Planting a Snitch Jacket
// The Bureau's own term for manufactured suspicion — a dated 1970 headquarters memo, a named tactic, and a documented death the Senate later confirmed was foreseeable
Posts I and II established the architecture's source and conduit — the closed channel the program was built inside of, and the directorate's actual mechanism for deciding who to act against. This post moves to conversion: the specific point where the conduit's output, a directive to "neutralize" a target, became a concrete act against a named human being.
Snitch jacketing — the Bureau's own internal records use the phrase "planting a snitch jacket" — describes the deliberate manufacture of suspicion that a genuine, loyal organizational member is actually a police or FBI informant. The mechanism required no truth in the underlying accusation. Its function was achieved the moment the target organization began to doubt one of its own, regardless of whether the doubt was warranted.
The clearest documentary anchor for this tactic is a Bureau headquarters memo dated May 11, 1970, in which FBI headquarters urged its San Francisco field office to work with local police to plant fabricated documents and other disruptive disinformation specifically pinpointing Black Panther members as police or FBI informants. The memo is not a description of a tactic happening somewhere in the abstract. It is an instruction, dated, directed at a specific field office, using the Bureau's own internal name for what it was asking that office to do.
Before the tactic reached the Panthers, it had already been proposed against a different, equally prominent target, in a document specific enough to quote directly. On July 10, 1968, the Special Agent in Charge of the FBI's New York field office submitted a COINTELPRO proposal to the Director recommending that "consideration be given to convey the impression that Carmichael is a CIA informer" — referring to Stokely Carmichael (later Kwame Ture), then a leading SNCC organizer.
The proposal followed the exact chain Post II documented: field office to Director, by formal written proposal, awaiting headquarters approval before any field action proceeded. One traceable consequence appears in the Bureau's own later file material — a Black Panther Party leadership statement in September 1970 publicly repeating the accusation that Carmichael was "operating as an agent of the CIA," language that mirrors the 1968 proposal's framing closely enough that the file's own compilers treated it as a probable result of the original operation.
The most thoroughly documented lethal outcome tied to this tactic involves Fred Bennett, a Bay Area Black Panther who had headed the Soledad Defense Committee. According to the later account of Thomas E. Mosher, an FBI informant who had infiltrated the Bay Area Radical Union and worked his way into contact with the Panthers' national office, Bennett was successfully "bad-jacketed" as a police informer in mid-1969 — there is no documented evidence that Bennett was in fact an informant. The accusation's truth was never the operative variable. Only its acceptance by the organization was.
Bennett was subsequently killed. Mosher's own account, corroborated by a contemporaneous journalist's reporting that drew on a source independently described as an informer within the same radical-militant circles, describes returning to the burn site of the killing and recovering identifiable remains — keys, personal effects, a charred uniform button, and bone fragments sufficient for positive identification. Mosher was subsequently flown to Washington to testify in closed session before the staff of the Senate Subcommittee on Internal Security — meaning the federal government's own legislative branch took direct, sworn testimony on this specific case.
The same tactic was later used against Jimmie Carr, the Panther organizer connected to Bennett's case, who was bad-jacketed in turn — accused of being a police agent and of skimming organizational funds — and was assassinated in his own front yard in April 1972. The pattern repeated against the same small circle of people, using the same named mechanism, with a second death.
The mechanism required no truth in the underlying accusation. Its function was achieved the moment the organization began to doubt one of its own.
The Program · Series AnalysisThe single most important finding for this post's place in the series is not that the tactic existed or that it produced violence. Disruption tactics producing unintended harm could, in isolation, be read as reckless rather than as a documented, knowing choice. What moves this specimen from recklessness to something more deliberate is the timing the historical record establishes: accounts of the tactic from researchers who reviewed the Bureau's own released files state plainly that it became known to FBI agents that the likely outcome of snitch-jacketing in the Black Panther context would be extreme physical violence directed at the jacketed individual — and that, having learned this, the Bureau's own efforts were continued, and in some documented instances accelerated, rather than curtailed.
The Senate's own 1976 investigation, conducted half a decade after Bennett's death and the program's formal 1971 cancellation, reached the same conclusion from the opposite direction: its report confirmed the snitch jacket technique was used in all COINTELPRO operations, and stated explicitly that the tactic carried an added dimension of danger when used in groups already known to have killed people believed to be informers — which the Panthers, given the period's internal violence, were known to be. The Senate was not describing a risk no one could have anticipated. It was describing a risk the Bureau's own field experience had already demonstrated before the Senate ever investigated it.
One of three conditions fires clearly. The other two are assessed honestly as not the right fit for this specimen, rather than stretched to reach a higher count.
Temporal Capital — fires, and unusually precisely for this series. The gap here is not between an event and its later correction, but between when the Bureau's own field experience demonstrated the tactic's lethal foreseeability and when the Bureau's documented response was to continue and, in places, accelerate the same tactic. That is a dateable interval of continued, knowing use after risk was established — not merely a delay before later accountability, which is the Temporal Capital pattern this series has tracked in other posts. The category fits, but the mechanism is distinct: friction here is the gap between knowledge and a change in conduct, not between an act and a public reckoning with it.
Interpretive Capital — does not clearly apply to this specimen as a separate finding. The tactic's name, "snitch jacket," is Bureau-internal slang rather than an official classification subject to reinterpretation over time, the way "domestic dependent nation" or "riot" functioned in earlier Silence Architecture specimens. There is no documented relabeling of the tactic itself across this post's timeline worth treating as a distinct interpretive-drift finding.
Enforcement Asymmetry — does not clearly apply. This post documents a tactic's design and use, not differential application of a stated rule across comparable cases. That comparison remains the explicit subject of Posts V and VI.
Who absorbed the redistributed friction: the individuals accused — true or not — bore a risk of social isolation and, in the documented case of Fred Bennett and Jimmie Carr, death. The Bureau and its field agents bore no comparable consequence for continuing a tactic their own internal experience had already flagged as carrying that risk.
The May 11, 1970 headquarters memo to the San Francisco field office, and its instruction to plant fabricated documents identifying Panthers as informants, is drawn from a detailed long-form historical account published by Reader Supported News that cites the memo directly; this is treated as Tier 2 given the secondary nature of the publication, while the underlying memo it describes is understood to be part of the Bureau's own released COINTELPRO file. The July 10, 1968 New York field office proposal regarding Stokely Carmichael, quoted directly, and the September 1970 Black Panther Party leadership statement, are drawn from a documented academic account hosted on Tumblr that cites Churchill and Vander Wall's primary-document compilation The COINTELPRO Papers, treated here as Tier 2 secondary sourcing of a Tier 1 underlying document set. The Fred Bennett case — Thomas Mosher's infiltration, the bad-jacketing, the killing, the forensic recovery of remains, and Mosher's closed-session Senate testimony — is corroborated across four independently authored accounts (Reader Supported News, Full Praxis Now citing Churchill and Vander Wall, the Marxist.com Alphabet Boys account, and the Confluence Premiers Peuples archival project), each describing the same sequence of events consistently; this convergence across independent secondary sources describing the same primary record is treated as a stronger evidentiary basis than any single account alone, though the underlying Senate testimony itself has not been directly reviewed for this post. The Senate's 1976 finding that the snitch jacket technique was used in all COINTELPRO operations, and its specific note on the added danger in groups with a history of killing suspected informers, is drawn from a published account of the Senate's COINTELPRO investigation report.
The series methodological note carries forward: this post deliberately reports only one Friction Capital condition as a clean fit, rather than forcing a count to match the higher totals seen in Posts II or IV of The Silence Architecture. A tactic specimen does not automatically reproduce every mechanism a structural or institutional specimen does, and the discipline established across this archive requires saying so plainly when a condition's fit is poor, rather than reframing the evidence to manufacture a fit.



