Civil rights photographer, Ernest Withers, outed as FBI informant

Email Print Twitter Facebook MySpace Stumble Digg More Destinations
Juliana D. Norwood  |   OW Staff Writer

Ernest Withers may have played both sides

It was recently discovered that Ernest Withers, a very well-known civil rights photographer, who was at the forefront of many of the pivotal movements in the African American community, including the murder of Emmett Till and the marches with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., was actually playing both sides of the field, because he was also an informant for the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).

The news was made public recently, after a two-year investigation of Withers by The Commercial Appeal (CA), the daily newspaper in Memphis, Tenn. Through their investigation the CA was able to verify that Withers was on the FBI payroll as a confidential informant for at least two years and that during that time he divulged valuable information about Dr. King and other civil rights leaders’ movement strategy.

Because Withers was seen as an ally, he had unbridled access to some of the movement’s most confidential meetings and planning sessions. In the community, he was known as a supporter and ‘the original civil rights photographer.” But according to an FBI report, to them, he was known as ME 338-R, a super-informant who was “most conversant with all key activities in the Negro community,” and they made sure to utilize his privileges to the maximum.

Understandably, many influential members of the African American community were shocked and hurt to hear the news.

“If these allegations are true, I am shocked and extremely disappointed,” said Dorothy Gilliam, a journalist who worked with Withers while covering the integration of Central High School in Little Rock, Ark. “I never had any reason to suspect that he was doing this, when we worked together.”

“In my mind, I guess he did what he felt he had to do. We did what we felt we had to do,” said Harold Middlebrook, one of Dr. King’s top aides, in a phone interview with AOL News. “It is tragic that we were not on the same path and that he permitted himself to be used by others.”

Wither’s family claims that even they were kept in the dark about their father’s allegedly double-dealing past. “We, as a family, none of us have ever heard anything like this,” Withers’ daughter, Rosalind Withers, told WMCTV 5 in Memphis. “It’s very sad that someone would have the audacity to print something of that magnitude without him here to defend himself.”

Although emotions about the revelation are mixed, some prominent figures in the African American community are indifferent to the new finding,s because of a unified belief that the movement was always transparent and there was never any foul-play to report.

“His photographs still opened a lot of eyes,” Middlebrook said. “I really thought then, and still believe now, that Ernest had a serious commitment to the movement. He had seen the death of Emmett Till. He had been an African-American in the South.”

Related Articles

  • Remembering Emmett Till -

    African Americans come from a long line of royal ancestors, warriors, and spiritual people. Our legacy in the United States cannot be told without recognizing the fighters that came before us— the ones who started movements, the ones who kept us alive, and the ones who sacrificed their lives for our freedom.

    Emmett “Bobo” Till, a sacrificial lamb, is one of those heroes, who cannot be erased from the memories of our history.

  • Labor unions and NAACP plan rally in Washington, D.C. -

    Several labor unions and the NAACP are planning a rally in Washington, D.C., October 2, to push for improved job creation efforts and to put an end to the idea that the Tea Party represents the views of America’s working people.

  • Manifest Destiny -

    During the 19th century the “Manifest Destiny” of the United States was one of “God-ordained” expansionism. African slaves, indigenous peoples, Mexican nationals and other “non-Europeans” were deemed aliens and enemy combatants, anathema to the democratizing force of America.

  • Penalty phase begins for killer of high school football star -

    Jurors heard evidence Tuesday in the penalty phase of the trial of a 23-year-old gang member convicted of gunning down a standout Los Angeles High School football player whom he mistook for a rival gang member.

    Prosecutors will be seeking the death penalty for Pedro Espinoza, who killed 17-year-old Jamiel Shaw Jr. on March 2, 2008, while the defense will ask jurors to recommend life in prison without the possibility of parole.

  • Filmmaker Jamaa Fanaka, 69, succumbs -

    Jamaa Fanaka, born Walter Gordon, on Sept. 6, 1942, was an American filmmaker best known for his 1979 film, “Penitentiary,” and one of the leading directors of the L.A. Rebellion film movement. Fanaka died April 1, from complication of diabetes. He was 69.

  • Support/Volunteer Opportunities

    The following numbers can be contacted for drug and alcohol assistance. 

    Alcoholics Anonymous (323) 936-4343 
    Cocaine Anonymous (310) 216-4444 
    Narcotics Anonymous (323) 933-5395 
     
    LA Treatment Facilities          
     
    AV Treatment Facilities