FBI FILE ON FORMER BEATLE; WAS IT LENNONGATE?Byline: Larry Gerber Associated Press Associated Press: see news agency. Associated Press (AP) Cooperative news agency, the oldest and largest in the U.S. and long the largest in the world. After fighting since 1981 to make the FBI tell why its agents shadowed John Lennon Noun 1. John Lennon - English rock star and guitarist and songwriter who with Paul McCartney wrote most of the music for the Beatles (1940-1980) Lennon , a biographer of the late Beatle hopes that now the answers finally will come together. "I would love to do something else for the next 10 years," said Jon Wiener Jon Wiener is professor of history at the University of California Irvine, a contributing editor to The Nation magazine, and a Los Angeles radio host. He is noted for being the plaintiff in a Freedom of Information lawsuit against the Federal Bureau of Investigation for , a history professor at the University of California The University of California has a combined student body of more than 191,000 students, over 1,340,000 living alumni, and a combined systemwide and campus endowment of just over $7.3 billion (8th largest in the United States). , Irvine, who documented Lennon's attempts to change politics through rock music and the government's attempts to stop him. "We are almost at the end," said Dan Marmalefsky, an attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), nonpartisan organization devoted to the preservation and extension of the basic rights set forth in the U.S. Constitution. . Court battles have freed about 85 percent of the FBI's Lennon file, he said. "I was a single man when I filed this case, and now my older son is going on into the seventh grade." "Real Love," the second "new" Beatles song assembled from a Lennon demo, hit record stores last week as the lead track on the group's latest CD single. The two-disc "Beatles Anthology 2" is due in stores March 19. It features 45 unreleased Beatles tracks dating from 1965 to 1968, including the first recorded takes of "Yesterday" and "Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown)," a strings-only version of "Eleanor Rigby" and demos of "Strawberry Fields Forever." Wiener first asked for the Lennon FBI files a few months after the talented composer and musician was shot to death in 1980 by a deranged de·range tr.v. de·ranged, de·rang·ing, de·rang·es 1. To disturb the order or arrangement of. 2. To upset the normal condition or functioning of. 3. To disturb mentally; make insane. fan in New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of . The professor and the ACLU ACLU: see American Civil Liberties Union. sued in 1983. The case was thrown out but reinstated on appeal. The U.S. Supreme Court sided with Wiener in 1992, rejecting an FBI appeal to kill the suit. In December, U.S. District Judge Robert Takasugi ordered the FBI to answer questions about why it kept a file on Lennon. Responses were due in February, but the FBI asked for an extension because of the federal government shutdown The ruling probably won't free the remaining files, Wiener said. "But the implications are clear that the courts are ... telling the FBI it can't do what it's been doing in this case. And the logical thing ... for the Clinton Justice Department to do is to give us the materials," he said. Step by step, the agency has dribbled out bits of information from its 1972 surveillance of Lennon, who was ordered deported after speaking out against the Vietnam War Vietnam War, conflict in Southeast Asia, primarily fought in South Vietnam between government forces aided by the United States and guerrilla forces aided by North Vietnam. and Richard Nixon's re-election to the presidency. Wiener has collected 26 pounds of paper, filling two cardboard boxes in the study of his West Los Angeles
"Lennon formerly with group known as the Beatles," an undercover source reported to FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover Noun 1. J. Edgar Hoover - United States lawyer who was director of the FBI for 48 years (1895-1972) John Edgar Hoover, Hoover on a Lennon appearance at a 1971 anti-war concert in Ann Arbor Ann Arbor, city (1990 pop. 109,592), seat of Washtenaw co., S Mich., on the Huron River; inc. 1851. It is a research and educational center, with a large number of government and industrial research and development firms, many in high-technology fields such as , Mich. Much of the report was withheld on grounds of "national defense or foreign policy." About 15,000 people attended the concert. Wiener eventually got the withheld portion, classified "confidential" by the FBI. It begins with lyrics to the Lennon song "John Sinclair John Sinclair is the name of several notable individuals:
The song, about an activist busted for marijuana, "probably will become a million seller," the FBI informant wrongly predicted, "... but it is lacking Lennon's usual standards." The report also noted - confidentially - that Lennon's wife, Yoko Ono, "can't even remain on key." Lennon at the time was discussing plans, later discarded, for opposing the war and Nixon on a rock tour ending with a "political Woodstock" outside the Republican National Convention in San Diego. Lennon fought the government's deportation order and remained to see Nixon forced from office over the Watergate burglary and other "dirty tricks." He was never deported. Wiener said he might add a chapter to his book "Come Together; John Lennon in His Time" once he has all the FBI information. A specialist in recent American history, he suggested some youngsters could use a general update. A student interviewer, for example, recently seemed puzzled when Wiener mentioned Lennon's anti-war anthem, "Give Peace a Chance." "She asked, 'What does that mean?' " the professor recalled. "She knew there was a group called the Beatles, and she knew there was a Vietnam War. But she didn't know much else about the period." Not that Wiener expects many new revelations from the remaining files. He expects to show that the Nixon administration acted illegally against Lennon, as it did against its Democratic opponents. "I don't think the issue here is John Lennon. I don't think we're going to find out more about Lennon," said Wiener. "What's important about these files is that they document government's abuse of power, using government agencies to harass and intimidate critics of the president, and that's a violation of the Bill of Rights, an attack on freedom of speech. "And that has much bigger implications than whether John Lennon gets to sing 'Give Peace a Chance.' " The ACLU has invested an estimated $500,000 in attorney time and other expenses, Marmalefsky estimated. Four different lawyers have headed the case for the government. It wasn't known what the taxpayer expenses amounted to. Spokesmen for the FBI and the Justice Department either declined to return calls or to discuss the case on the phone. "Nixon is dead and gone. J. Edgar Hoover is dead and gone. John Lennon is dead and gone. We've started relations with Vietnam," said Wiener. "Yet the Clinton administration has apparently decided that they'll continue to keep these documents secret, at least some of them, and I wonder why," he said. "It doesn't make much sense." CAPTION(S): PHOTO Photo "The Clinton administration has apparently decided that they'll continue to keep these documents secret, at least some of them, and I wonder why. It doesn't make much sense." - Jon Wiener trying to demystify de·mys·ti·fy tr.v. de·mys·ti·fied, de·mys·ti·fy·ing, de·mys·ti·fies To make less mysterious; clarify: an autobiography that demystified the career of an eminent physician. FBI probe on John Lennon, left |
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