THE FBI'S BIRMINGHAM
FIELD OFFICE
Past and Into the Future
08/10/05
|
Director Mueller cuts ribbon with Birmingham Mayor Bernard Kincaid
and U.S.
Attorney Alice Martin. |
On 8/4, Director Mueller
helped dedicate a newly constructed FBI office in Birmingham, Alabama.
It's a beauty, by the way, with much needed upgrades in security and
technology, including special areas to handle sensitive intelligence
and support the most modern evidence collection techniques and computer
forensic analysis.
But the real story,
as Director Mueller pointed out, is different than this newest upgrade.
The real story is
that, beginning in the early 1900s, the FBI began staffing Special Agents
in offices around the country—now in 56 locations—in order
to investigate crime and protect U.S. communities. And each place, over
time, came to have its own story to tell—different kinds of crimes,
different kinds of cases, even different kinds of personalities, reflecting
their geographic locations.
In the case of Birmingham,
a Special Agent in Charge named C. W. McPhail had the honor of opening
the first office for business there in 1924. Its agents investigated
violations of federal law, and because there weren't many criminal federal
laws in those early days, the office was as small as its territory was
large, to include Alabama, Georgia, and parts of Tennessee and Mississippi.
Then, less than 40
years into its existence, a bomb went off on Birmingham's 16th Street.
Director Mueller said
about it: "I want to recognize someone who has witnessed firsthand
much of the FBI's growth over the years, as well as many other changes
that have taken place. Glenn Rotenberry will have been with the FBI for
43 years in October. He was employed as a Security Clerk in the Birmingham
office for less than a month when he answered the phone on September
15, 1963, to learn that the 16th Street Baptist Church had been bombed.
Four African-American girls were slain as they attended Sunday school
in a racial killing that shook the Nation." He added, "We did
not call it terrorism then, but terrorism is what it was. And in this
case, like too many others, justice came slowly. In 2002, former Klu
Klux Klan member Bobby Frank Cherry became the third man convicted in
the murder of those four young girls."
What has the
FBI as a whole learned from this Birmingham case? Three things,
according to Director Mueller:
1) That “it
is our mission to protect the civil liberties of all Americans. Because
when just one of us loses just one of our rights, then the freedoms of
all of us are diminished.”
2) That “the motivations of terrorists have not changed. They still hide
in the shadows and have such contempt for human life that they are willing
to kill children to live out their hatred.”
3) That “no matter how long it takes, we do not give up. And we will
not give up until freedom prevails against fear, acceptance prevails against
extremism, and all Americans can live in peace and security."
We encourage you to
read Director Mueller's
complete remarks—and also to visit the Birmingham
Field Office website to learn about what it is doing to protect the
community.