At a CNN town hall meeting on Wednesday, a Missouri police chief sternly reminded attendees about the Ku Klux Klan’s historic influence on U.S. law enforcement.

The town hall meeting was held on Wednesday, July 13 and discussed the topic of police violence and race.

Col. K.L. Williams — the black chief of police in Kinloch, Missouri — told the panel that he had so many guns pointed at his head over the course of his youth that he is frankly amazed to be alive.

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“I know I could never change the condition from the outside. I had to go for the inside,” Williams said.

“If you think that racism and white supremacy is not involved in police departments, you better check yourself. Because the KKK has been involved with law enforcement from when it just about started,” he continued.

The Southern Poverty Law Center has extensively documented the Klan’s activity in the U.S., which has come in cyclical waves since the hate group’s inception during the Reconstruction Era. Often the Klan functioned as a covert enforcement arm of white governments, acting in secrecy to undermine the rights of blacks, Jews, immigrants and other groups.

Watch the video, embedded via Twitter, below:

"The KKK has been involved in law enforcement from when it started" says Kinloch, Missouri police chief #CNNTownHall https://t.co/EItKDNatxn — CNN (@CNN) July 14, 2016