In today’s world of LGBT “rights,” we wonder if any report written by a government agency would use language such as “sex acts deviating from the normal,” when an official definition of “normal” is for all practical purposes nonexistent. We cannot help but notice the striking change in general moral sensibilities that has taken place in our society since 1968 - when the above words were written - and today. A variety of sex acts deviating from the normal were observed. The two Negro prostitutes were paid $50.00 to put on a sex show for the entertainment of the guests. One room had a large table in it which was filled with whiskey. An all-night sex orgy was held with these prostitutes and some of the delegates in attendance. Several Negro and white prostitutes were brought in from the Miami area. One Negro minister in attendance later expressed his disgust with the behind-the-scene drinking, fornication, and homosexuality that went on at the conference. With the funds he had received from the Ford Foundation, King held the first of two workshops in Miami, Florida, in February, 1968, to train Negro ministers in urban leadership. The report’s reference for funding for these workshops was also interesting. This part of the document was replete with accounts of drunken orgies and other behavior unbecoming to an ordained minister being conducted at workshops King organized. The report concluded with a section on King’s personal conduct. After documenting multiple instances of King having accepted the help of men who had been identified as communists, the paper also addressed the SCLC’s finances, before moving on to more sensitive matters. Much of the FBI paper dealt with what it termed the “strong communist influence” on King and the organization he was instrumental in founding, the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC). The 20-page paper, which was classified as “secret,” was reviewed by the FBI/JFK Task Force in 1994, which denied the release of its contents. King’s convicted killer, James Earl Ray, pled guilty to his murder, received a life sentence, and died in prison of natural causes 29 years later. As we noted in a related article, among the files related to the JFK assassination that were recently released was an FBI research paper dated March 12, 1968, with the subject line: “Martin Luther King, Jr.: A Current Analysis.” The paper was written just a month before the controversial civil rights activist was shot and killed on April 4, 1968.
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