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  • The FBI and MI5 Tried to Crush The Rolling Stones and Rock ‘N’ Roll

    Take a trip back in time to when two governments(who once hated each other) teamed up in an attempt to assassinate the Rolling Stones‘ career. They attempted to do so before The Rolling Stones could fill the minds of the youth with rock & roll.

    The Rolling Stones are celebrating 50 years of rocking, and now Philip Norman writes in his book ‘Mick Jagger’, that the FBI and MI5 plotted against the band. The author alleges the two agencies teamed up after Acid King Dave cooperated in lieu of going to jail. The failing actor, after being busted at Heathrow Airport with drugs, cut a deal with MI5.

    Phillip says that led to dealing drugs to the Rolling Stones which turned into the infamous Redlands bust. The idea he claims was all the FBI’s who wanted to keep Keith and Mick off of American soil. Both did jail time, Keith Richards was convicted for allowing marijuana to be smoked at his estate and Mick Jagger for amphetamines.

    They still couldn’t keep the Rolling Stones from rocking the U.S., but then guitarist Brian Jones did until his ‘misadventure’ death in 1969.

     

    By: Kain | Yesterday
    Find this story at 2 October 2012

    How the Acid King confessed he DID set up Rolling Stones drug bust for MI5 and FBI

    It is one of the most intriguing chapters in the history of the Rolling Stones.

    The drugs raid on a party at guitarist Keith Richards’s Sussex home, Redlands, more than 40 years ago very nearly destroyed the band.

    And one of the 1967 episode’s unexplained mysteries was the identity of the man blamed by Richards and Mick Jagger for setting them up, a young drug dealer known as the Acid King.

    He was a guest at the party – and supplied the drugs – but vanished after the raid, never to be seen or heard of again.

    Jagger and Richards were arrested and jailed for possession of cannabis and amphetamines, though later acquitted on appeal.

    Richards claimed last week in his autobiography, Life, that the Acid King was a police informant called David Sniderman.

    The truth appears to confirm Richards’s long-held belief that the band was targeted by an Establishment fearful of its influence over the nation’s youth.

    The Mail on Sunday can reveal that Sniderman was a Toronto-born failed actor who told his family and friends he was recruited by British and American intelligence as part of a plot to discredit the group.

    After the Redlands bust, he slipped out of Britain and moved to the States where he changed his name to David Jove, and lived in Hollywood, later working as a small-time producer and film-maker.

    Maggie Abbott, a Sixties talent agent, met him in Los Angeles in 1983 and became his lover. He told her how he infiltrated the group but said he was now ‘on the run’.

    She said: ‘David was a heavy drug user but had a quick wit. He was the perfect choice to infiltrate the Stones.

    ‘He never showed any remorse for what he did. It was all about how he had been “the victim”. He was a totally selfish person.

    ‘Mick had been my friend as well as a client and I thought about trying to persuade David to come clean publicly.

    ‘But he was always armed with a handgun and I feared that if I gave him away, he’d shoot me.’

    His identity was confirmed by a scion of a family of American philanthropists,
    James Weinstock.

    Two years after the Redlands raid, ‘Dave Jove’ married Mr Weinstock’s sister, Lotus, in Britain.

    ‘They’d come up with some new way to make acid and decided to go to the UK and sell it,’ Miss Abbott said.

    But David was caught carrying pot by Customs.

    ‘Some other guys turned up – he implied they were MI5 or MI6 – and they gave him an ultimatum: he’d get out of prison time if he set up the Stones.’

    The British agents were in cahoots, he told Miss Abbott, with the FBI’s notorious Counterintelligence division, known as Cointelpro, which specialised in discrediting American groups deemed to be ‘subversive’.

    On Christmas Day in 1969, ‘Jove’s’ new wife, Lotus, gave birth to a daughter, Lili. Their marriage lasted 18 years, though they never lived together.

    ‘I first met David when I returned to California from Bali, where I had gone searching for God,’ said James Weinstock, Lotus’s brother.

    ‘One New Year’s Eve, he showed me a gun and said he’d just killed a man who was messing with his car.’ Later he was rumoured to have murdered a TV personality, Peter Ivers, the presenter of a TV show that ‘Jove’ produced.

    Miss Abbott said: ‘There was talk that Peter had decided to leave the show and David was angry. ‘I discovered “Jove” wasn’t David’s real name when he shot himself through his heel with his gun.

    ‘When we checked him into hospital, he used a made-up name and later I found out his real name was Sniderman.’

    His first half-hearted admission was to Mr Weinstock: ‘He told me he was tight with the Rolling Stones in England, but had a falling-out with them,’ he said.

    ‘He was arrested for some serious offence, but managed to extricate himself, and he said it all looked very suspicious when the police busted the Rolling Stones. They froze him out after that.’

    In 1985, Miss Abbott and an old friend, Marianne Faithfull, went out for dinner in Los Angeles.

    Miss Abbott introduced her to ‘Jove’ – but Ms Faithfull soon told her she wanted to leave.

    Miss Abbott says: ‘When we got into my car, she said, “It’s him, the Acid King. He set up the Redlands bust. Don’t ever see him again”. ’

    Miss Abbott added: ‘Two months after the evening with Marianne, I finally had it out with him.
    ‘To my amazement, he told me everything. He said, “It’s a relief to be able to talk about it”. ’

    By Sharon Churcher and Peter Sheridan
    UPDATED: 13:46 GMT, 24 October 2010

    Find this story at 24 October 2010

    Published by Associated Newspapers Ltd

    Part of the Daily Mail, The Mail on Sunday & Metro Media Group
    © Associated Newspapers Ltd

    Informant bij de Black Panters

    In de VS is een controverse ontstaan naar aanleiding van een publicatie over de mogelijke aanwezigheid van een FBI-informant bij de Black Panthers in de jaren ’60. Deed Richard Masato Aoki het nu wel of niet?

    Op 20 augustus 2012 publiceerde The Center for Investigative Reporting (CIR) een verhaal over Richard Masato Aoki, een voormalig lid van de Black Panther Party in de jaren ’60-’70 en inmiddels overleden. Op de website van CIR gaf Seth Rosenfeld het artikel de titel ‘Man who armed Black Panthers was FBI informant, records show.’ De San Francisco Chronicle publiceerde nog dezelfde dag exact hetzelfde verhaal met de titel ‘Activist Richard Aoki named as informant.’ Het nuanceverschil in de kop van markeert de discussie die zich ontpopte in de dagen die volgden.

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