COLLECTION NAME:
CU Chicanx/Latinx History Collection
mediaCollectionId
CUB~24~24
CU Chicanx/Latinx History Collection
Collection
true
Collection Name:
CU Chicanx History Collection
collection_name
CU Chicanx History Collection
Collection Name
false
Title:
Session 4A: The Uses and Limitations of the Freedom of Information Act in Researching the 1974 Boulder Bombings
title
Session 4A: The Uses and Limitations of the Freedom of Information Act in Researching the 1974 Boulder Bombings
Title
false
Name:
Romero, Jasón
name_part
Romero, Jasón
Name
false
Name Role:
Presenter
name_role
Presenter
Name Role
false
Name Affiliation:
Director, Latino History Project, CU Boulder
name_affiliation
Director, Latino History Project, CU Boulder
Name Affiliation
false
Name:
Vigil, Ernesto B., 1948-
name_part
Vigil, Ernesto B., 1948-
Name
false
Name Role:
Presenter
name_role
Presenter
Name Role
false
Name Affiliation:
Author of The Crusade for Justice: Chicano Militancy and the Government's War on Dissent
name_affiliation
Author of The Crusade for Justice: Chicano Militancy and the Government's War on Dissent
Name Affiliation
false
Resource Type:
Moving image
type_of_resource
Moving image
Resource Type
false
Genre:
symposia (conferences)
genre
symposia (conferences)
Genre
false
Place Created:
Boulder (Colo.)
place_term
Boulder (Colo.)
Place Created
false
Date Created:
2021-11-06
date_created
2021-11-06
Date Created
false
Language Term:
English
language_term
English
Language Term
false
Extent:
1 video : color, sound; 01:00:55
extent
1 video : color, sound; 01:00:55
Extent
false
Form:
presentations (communicative events)
form
presentations (communicative events)
Form
false
Abstract:
The bombings that resulted in the death of Los Seis de Boulder have never been "solved," yet frequent references to them invoke the murky and poorly-understood history of the FBI Counter-Intelligence Programs (COINTELPRO) as a possible explanation. In fact, there were thirteen COINTELPRO operations led by the FBI, and CU Boulder’s UMAS student group was the second-most important Chicano organization monitored by the FBI in Colorado in the 1960s and 1970s. This presentation will discuss what COINTELPRO was and what it wasn't, provide information about FBI programs in effect at that time, address the basic terminology and procedures of the FBI, and explain the uses and limitations of FOIA for furthering scholarship on this topic.An audience Q&A will follow the presentation.
abstract
The bombings that resulted in the death of Los Seis de Boulder have never been "solved," yet frequent references to them invoke the murky and poorly-understood history of the FBI Counter-Intelligence Programs (COINTELPRO) as a possible explanation. In fact, there were thirteen COINTELPRO operations led by the FBI, and CU Boulder’s UMAS student group was the second-most important Chicano organization monitored by the FBI in Colorado in the 1960s and 1970s. This presentation will discuss what COINTELPRO was and what it wasn't, provide information about FBI programs in effect at that time, address the basic terminology and procedures of the FBI, and explain the uses and limitations of FOIA for furthering scholarship on this topic.An audience Q&A will follow the presentation.
Abstract
false
Note:
00:00 Jasón Romero introduces the presentation and speaker; 09:15 Ernesto Vigil begins his presentation titled "The uses and limitations of the Freedom of Information Act: Researching the 1974 Boulder bombings." He admits he has the largest collection of FBI files on the Chicano movement; 12:30 Ernesto clarifies some of the terminology he is going to use throughout the presentation, such as 'counter intelligence'; 15:20 Ernesto relates the term counter intelligence to the work of the FBI in the United States. He continues to talk about how former director of the FBI, J. Edgar Hoover built the FBI into an agency that went from investigating violations of federal law to one that became a domestic and international spy agency; 22:15 Ernesto talks about his personal motives for researching Chicano movements and Los Seis. He talks about activism; 24:17 Ernesto talks about the origin of UMAS and his personal experiences with UMAS in the 1960s and 1970s; 29:00 Ernesto talks about high schools and the public school system, as well as how students of color make up the majority of students in urban public school systems. He continues to talk about the small percentage of students of color that were enrolled at the CU Boulder campus in the 1960s; 33:50 Ernesto talks about a time when students reached out to him about the Summer Tutorial Program that started in 1968 at CU Boulder. While the university managed to find money to introduce the students to campus life there was no money for the students to continue to attend school. Ernesto mentions the political climate and activists at the time that influenced the extra funding for students of color; 40:00 Ernesto talks about the Los Seis bombings as two separate events that occured. Ernesto talks about how he knew some of the students; 42:00 Ernesto talks about how the Freedom of Information Act released some of the FBI documents that Hoover thought would never be seen. He continues to talk about how some documents are redacted; 45:50 Ernesto shows an example of a government document that lists several activists that were tracked in Colorado. He continues to read through other government documents that relate to Los Seis; 53:30 Ernesto talks about blind memos in the FBI documentation and how their documents frame the Chicano students for blowing themselves up, but insertions from the FBI indicate they were behind the bombings; 01:00:00 Ernesto ends his discussion.
note
00:00 Jasón Romero introduces the presentation and speaker; 09:15 Ernesto Vigil begins his presentation titled "The uses and limitations of the Freedom of Information Act: Researching the 1974 Boulder bombings." He admits he has the largest collection of FBI files on the Chicano movement; 12:30 Ernesto clarifies some of the terminology he is going to use throughout the presentation, such as 'counter intelligence'; 15:20 Ernesto relates the term counter intelligence to the work of the FBI in the United States. He continues to talk about how former director of the FBI, J. Edgar Hoover built the FBI into an agency that went from investigating violations of federal law to one that became a domestic and international spy agency; 22:15 Ernesto talks about his personal motives for researching Chicano movements and Los Seis. He talks about activism; 24:17 Ernesto talks about the origin of UMAS and his personal experiences with UMAS in the 1960s and 1970s; 29:00 Ernesto talks about high schools and the public school system, as well as how students of color make up the majority of students in urban public school systems. He continues to talk about the small percentage of students of color that were enrolled at the CU Boulder campus in the 1960s; 33:50 Ernesto talks about a time when students reached out to him about the Summer Tutorial Program that started in 1968 at CU Boulder. While the university managed to find money to introduce the students to campus life there was no money for the students to continue to attend school. Ernesto mentions the political climate and activists at the time that influenced the extra funding for students of color; 40:00 Ernesto talks about the Los Seis bombings as two separate events that occured. Ernesto talks about how he knew some of the students; 42:00 Ernesto talks about how the Freedom of Information Act released some of the FBI documents that Hoover thought would never be seen. He continues to talk about how some documents are redacted; 45:50 Ernesto shows an example of a government document that lists several activists that were tracked in Colorado. He continues to read through other government documents that relate to Los Seis; 53:30 Ernesto talks about blind memos in the FBI documentation and how their documents frame the Chicano students for blowing themselves up, but insertions from the FBI indicate they were behind the bombings; 01:00:00 Ernesto ends his discussion.
Note
false
Note Type:
Segment sequence
note_type
Segment sequence
Note Type
false
Subject Topic:
Intelligence service
subject_topic
Intelligence service
Subject Topic
false
Subject Topic:
Security classification (Government documents)
subject_topic
Security classification (Government documents)
Subject Topic
false
Subject Topic:
Chicano movement
subject_topic
Chicano movement
Subject Topic
false
Subject Name:
United States. Federal Bureau of Investigation. Washington Field Office
subject_name
United States. Federal Bureau of Investigation. Washington Field Office
Subject Name
false
Subject Geographic:
Colorado--Boulder
subject_geographic
Colorado--Boulder
Subject Geographic
false
Subject Temporal:
Nineteen seventies
subject_temporal
Nineteen seventies
Subject Temporal
false
Subject Title:
Los Seis de Boulder
subject_title
Los Seis de Boulder
Subject Title
false
Identifier:
Session 4A 11.6.2021.mp4
identifier
Session 4A 11.6.2021.mp4
Identifier
false
Identifier ARK:
identifierark
https://ark.colorado.edu/ark:/47540/7s7j6z85h8f2
Identifier ARK
false
Physical Location:
University of Colorado Boulder Libraries Rare and Distinctive Collections
physical_location
University of Colorado Boulder Libraries Rare and Distinctive Collections
Physical Location
false
Date Captured:
2021-11-06
Internet Media Type:
video/mp4
internet_media_type
video/mp4
Internet Media Type
false
Digital Origin:
born digital
digital_origin
born digital
Digital Origin
false
Access Condition:
This Item is protected by copyright and/or related rights. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s).
access_condition
This Item is protected by copyright and/or related rights. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s).
Access Condition
false
Access Condition URI:
access_conditionuri
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
Access Condition URI
false