LAPD Red Squad

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LAPD captain Luke Lane with a board of "communistic literature" seized during Red Squad raids (Los Angeles Herald-Examiner photograph, 1935, via Los Angeles Public Library photo archive)

The LAPD Red Squad is the common name for a division of the municipal Los Angeles Police Department, in California, United States, that was focused on limiting the activities of left-wing individuals and organizations in the city. Over the course of 50 years, LAPD "gathered some 2 million secret files...on all manner of legitimate dissenters."[1]

1920s–1930s[edit]

The department's first Red Squad, formally the LAPD Intelligence Division, operated from approximately 1929 when it was organized by chief of police Roy E. Steckel,[2] until June 22, 1938 when it was disbanded under chief of police James E. Davis.[3] The "anti-radical" section of the Intelligence division was widely known as the Red Squad, and was one of a number of red squads operating during the interwar period in Canada and the United States. Key figures included Red Hynes, Luke Lane, and Earl E. Kynette, who ran what was considered the "confidential" section of the squad, also known as the "spy squad". As one artist later summarized the organization's actions of the late 1920s and 1930s: "Red Hynes' 'red squads' were running rampant, raiding union headquarters and homes, and creating havoc among the liberals."[4]

Historian Frank Donner wrote in 1990:[5]

In Los Angeles, however, more than in any other city in the country, the role of the police department and its red squad as clients of business interests in combating dissent and unionism was from the start openly proclaimed and was implemented over the years with only minimal concessions to changes in political climate, accountability requirements, reform movements, recurring corruption scandals, and adverse court decisions. Finally, the political intelligence component of the LAPD is unique because of its unabashed right-wing commitment. To be sure, all of the red squads were guided by highly conservative political values, but in Los Angeles right-wing zealotry reigned supreme.[5]

A semi-official departmental history published in the Los Angeles Police Department yearbook of 1984 stated that Red Hynes was one of the "most potent force[s] in the Police Department and city in those years".[6] The Red Squad consistently used physical violence and civil-rights violations to achieve its goals; per LAPD historian Arthur W. Sjoquist, "Today these actions would be reprehensible, but in the 1930s the mood was different. Red had the support of such groups as the Chamber of Commerce, much of the press (including the L.A. Times), the County Grand Jury, the Mayor and City Council...Even the Police Commission lent its support. As one Commissioner put it, 'The more the police beat them up and wreck their headquarters, the better...Communists have no constitutional rights and I won't listen to anyone who defends them'."[7]

Use of violence[edit]

The LAPD Red Squad of the Great Depression era appears to have routinely used physical violence as a means of intimidation and repression. The Red Squad under Davis and Hynes found that "simple intimidation or a good beating could get the job done just as effectively" as effectively as arrest, prosecution, and incarceration, without all the time-consuming paperwork and procedure.[8] For instance, during a Los Angeles City Council meeting, the Red Squad attacked leftists present to protest against the LAPD Red Squad raid on the John Reed Club art show, beating ACLU president Clinton J. Taft, two war veterans, and attorney Leo Gallagher,[9] "leaving him with broken glasses and two black eyes".[10] Nieces of children of Chicano union activist Jesús "Uncle Chuey" Cruz told a historian with the University of Arizona that when their uncle was involved with the California agricultural strikes of 1933, "They hired the Red Squad from Los Angeles to quell that rebellion. They beat the hell out of him. They cracked his head open several times...Boy, they treated him so bad [that] they made a Communist out of him".[11] Communist teacher Eva Shafran was reportedly jumped by one or more members of the Red Squad, knocked unconscious with an automobile crank, kicked in the mouth knocking out her front teeth, and was seriously injured to the point that she was sent to a sanitarium to recover.[12][13][14] In 1935, officers under command of Luke Lane used their blackjacks to beat two college students unconscious at a peace rally.[15][16] According to a group biography of the leftist Brooks family of California held at the Southern California Library for Social Studies and Research, "In 1932, Isador was arrested by Los Angeles Police Chief William F. Hynes' Red Squad. He was so severely beaten by them that it permanently affected his health and he died two years later."[17]

1960s–1970s[edit]

In the 1970s the Red Squad was known as the LAPD Public Disorder Intelligence Division.[18] In 1982 the LAPD agreed to pay Seymour Myerson $27,500 to settle a lawsuit charging them with political spying and harassment.[19] As part of a larger reform program, the department agreed to destroy their files on dissenters, except as of 1983, PDID "was still keeping tabs on more than 200 organizations, including the Coalition Against Police Abuse and Citizens Commission on Police Repression."[1]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Bartosiewicz, Petra. "Beyond the Broken Window: How Washington sealed Puerto Rico's fate". Harper's Magazine. Vol. May 2015. ISSN 0017-789X. Retrieved May 20, 2024.
  2. ^ "Two Hundred Officers Shifted in Shakeup: 'Red Squad' Banned and Hynes Demoted". The Los Angeles Times. December 1, 1938. p. 23. Retrieved May 14, 2024.
  3. ^ "Police Intelligence Squad Discontinued". The Los Angeles Times. June 23, 1938. p. 2. Retrieved May 14, 2024.
  4. ^ Cherry (1956), p. 18.
  5. ^ a b Donner (1990), p. 245.
  6. ^ Sjoquist (1984), p. 72.
  7. ^ Sjoquist (1984), p. 73.
  8. ^ McClellan (2011), p. 165.
  9. ^ Buelna (2019), p. 231, n. 98.
  10. ^ Stevens (2021), p. 106.
  11. ^ Buelna (2019), p. 26.
  12. ^ "Girl in Mystery Attack Injured". Los Angeles Evening Post-Record. June 27, 1930. p. 1. Retrieved May 14, 2024.
  13. ^ "Eva Shafran Knocked Senseless by Gangster". The Daily Worker. July 14, 1930. p. 2. Retrieved May 14, 2024.
  14. ^ McClellan (2011), p. 178.
  15. ^ "Clubs Wielded at Anti-War Gathering [part 1 of 3]". Los Angeles Daily News. April 13, 1935. p. 1. Retrieved May 22, 2024. &"L.A. Police Slug College Girls at Rally [part 2 of 3]". Daily News. April 13, 1935. p. 4. Retrieved May 22, 2024. & "Clubs Wielded at Anti-War Gathering [part 3 of 3]". Daily News. April 13, 1935. p. 1. Retrieved May 22, 2024.
  16. ^ "Stephen O'Donnell Says". Los Angeles Evening Post-Record. April 16, 1935. p. 11. Retrieved May 22, 2024.
  17. ^ "Miriam Sherman - Brooks Family Papers, 1910–1978". oac.cdlib.org. Retrieved May 26, 2024.
  18. ^ Myerson (1990), p. 306.
  19. ^ Myerson (1990), p. 316–317.

Sources[edit]