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BLACK PANTHER LEADER FRED HAMPTON WAS KILLED BY THE POLICE AND FBI 53 YEARS AGO, DECEMBER 4, 1969
On December 4, 1969, Fred Hampton — an activist, a revolutionary socialist and the chairman of the Illinois chapter of the Black Panther Party — was killed by the Chicago Police and the FBI at the age of 21. 53 years later, Americans are reflecting on his work and legacy.
As reported in the Chicago Daily News, sister publication of the Chicago Sun-Times:
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On the morning of Dec. 4, 1969, Chicago police, working covertly with the FBI, raided Black Panther headquarters on the West Side, killing the charismatic chairman Fred Hampton and downstate leader Mark Clark.
It would be years before this truth would come out. The front page story in that day’s Chicago Daily News, written by Edmund J. Rooney and Barry Felcher, tells a very different story.
“Fred Hampton, 21, chairman of the Illinois Black Panther Party, and another Panther leader were killed early Thursday in a gun battle with state’s attorney’s police,” the report said.
Four other Panthers and two officers were also injured, Rooney and Felcher noted. They identified Mark Clark, the other man killed, as a “Downstate leader of the militant Panthers” and said he had a “long police record and had dropped out of school in the eighth grade.”
The state’s official narrative on the raid came from State’s Attorney Edward V. Hanrahan. At a press conference, he told reporters that a “gun battle broke out as state’s attorney’s policemen tried to enter the apartment to search for illegal weapons.”
Hanrahan said the officers leading the raid allegedly announced themselves, only to be met with gunfire from the first-floor apartment. Three times, the state’s attorney claimed, officers ceased fire and demanded the occupants “come out with their hands up,” only to be met with more gunfire
“The immediate, violent criminal reaction of the occupants in shooting at announced police officers emphasizes the extreme viciousness of the Black Panther Party,” Hanrahan said.
Defense for Hampton and Clark came in the second half of the article, on page six. Bobby Rush, current U.S. Representative and then-deputy minister of the party, asserted that Hampton had been sleeping during the raid, them bullet holes