In the late 60’s early 70’s, there was a controversial novel and movie entitled The Spook Who Sat by the Door that was a fictional story of Dan Freeman, the first Black CIA officer. The Freeman character was a secret Black nationalist who infiltrated the CIA to gather intel. Freeman later used the skills he learned at the bureau to train Black street gangs to wage guerrilla warfare against the CIA.

The term “spook” had a double meaning. Spook is a term used for CIA agents. This is most likely because of their covert maneuvering. And the term is also used as a racial epithet for Black people. The “sat by the door” reference is based on a practice used by white organizations who hire tokenized Black people, and place them in office positions at the front desk or “by the front door” of the business. This is a tactic to make the one Black person at an organization as visible as possible to give the illusion of racial diversity.

The film version of this story was so controversial at the time, the FBI had all the film prints removed from movie theaters in the 70’s. There has always been a long standing concern that Black people within the ranks of the FBI and CIA (and general military and police agencies) would utilize their training and knowledge against the system of white supremacy.

This week, in Minnesota, there was a real life “Spook Who Sat By The Door” named Terry J. Albury, a 39 year old Black counterterrorism agent for the FBI who appeared in federal court in St. Paul. Albury was charged on one count of unauthorized disclosure of national defense information and one count of unauthorized retention of national defense information.

Albury pleaded guilty to leaking classified documents to a reporter, saying in a statement that he knew it was illegal but felt he had to act against a culture in the bureau that often treats minority communities with suspicion and disrespect.

According to the Columbia Journalism Review, Albury’s lawyers stated:

For Terry, the only African-American field agent in the Minneapolis office, the problem of racism both within the FBI and in its interactions with minority communities was especially pronounced. The situation became even more acute for him when, having previously served a tour for the FBI in Iraq, he was assigned to the counter-terrorism squad, and was required first-hand to implement FBI investigation directives that profiled and intimidated minority communities in Minnesota and other locations in which Terry served.

So Terry J. Albury is being punished for being a whistleblower against systematic, unconstitutional racial injustices within the FBI. Back in 2006, the FBI released documents stating that white supremacist groups had infiltrated law enforcement organizations. Yet the FBI never specified what they were going to do to stop or even counter this infiltration. This has lead many to believe the FBI itself has been infiltrated by these same white supremacist groups.

As we see the number of racialized anti-Black executions that are being allowed by race soldiers employed as “police” around the country, and the FBI’s complicity in these unconstitutional executions, there may be some merit to these suspicions.