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Authors: Norm Stamper

BOOK: Breaking Rank
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The task force talked a lot about the need to keep safety procedures confidential, for fear of compromising them. I think a lot of cops go overboard on this issue, but not in this case. Which is why you won't find an explanation of the actual procedures here.

CHAPTER 19

UNDERCOVER

W
HAT DO YOU PICTURE
when you think of police undercover work? Narcs, right? Long-haired, unshaven dudes in foul-smelling Harley T-shirts who talk the talk of the streets, work informants, sidle up to dealers, score drugs, and pop the sellers. Indeed, most undercover cops
are
narcs. But there's a different breed out there, one that became virtually extinct during the seventies: the police spy who infiltrates political groups, befriends social activists, and reports his findings back to HQ. That's the kind of spy I was in the late sixties, at the height of antiwar protests, campus uprisings, and civil rights demonstrations.

Shame being an effective muzzle, I've never made this story public until now. But now is an important time to tell it. With antiwar, antiglobalization, antigovernment sentiments and demonstrations nearing a fever pitch, pressures are building to put “narcs” back into the political mix.

Having resolved in 1967 to mend my evil ways, and having accepted exclusive personal responsibility for transforming American policing, I expanded my crusade to include the rectification of the way my colleagues saw the
world
—not just their work. They were wrong about Vietnam, gun control, capital punishment. They upheld imperialism, ethnocentrism, fascism, racism, classism, sexism, elitism—and every other flaw I could attach an
ism
to. They were,
I
was, part of an occupational army, the oppressive arm of a repressive establishment. We, the police, were “running dogs” of corporate Amerika, defenders of an insidious military-industrial complex, foot soldiers in the war against minorities, the poor, the disenfranchised.

Reading is a dangerous thing, and I'd been doing a lot of it. When I'd started my studies at Southwestern Community College I didn't know Schopenhauer from Eisenhower, Aesop from Alsop. But now I was reading everything I could get my hands on, not just sociology, psychology, politics, and criminology but literature: Barth, Grass, O'Connor, Bellow, Hesse, Kafka, and the Russians Tolstoy, Dostoevsky, and Yevtushenko. I was making up for lost time. Early on, I'd not been a good student.

My elementary school report cards spoke of my “potential”—and how I was in no immediate danger of realizing it. My reading, writing, and arithmetic skills were all “below standard.” But my biggest problem was behavioral. “Norman continues to be a disruptive influence in class,” wrote Miss Weir, my sixth-grade teacher. She could have saved herself a lot of time if she'd bought a stamp. Every other day, it seemed, she handed me a note to take home to my parents.

Years later, I was a disruptive influence in the workplace. I remember laying my newfound political consciousness, in all its manifest glory, on a dazed rookie as we drank coffee and he feasted on a chocolate doughnut with sprinkles at the Winchell's at Fortieth and Meade. I was halfway through my lecture when he got a routine call. “Well, back to work,” he said. “Thanks for the information.” He dumped his coffee and took off.

“Don't forget what I said,” I yelled after him.

The next morning I got a call at home. I was to meet my C.O., Lieutenant Jay Helmick, at Louie's drive-in in National City. So this is how they do it, I remember thinking. They believe I'm a communist. They're going to fire me. After only two years on the job. At
Louie's.

The new Louie's had just opened at the north end of town. It was indistinguishable from a Denny's. The old one, a hangout during the days of our R&B band, had looked like a 1930s national park lodge—except for the giant neon faces of a cow and a pig, one pink, the other blue, atop its sweeping dormers. It was open 24/7, served breakfast around the clock, and played host to our countless philosophical / political / musical raps.

I walked into Louie's and saw the back of Helmick's shaved head in a corner booth. Seated in the cop's spot, facing the entrance, was Ken O'Brien. I'd met O'Brien when he flitted in and out of the Sex Crimes office during my Pink Beret days in Balboa Park (see
chapter 26
). He was the chief of
Intelligence. One look at him and you knew O'Brien didn't follow orders, he gave them. His passions, known to all, served a view of the world jarringly out of alignment with mine. What was he doing here? What was
I
doing here? It had all the makings of some kind of an IA investigation.

“Sit down, Stamper.” Helmick nodded toward the empty space next to him. I slid in. “Here's the deal,” said O'Brien. “I'm putting you in a deep cover assignment.” His leg was aquiver under the table; he was one of those compulsive leg bouncers who made you think
earthquake!
if you sat next to him at a poker game. “This isn't about busting fags. Or sucking up martinis in Mission Valley.” O'Brien had done his homework. (Three other patrol officers and I had just finished a week of undercover at the Hanalei Hotel, dining high on the hog, guzzling upscale booze, smoking Cohibas in the hot tub, and getting careless with our room keys and the “flash rolls” the department had given us. We were looking to bust a prolific room prowler, but all we'd been able to nab was a sixteen-year-old panty burglar who'd fled security from the Motel Six next door.) “You're going to infiltrate the commies and pinkos at UCSD, and wherever else you find them.” He tried to take me out in a stare-down. Surely he knew my politics, was testing me. I held his stare. “We need to know what they're up to, their every move.”

Did he make a distinction between that fringe of lefties who bombed buildings or derailed trains, and those of us who opposed the war, who thought America could do better by its poor and its minorities? Apparently not. “They're
thugs,
” he said. “Two-bit thugs hiding behind their goddam ‘ideology.' Or, they're daddy's little rich kids, bored and spoiled rotten. Either way, you're going learn what they're up to, whether it's the Panthers or the long-haired pukes out in La Jolla.” He was particularly scornful of “that commie creep, Marcuse,” which he pronounced Marcoosey.

Herbert Marcuse, author of
One-Dimensional Man
and
Eros and Civilization
, among other works, was born in Berlin in 1898. He left Germany soon after Hitler's rise to power and lived briefly in Switzerland before coming to the U.S. He became a citizen in 1940, and worked for a time in the government's Office of Strategic Services, precursor to the CIA. He taught
at Columbia, Harvard, and Brandeis before joining the faculty at the University of California at San Diego in the mid-sixties.

I'd never heard of the guy. I didn't know he was widely regarded as the Father of the New Left, that his writings had influenced generations of Marxists, and that Angela Davis, also at UCSD, was a protégé.

The meeting over, Helmick told me I would report to Patrol/third watch (P3) that night, my last shift before disappearing from the department. The “official” word was that I had, indeed, been fired from SDPD.

Truth is layered, I think. There are the cheap surface truths, an extrinsic layer of declarations we make to others and to ourselves that are accurate—but incomplete, or irrelevant or unimportant. Below these surface truths are other truths, more meaningful but sometimes painful to acknowledge. Below them, buried deep in the unconscious, is the final layer of truth. Real Truth. That's how I see it, anyway.

Real Truth still scares me, sometimes. I like to pretend it doesn't but it does. Especially if it hits me at a bad time, leaving me stuck with more information than I want.

How could I possibly infiltrate the radical left in San Diego? How could I spy on my ideological allies? As I drove home I considered ways to get out of it. O'Brien would be pissed, Helmick embarrassed. But that would be their problem. By the time I pulled into our driveway, though, I'd found enough in the surface truths to justify the assignment. Some of these “idealists” were, as O'Brien had put it, ruthless, single-minded zealots bent on criminal violence as a means of political expression. Some were wingnuts along for the ride, happy to pitch Molotov cocktails for the sheer fun of it. And hadn't Deputy Chief Gore's son, Lieutenant Larry Gore, almost been taken out by a sniper's bullet during our last riot? Terrorism in the name of “the Movement” was morally reprehensible, and stupid.
Someone
needed to sneak in there and disrupt those bastards.

But had the Real Truth revealed itself in '68? Would I have turned in my badge before taking the assignment? I think so.

This is what the Real Truth would have announced to me as I prepared to tell Dottie about the big change coming up in our lives:
O'Brien's like your old man, isn't he? When you were a kid he beat feelings of unworthiness into your flesh. But now? He respects you, has confidence in you. He's entrusting you with a job that's never been done before, a dangerous, sensitive job. You
want
to take the assignment because it represents another nail in the coffin of doubts you've had about your adequacy as a human being.

The next morning I drove out of the POA parking lot in a “cool car,” a ten-year-old Ford station wagon that had been chopped or raked or whatever it's called when you drop the front end a foot and raise the back three. It had been painted a deep metallic green and fitted out with moon caps. Not exactly befitting a campus radical but it was the best of the seized stock on hand.

I'd just been briefed, exhaustively, by O'Brien. Again, an assignment with no gun, no radio. And this time, unlike my work as a “Pink Beret” there would be no badge. There would be no visits to the station. I would not be wired unless absolutely necessary, and O'Brien would see to it that it would never become absolutely necessary. This was
deep
cover, pure intelligence gathering. I'd make no arrests, or do anything that would make me as a cop. For at least a year.

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