describe
to me the meeting where you remember giving information to Mitchell.
WILLIAM O'NEAL: Well,
the meeting was not unlike the other meetings we'd had. It was always at the
same location. It was always during the daytime, and it was routine. I, here
again, in my mind, I knew that a raid was being planned. In my mind, I knew it.
I knew, also, from the type of information, that it would be probably a, a, a
top raid, fo--meaning the leader, one of the leader's apartments. I also knew
that the most vulnerable spot was, was Hampton's house because it was the one
that had all the weapons in it. It was the one with the, with the, with the
weapons. Very few of the other apartments had the kind of weapons he had at
that apartment. So when he asked me for the diagram, it didn't surprise me. I
knew that the raid was going to be planned. I felt like at, at that point, what
they wanted to do was catch him with weapons and seal his conviction. If he'd
have been caught with weapons out on appeal, he would have went straight to
jail. And it, I don't, I can't recall it being expressed, I can't recall any
specific conversations I've had with Mitchell about the raid, but we had such a
unity of mind, so to speak, our efforts were basically one. I understood what
was going on. He didn't have to tell me. He described to me going to the
funeral of the two police officers who got killed, and I knew he was, I knew he
was hurt by that, and I knew he was going to do what he could to help the
police department do something about it.
QUESTION 19
INTERVIEWER: The night
of December, I'm sorry, we have to stop for a second.
QUESTION 20
INTERVIEWER: How were
you paid, how much were you paid?
WILLIAM O'NEAL:
Generally, I was paid, paid in cash, and normal amounts would have ranged from
three to five hundred dollars depending on my needs. If I requested a specific
amount, I knew that I could get it. But the payments were very infrequent, I
mean, Mitchell determined, even Mitchell determined very early on in the game
that spending money was the quickest way to blow your cover. Also, I was living
in the Panther environment, I was living in a Panther house, which they called
a crib, I was eating with them and sleeping with them, and I was with them 24
hours a day, so I had very little need for money, so I was always assured that
my money was being held in trust, and that I could draw from it, draw down on
it any time I got ready, or any time I had a legitimate need that wouldn't
compromise my security. I suppose at any point if I needed a thousand dollars
or two thousand dollars from the FBI, I couldn't have gotten it.
QUESTION 21
INTERVIEWER: How often
did you meet with Mitchell?
WILLIAM O'NEAL:
Depending on my travel schedule, and later on, within the Black Panther Party,
I was traveling around a lot as a bodyguard to Hampton and so forth, and
everywhere he went, I went. So the meetings came infrequent as the activities
picked up. Normally once a week. In the fall of 1969 it had gotten down to
about once a week. And, past that point, it was just telephonic contact.
INTERVIEWER: Are we
still rolling?
INTERVIEWER: Yes.
QUESTION 22
INTERVIEWER: Walk me
through the events of the evening of December the third. What you did, where
you were.
WILLIAM O'NEAL:
December 3. It was cold that day. It was really a slow day. We were at the
office. Hampton was there; Rush was there. The general staff was there, and
there wasn't too much activity going on streetwise because the weather was so
cold. It was a melancholy kind of day. It just came and went. It got down to
the evening, we all decided to walk the block from the office to Hampton's
house and eat dinner. The women were cooking dinner, a big dinner, big, I think
we had chili and a big pot of spaghetti, and most of us who had labored that
day at the office and were just looking forward to going over there and eating
dinner and reading and just being together. It was just a slow day. It was the
last day we, it would be, you know, it was the last type of day where we'd
think that anything was going to happen. It was just too quiet, nothing was
happening. Totally off-guard.
QUESTION 23
INTERVIEWER: There are
conflicting autopsy reports that Fred Hampton may or may not have been drugged.
There are stories about whether or not you brought Fred Hampton food or drink.
Do you have any information about whether he was drugged?
WILLIAM O'NEAL: Fred
Hampton drugged? I've never known Fred, I knew him for about, oh, 16 months,
I've been with him in a lot of different situations. We've been in hotels
together, we've been out, he and I alone in the car, I've never known Fred to
take drugs. And, to take it a step further, Fred would not tolerate anyone even
smoking marijuana around him. And, I don't think any of us in the hierarchy of
the, of the Black Panther Party would dare get drunk or drink, so alcohol and
drugs were a no-no. As far as the rumors that he was drugged that night, unless
he was on some type of medication, I think it was just rhetoric. I think it was
fabricated. As far as the insinuation that myself or someone else in the house
would have drugged Frank--ah, Fred Hampt--Fred Hampton, I don't buy it. There's
just no way. Fred was the type of person that you didn't have to drug anyway.
Fred was always tired. He could get in a car, and we couldn't ride two blocks
without him dozing off. I mean, he, he just, he was a high-energy person that
ran on very little fuel, and wherever he'd sit down, he was well-rested. I have
never, I have never believed that, I mean--
QUESTION 24
INTERVIEWER: In the
days prior to December 3, had you given Mitchell specific information about
weapons that were at the Monroe Street apartment?
WILLIAM O'NEAL: Well, I
can recall we had a couple conversations, but, where I told him basically what
was in various apartments, and, and, yeah, the apartment on Monroe was not
unlike the office and so forth. He had a, a running knowledge, pretty much, of
where the weapons were, what weapons were there, and so forth. I can recall
probably around the second or third verifying that certain weapons were still
as previous--where previously reported. Yeah, I re--can recall having a
conversation or two about weapons.
QUESTION 25
INTERVIEWER: How did
you learn about the police raid on the, the Monroe Street apartment?
WILLIAM O'NEAL: Well,
the following day I went directly to the office, and the office was empty.
Unusually empty. There was one girl sitting behind the desk and she was on the
phone, and there was just no people there. And, I walked in, and I guess it was
about, oh, ten o'clock in the morning, and I walked in and I was waiting on her
to get off the phone to ask, you know, what was up, and I saw a _Sun-Times_, a
copy of _Sun-Times_ laying there, and it had this picture on there, and it had
"Panther Leaders Slain" on it. And boy I felt bad. I felt, just, oh,
I mean. I remember walking out of the office and looking through a little
clearing over on the next block,
which was right in front of uhm, the Monroe St. address and seeing a lot of
police cars over there. And, uhm, at that time Bobby Rush came to the office,
he had just come from over there, or maybe the coroner's office, and in any
case, we walked on over there, and uhm, we both we're speechless. We just
walked through the house and saw where it had taken place and where he had
died, and it was just shocking.[2] Interview gathered as part of Eyes on the
Prize II: America at the Racial Crossroads 1965-1985; Episode 206-21 That was--
QUESTION 26
INTERVIEWER: What ,
what happened?
WILLIAM O'NEAL: Well,
you know, that was, I think, I think it was that morning that I began to feel,
that I felt really, I mean, everything that I had done flashed before me. I
began to, I began to put, put it all together, pretty much. And, I couldn't
believe it. I mean, it was just shocking, and, that, that he had died.
QUESTION 27
INTERVIEWER: What did
you begin to regret?
WILLIAM O'NEAL: The
information, the, the, the, the, the information leading up to the raid, the,
the, the attitudes and the, the whole thing, I mean, you just felt it in the
wind. You know something bad was gonna, gonna happen. I felt like it would be a
raid, I mean, I knew it would be a raid, I mean, two police officers had got
killed. I knew it would be a raid, but I didn't feel like anyone would get
killed, especially not Fred, you know. So, yeah, I was shocked, I felt a
little--
QUESTION 28
INTERVIEWER: Did you
feel remorse about what you had done?
WILLIAM O'NEAL: I
didn't feel like I had done anything. I didn't walk in there with guns. I
didn't shoot him. FBI didn't do it. I felt somewhat like I was betrayed. I felt
like if anyone should have known it was going to be a raid that morning, I should
have known, also. I felt like I could have been caught in that raid. I was
there that night, and I felt like if I'd have laid down I probably would have
been a victim, so I felt betrayed, I felt like, I felt like I was expendable. I
felt like, like perhaps I was on the wrong side. Yeah, yeah, I had my
misgivings. I'm not going to, I, no, I'm not going to sit here now and take the
responsibility for the raid, you know, I'm not going to do that. I didn't pull
the trigger. I didn't issue the warrant. I didn't put the guns in the
apartment. So I'm not going to take the responsibility for that, but I do feel
like I was betrayed. I felt like I should have known the raid was coming down.
I felt like it was probably excessive. You know, I felt like it was a surgical
strike, you know, and I was really angry for quite a few days. Quite a few
days. I refused to have any contact with Roy Mitchell at that point. But I
think he pretty much understood, too. We got together and had a few drinks, and
he didn't take any responsibility for it either. He said, basically, he didn't
know it was going to occur, which, at that point was hard for me to believe. I
just began to understand basically how serious and deadly the game we'd all
been playing for 16 months, the reality of what we were doing, just came to
bare on us that morning. I think, I think the membership was, was automatically
decreased by 300 members that, that never showed up again when that happened. I
think that all of the, all of our enemies, all of the Black Panther Party's
enemies came out of the woodwork to capitalize on the situation. Bobby Rush was
angry for quite a few days about all of the national leaders that showed up to
lend support to the Black Panthers who wouldn't sit down and have a conference
with them early in the game, all of those people that showed up at Fred
Hampton's funeral and looked over his coffin, didn't give him ten minutes of
their time when he was alive.
WILLIAM O'NEAL: My
recruitment by the FBI was very efficient, very simple, really. I'd stolen a
car and went joy-riding over the state limit, and they had a potential case
against me, and I was looking for an opportunity to work it off. And a couple
of months later that opportunity came when FBI agent Roy Mitchell asked me to
go down to the local office of the Black Panther Party, and try to gain
membership.[3] Interview gathered as part of Eyes on the Prize II: America at
the Racial Crossroads 1965-1985; Episode 206-09 I did so and became a member of
the Black Panther Party.
QUESTION 29
INTERVIEWER: Where you
aware specifically, through Mitchell, of a program called COINTELPRO, or the
Counter Intelligence Program?
WILLIAM O'NEAL: At the
time, no. I had no idea of any national program out to get the Panthers. I had
no idea. In retrospect, I can determine, I have determined from the type of
information that I probably contributed greatly to it.
QUESTION 30
INTERVIEWER: You, you
told the story before, I'd just like to have you repeat it, about Mitchell
telling you that he had other agents giving him information, and how you, how
that made, you know, you, you know how you were being checked out.
WILLIAM O'NEAL: Well, I
think early on in the game he let me know that the information, most of the
information that I was supplying him, was information he had already or had
been developed by his squad already. He kind of indicated that the, the
information I was supplying was being cross-referenced with other informants,
so I always felt like it was best to tell the truth in talking to him because
he had his own methods. There was very little information that I gave him that
he seemed surprised of. OK, I just assumed the FBI is not the FBI for nothing,
you know?
QUESTION 31
INTERVIEWER: Once again
I want to ask you about your feelings when you learned about the raid, Fred
Hampton's death, or walking through the apartment with Bobby Rush.
WILLIAM O'NEAL: I can't
do it again. I, I just can't.
INTERVIEWER: Cut.
WILLIAM O'NEAL: It
just, it won't--
INTERVIEWER: Cut.
WILLIAM O'NEAL: --it
won't gel.
QUESTION 32
INTERVIEWER: OK, this
is important. You went to the office that morning, and you saw the headline,
and then su--and it hit you. What hit you?
WILLIAM O'NEAL: Well
it, it didn't really hit me then. It hit me after I walked into that house. It
was cold and it, it was blood everywhere, and it was holes in the wall, and,
and then I was, you know, I just begain to realize that the information that I
had supplied leading up to that moment, had facilitated that raid. I knew that
indirectly I had contributed, and I felt it, and I felt bad about it. And then
I got mad. You know, I had uh, and then I had to conceal those feelings, which
made it worse. I couldn't, I couldn't say anything I just had to continue to
play the role.[4] Interview gathered as part of Eyes on the Prize II: America
at the Racial Crossroads 1965-1985; Episode 206-21 And I think it was at that
point that I lost, I lost something. I lost something, I mean everything that I
thought we were doing to fight crime had a different message after that, you
know, it was a, it was a blow. That's the best I can do with that one.
QUESTION 33
INTERVIEWER: Did you
ever think about the movement, the Civil Rights Movement, in regards to what
the Panthers was doing? Did they ever talk about that?
WILLIAM O'NEAL: Yes, I
did. But it came later for me. The movement came later. The, well, you gotta
understand I was inside the Black Panther Party looking out at the movement.
Something in my nose?
INTERVIEWER: No, but
look at me
WILLIAM O'NEAL: Oh.
INTERVIEWER:
WILLIAM O'NEAL: Stop
the camera a m--a minute, please.
WILLIAM O'NEAL: Well, I
always understood the movement from Martin Luther King's angle. In my view, he
was the movement. The Panthers, their perspective was as Black revolutionaries,
Black nationalists. They really didn't want this government. They wanted to
overthrow this government. They wanted to embarrass this government. They
wanted to punch holes in the system. They wanted to investigate and illustrate
its shortcomings. That was their purpose. They were a vanguard. At one point
the party members embraced the, Huey P. Newton's writings, it was a theory of
revolutionary suicide; they felt like their job was to get out there and
basically die to set an example. They were sacrificial lambs, OK, for the
people. That was their, their, their position. It was a, a phase. They were,
they were not really in the mainstream Civil Rights Movement in my opinion.
QUESTION 34
INTERVIEWER: Tell me
what you thought of Fred Hampton as a human being.
WILLIAM O'NEAL: I
thought Fred Hampton was pretty idealistic. He was pretty dedicated to the
Black struggle. I felt like he gave a lot. He gave his life, and, out of the 16
months that I knew him, I don't have anything bad to say about him. I, I'm
sorry that he died like he did. He was, in my opinion he was murdered by the
Chicago Police Department, and I feel bad about that. I felt like he was a
person that died for what he believed in. Had he lived today, he probably would
be a politician, a successful politician.
QUESTION 35
INTERVIEWER: You said
that he, he felt he might die after he got out of prison.
WILLIAM O'NEAL: No. I
think he felt after he got out of prison like he was a target, unfairly. I
think he felt like he was getting, he was going to jail for five years, and,
and nobody else was, and all he had done was basically gave speaking
engagements. So I think he felt used, I think there was always a friction, a
little bit of jealousy, between the price that the local chapters were paying
and the splendor and the notoriety that the national leaders were getting, such
as Eldridge Cleaver and, and Huey Newton and those guys. I, we felt like we
were paying, the Panthers felt like they were paying a heavy, heavy price to be
Panthers. And I think at one point Fred felt like he was a focal point of a
national agency to get him, and they were going to get him one way or the
other. And he felt pretty much taken out of the game with five years. I think
he was resigned to, to going to prison, he was resigned to not being a Panther
anymore. I--
QUESTION 36
INTERVIEWER: Let me ask
you about the Chicago Police and the FBI. Do, do you distinguish between the
two?
WILLIAM O'NEAL: I do. I
definitely do.
INTERVIEWER: Do what?
WILLIAM O'NEAL: I
definitely draw a distinction between the FBI and the Chicago police. I have
known quite a few FBI agents, and I've worked with them for the last five or
six years, and they've never asked me to compromise my morals or my principles.
Contrary to public belief, I haven't been instructed to commit crimes, or
provoke crimes, or conduct burglaries, or inject drugs in people, or to commit
murder. I haven't been. If anything, my association with the FBI made me a
better person.
QUESTION 37
INTERVIEWER: How did
they treat you? When you, when you were relaxing with Mitchell, were there ever
any other agents there? Did you get treated as a peer?
WILLIAM O'NEAL: Not
only was I treated, I had been to Mitchell's home, I have held his child in my
hands, in my arms when he was one years old. I have been through the offices of
the FBI wearing sneakers and a dirty t-shirt with Mitchell. I've rode around
with him in his car during that time, three or four months after I became a
Panther. I've eaten at his table, at his dinner table. We had a very, at one
point, he was a role model for me, when I needed one. I mean, we had very few
role models back then; we had Malcolm X, we had Martin Luther King, we had
Muhammad Ali, and I had an FBI agent.
QUESTION 38
INTERVIEWER: Do you
want to be a policeman?
WILLIAM O'NEAL: Not
anymore, no, not a policeman. No. I've never wanted to be a policeman. The FBI,
I think, are a much more, a much more efficient, a much more effective
organization than the policemen. Yeah. Chicago police are one thing, the FBI is
another. Yeah, I see a distinction.
INTERVIEWER: OK, cut
for a second.
QUESTION 39
INTERVIEWER:
WILLIAM O'NEAL: Was
there a loss? Yes. I think that the slaying of Fred Hampton was definitely a
loss to, to Black people in general. He would have made a fine, he was a fine
leader then and he would have made a better leader. He was only maturing then,
I mean, he was 22 years old. And, We tried to develop negative information to
try to to discredit him just like we did everybody else. We meaning the FBI. I
tried to come up with signs of him doing drugs or, or something and never
could. He was clean. He was dedicated. I've had private conversations with him.
we got along pretty well[5] Interview gathered as part of Eyes on the Prize II:
America at the Racial Crossroads 1965-1985; Episode 206-12. For seven months I
was his personal body guard. He wouldn't go anywhere without me. I know Fred
Hampton better than anybody, to tell you the truth. He was dedicated, that's
all I can say to it.
QUESTION 40
INTERVIEWER: Do you
think of yourself as a hero for what you did?
WILLIAM O'NEAL: Oh,
absolutely not. I'm not a hero, no, I don't think of myself as a hero for what
I've done. But at the same time, I don't feel ashamed. It was, it was my role
during that time. There were a lot of different roles, a lot of different
positions. There were actually a lot of Blacks fighting in Vietnam that felt
like they should have been there and was proud to be there, fighting for the
country. I felt like there was a war here in the street and I was recruited
early and I joined sides early and I didn't straddle the fence. I gave it all,
all I could, as long as I could. And then when I felt like I couldn't give
anymore, I left. I excused myself. Do I feel like I betrayed someone?
Absolutely not. I had no allegiance to the Panthers. I didn't even know what
they were about when I joined. I joined at the instigation of the FBI, who I
had scant knowledge of. So, no, I don't feel like I betrayed anybody. I don't
feel like I'm a hero. Am I proud? I'm proud of some of the things that I, that
we, that I had done. There were certain things that we'd done that prevented a
lot of violence. There could have been more shootouts between the gang members.
Every now and then a suspected informant inside the Black Panther Party would
be unearthed or detected, and we passed on information to get that informant
out of the game. And so, we avoided some violence there. I, uh--
QUESTION 41
INTERVIEWER: How do you
think members of the Black community at that period would have perceived what
you were doing?
WILLIAM O'NEAL: Well,
those members of the Black Panther Party, those members of the community that
weren't informants, I'm sure that they wouldn't understand, but there was quite
a few informants back then. Quite a few. I mean, what am I supposed to do? Feel
guilty right now about it? I didn't feel guilty then, I was hurt because Fred
Hampton died. I was hurt because a lot of other people died in the Panthers.
There were a lot of Panthers that died in Chicago, got killed needlessly and
senselessly. At this point I questioned the whole purpose of the Black Panther
Party. It got a lot of people hurt, did, did very little else. I mean, if you
associate the Black Panther Party with the Civil Rights Movement, that's,
that's a mistake. In my, in my thinking, they were necessary. It was a shock
treatment for White America to see Black men running around with guns just like
Black men had saw White men running around with ru--guns. Yeah, that was a
shock treatment. It was good in that extent. but it got a lot of black people
hurt.[6] Interview gathered as part of Eyes on the Prize II: America at the
Racial Crossroads 1965-1985; Episode 206-01
QUESTION 42
INTERVIEWER: Do you
regret the personal costs? Was there a personal cost during that period in
terms of relationships with, with home or friends?
WILLIAM O'NEAL: No,
because the Party was, the Black Panthers were Communistic. Basically
everything we had was within the Party. When I joined the Black Panther Party I
developed friendships. I developed new friends within the Party. I was closely
aligned with what they were doing. It was only certain individuals that were of
any interest to the FBI. The FBI never asked me about the Breakfast for
Children Program. They never asked me about the Free Medical Program. They
never said anything other than ridicule the Black Panther Newspaper. They never
questioned their right to have firearms. they were only interested in Panthers
that were doing other things, Panthers aligned to SDS and the Weathermen back
then, Panthers that were smuggling guns into the city. Every now and then I'd
pick up a locker full of composition C4, and the FBI was interested in tracking
the, that, that, that type of weapon, you know, to find out where it was
destined to, you know. They were only interested in basically, the
communications we had with other militant divisions, splinter groups outside of
the, outside of the city. They never asked me about free clothes for children
and stuff like that, no.
QUESTION 43
INTERVIEWER: Did you
ever develop any hard evidence the Panthers were involved in a coalition with
the SDS or Weathermen?
WILLIAM O'NEAL: Well,
the Panthers had a public coalition with the SDS, but the under--under--the,
the Weather Underground was a different ballgame. But than I knew Bernadine
Dohrn and those people before they became Weathermen, when they was just SDSers,
and, I knew the relationships we had then. And the relationships were pretty
tight, there was always, no, there was no hard proof, but who needed proof? I
didn't need it. FBI didn't need it.
QUESTION 44
INTERVIEWER: What would
you tell your son about what you did then?
WILLIAM O'NEAL: I think
I'll let your documentary put a cap on that story. I don't know what I'd tell
him other than I was part of the struggle. That's the bottom line. I wasn't one
of those armchair revolutionaries. One of those people that want to sit back
now and judge the actions or inactions of people when they sit back on the
sideline and did nothing. At least I had a point of view. I was dedicated. And
then I had the courage to get out there and put it on the line. And I did. I
think I'll let hi--let history speak for me.
QUESTION 45
INTERVIEWER: Were--
WILLIAM O'NEAL: Yeah.
INTERVIEWER: --the
Chicago police gonna--
INTERVIEWER: --gonna
raid you?
WILLIAM O'NEAL: No, no,
no. We wasn't worried about the Chicago police raiding us. Like I said, we had
guns, they knew we had guns, we had had guns ever since we were there in the
office, and nobody expected Chicago police just to blatantly come up in there.
And sure, if we were to shoot out the window or something, or somebody run up in
there and they're in hot pursuit, yeah, but we didn't expect the police
department to come at four o'clock in the morning and raid the apartment. I
mean, they knew guns were there. Hampton was out on appeal, and I think they
were suspecting that he would probably try to flee the state or something. So
they had the cars on him constantly. I mean, he was tailed constantly. But,
like I said, it was a game. It was a game we were playing--the leather jackets,
the berets, the, the military format, the, the guns--it was all to impress the
people, really. We never intended to take on the police department to overthrow
the government. The Black Panthers wasn't all about that. It was rhetoric. It
was, like I said, it was shock treatment for White America.
QUESTION 46
INTERVIEWER: When did
you know it was getting serious?
WILLIAM O'NEAL: Well, I
knew that it was kinda serious. Well, the game turned into reality when I saw
him, when I saw Fred Hampton's body. Yeah, when I walked through that house and
saw those bullet holes and that blood laying on his mattress. Yeah, it hit home
then, I knew we were, we were in the real world and that there were people out
there that was going to kill us. That was the bottom line. It was real. But
before that time it was, you know, we used to walk around packed. I mean, I, I
carried two guns every day for seven, eight months. We used to walk in the
University of Illinois circle, campus, man, on a speaking engagement--
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