Sunday News

FBI releases documents showing how it targeted Ali

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ATLANTA The FBI kept a close watch on the activities of boxer Muhammad Ali in 1966, with a particular focus on his links to the Nation of Islam, a black movement that the agency viewed as subversive, according to archival documents posted on the FBI website.

The Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion released the documents in response to a Freedom of Informatio­n Act lawsuit by the conservati­ve group Judicial Watch.

Ali, one of the world’s most famous celebritie­s and a revered role model for AfricanAme­ricans, died in June, aged 74. His death triggered an outpouring of affection for the former heavyweigh­t champion, known as much for his social activism and humanitari­anism as for his legendary boxing career.

In the FBI’s view, Ali may have posed a threat because he was a potential source of money and charismati­c leadership for the civil rights movement, which Hoover opposed, said Michael Ezra, a professor at Sonoma State University and author of a book on Ali.

‘‘Ali was an important symbol to the civil rights movement, a galvanisin­g force, and him running around free was a problem for the FBI.’’

Representa­tives of the FBI could not be reached for comment.

The papers, which used Ali’s birth name Cassius Clay, include a request for agents to monitor his divorce that year from his first wife as a ‘‘lead’’.

A separate FBI memo, on a speech Ali gave in 1966 at a mosque, said he discussed efforts to strip him of his heavyweigh­t title and blamed the ‘‘white man’’.

The controvers­y centered on Ali’s refusal to be drafted into the United States military during the Vietnam War and his claim of conscienti­ous objector status, which led to him being stripped of the boxing title in 1967.

Following a successful legal battle, Ali regained the title in a 1974 bout.

One memo said Ali’s connection to the African-American political and religious group the Nation of Islam, which was under FBI investigat­ion at the time, made the bureau interested in his activities ‘‘from an intelligen­ce standpoint’’. Some of the documents mention Main Bout Inc, a boxing promotion company that Ali establishe­d with the leaders of the Nation of Islam. The company was a source of money for them until Ali’s 1967 conviction for draft evasion.

The informatio­n in the file was not necessaril­y derogatory to Ali, said Chris Farrell, research director at Judicial Watch, which routinely asks the FBI to release its files on famous people who have died. Reuters

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Muhammad Ali

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