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Gary Thomas Rowe Jr.
Gary Thomas Rowe Jr.
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Gary Thomas Rowe Jr. (August 13, 1933 – May 25, 1998), known in Witness Protection as Thomas Neil Moore, was a paid informant and agent provocateur for the FBI. As an informant, he infiltrated the Ku Klux Klan, as part of the FBI's COINTELPRO project, to monitor and disrupt the Klan's activities. Rowe participated in violent Klan activity against African Americans and civil rights groups, but ultimately became a Klansman himself, beating freedom riders, shooting a civil rights worker, and teaching them to build bombs, including the one used in the murder of 4 children during the bombing of the 16th Street Baptist Church, all crimes for which he was never charged.[1][2]

Key Information

From 1965 until his death, Rowe was a figure of recurring controversy after he testified against fellow Klansmen who were accused of killing Viola Gregg Liuzzo, a civil rights volunteer. He was accused of being an accessory to the murder. He was involved in the attack on the Freedom Riders and also accused of involvement in the 16th Street Baptist Church bombing. Given immunity, he was never convicted of any wrongdoing. Rowe admitted to many of these violent acts in his 1976 autobiography, My Undercover Years with the Ku Klux Klan,[3] and in confession and testimony given to the United States Senate.

Background

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Gary Thomas Rowe Jr. was born on August 13, 1933, in Savannah, Georgia, to Gary Thomas Rowe and Alma Ann Sellars.[4] He dropped out of high school to join the Georgia National Guard and United States Marine Corps Reserves. After his discharge, Rowe attempted to join the county sheriff's department but his application was rejected because he did not have a high school diploma.[1] He earned a living as a nightclub bouncer, and he worked briefly with the Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco and Firearms, helping them bust up illegal alcohol stills in return for cheap firearms.[1]

Rowe was married four times, fathered three children and adopted two children.[4]

Recruitment by the FBI and the Ku Klux Klan

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Rowe was recruited by FBI Special Agent Barrett G. Kemp in April 1960. The FBI discovered that the Klan was attempting to recruit Rowe, a man known for his work with the ATF and who was seeking a career in law enforcement. The FBI decided that what made him a good candidate for the Klan also made him a good candidate to be an informant against the Klan for the FBI.[citation needed]

In 1975, when in front of the Senate committee, Rowe told them that the FBI knew and disregarded his participation in the violent attacks on African Americans and that he was also tasked with causing friction within the KKK by having sexual relations with some of the Klansmen's wives.[5]

Rowe successfully infiltrated Eastview Klavern 13, the most violent chapter of the Ku Klux Klan in American history, in May 1960.[1] He began receiving payments from the FBI for "services rendered," and FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover personally approved these payments.[3]

The payments that Rowe received from the FBI ranged from $80 to $250 with the addition of expenses.[4]

Involvement in the Ku Klux Klan

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Mob attack on the Freedom Riders

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In 1961, Gary Thomas Rowe helped plan and lead a violent mob attack against the Freedom Riders in Anniston, Alabama. He worked together with the Birmingham Police Commissioner, Bull Connor, and Police Sergeant Tom Cook (an avid Ku Klux Klan supporter) to organize violence against the Freedom Riders with local Ku Klux Klan chapters.[6] They assured Rowe that the mob would have 15 minutes to attack the bus before any arrests were made.

Rowe admitted to using a baseball bat during the attack,[7] in which the mob attacked the Greyhound bus carrying the Freedom Riders at a bus station in Anniston, Alabama on May 14, Mothers Day. They slashed the tires and set the bus on fire with the Freedom Riders still inside. The mob held the doors shut, intending to let the peaceful civil rights group burn alive, but a small explosion scared them back from the door. As the Freedom Riders exited the bus, they were badly beaten by the mob and many had to be taken to hospitals which refused to treat them.[8]

Although there were state patrolmen there during the incident and they fired warning shots to call off the mob, they did very little to protect the Freedom Riders from being beaten and burnt alive. Most of the Freedom Riders who were intercepted in Anniston sustained life-threatening injuries either from the beatings by the Ku Klux Klan, or from prolonged exposure to the smoke and fumes from the destroyed bus, and were sent to Anniston Memorial Hospital for immediate attention. When an ambulance arrived, its driver would only take white Freedom Riders to the hospital. The driver was shamed into taking both black and white casualties by the white Riders' refusal to go without their black companions, coupled with the intervention of an undercover policeman, Ell Cowling.[9] When the injured Freedom Riders arrived at the hospital there was no doctor present, only nurses to provide aid to those in need. They were eventually denied medical attention because they had "caused a commotion" by bringing the white mob to the hospital. Even though Gary Thomas Rowe had informed the FBI three weeks earlier that the attack on Freedom Riders would happen, they decided not to intervene but only to ask what had happened to Genevieve Hughes, who was one of the injured Freedom Riders. She stated, "When I woke up the nurse asked me if I could talk with the FBI. The FBI man did not care about us, but only the bombing".[10]

The Freedom Riders were attacked by the KKK again in Birmingham. Once again, Gary Thomas Rowe played a central role in the mobbing and with the help of Commissioner Bull Connor. The KKK used iron pipes, baseball bats and bicycle chains to beat the Freedom Riders as they left the bus.[8]

Years later, Rowe recalled how a call from police headquarters to Rowe had tipped them off to when and where to attack the Freedom Riders in Birmingham,[9] saying:

We made an astounding sight ... men running and walking down the streets of Birmingham on Sunday afternoon carrying chains, sticks, and clubs. Everything was deserted; no police officers were to be seen except one on a street corner. He stepped off and let us go by, and we barged into the bus station and took it over like an army of occupation. There were Klansmen in the waiting room, in the rest rooms, in the parking area.

A photograph of Rowe and several others, including Eastview Klavern leader Hubert Page, beating George Webb on May 14, 1961, was taken by Tommy Langston of the Birmingham Post-Herald, who was also caught and beaten. Although the camera was smashed, the film survived and the photo became one of only a few pieces of physical evidence of Rowe's involvement.

In 1975 Rowe testified before the United States Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, chaired by Idaho Senator Frank Church. He wore a cotton hood over his head to conceal his features. He told the committee that he and his fellow Klansmen "were promised 15 minutes with absolutely no intervention from any police officer whatsoever" during the May 1961 Freedom Riders' arrival.[11] Rowe claims that he informed the FBI of this conversation, but no intervention was made by the authorities.

16th Street Baptist Church Bombing

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In 1963, Gary Thomas Rowe may have helped perpetrate the 16th Street Baptist Church bombing that killed four young girls. One of the Klansmen eventually convicted of the crime, Robert Edward Chambliss, said that it was Rowe who had bombed the church.[12] Investigative records show that Rowe, who was no stranger to dynamite, had twice failed polygraph tests when questioned as to his possible involvement in the bombing.[13] Because of this, the FBI and the Alabama Attorney General serving as prosecutor Bill Baxley did not use Rowe as a witness in Chambliss's trial.

The FBI was also said to believe that Rowe was involved in the bombing of Martin Luther King Jr.'s motel room at the Gaston Motel on May 11, 1963, as well as the bombing of the house and parsonage of Martin Luther King Jr.'s brother. Through one of his African American informants, Rowe claimed that black Muslims were responsible for placing the bombs there. Rowe was eventually arrested with several other Klansmen in June 1963 after Alabama police received a tip-off that they were in possession of a truck full of assorted firearms and explosives intended for use at the University of Alabama to prevent the admission of James Hood and Vivian Malone. They were later released from jail and given back their weapons.[4]

The murder of Viola Liuzzo

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In 1965, Rowe was involved in the murder of civil rights activist Viola Liuzzo as she was returning from the Selma to Montgomery marches with other activists. Rowe was in the car with three other Klansmen as they chased Viola's car after they saw a black man in the passenger seat. They pulled up next to her car and shot her dead.

The FBI attempted to downplay the situation and discredit Liuzzo by spreading rumors that she was a member of the Communist Party, that she was a heroin addict and had abandoned her children to have sexual relationships with African Americans involved in the Civil Rights Movement.[14][15] This came at a time when the Bureau was also trying to smear Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s Southern Christian Leadership Conference and the Communist Party.

In 1965, Rowe testified as a trial witness against the three other Klansmen involved in Liuzzo's murder: Collie Leroy Wilkins Jr., William Orville Eaton, and Eugene Thomas. Because he had provided information leading to their conviction, Federal authorities placed Rowe in the Witness Protection Program under the name of Thomas Neil Moore. Following his testimony, Rowe was rewarded with a job as a deputy U.S. Marshal.[12]

Rowe was relocated to his home town of Savannah, Georgia. Later that year, Alabama authorities attempted to have him extradited back to Alabama to charge him with the murder of Liuzzo.[12] However, they were unsuccessful. Rowe claimed that the FBI had promised him complete immunity in return for the information he provided against the other Klansmen.[12]

Later years and death

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After Rowe testified against fellow Klansmen in the Liuzzo case in 1965, Rowe was relocated to Savannah, Georgia, his home town, where he worked for the U.S. Marshals and for a private security company. For the rest of his life, Rowe would be a highly controversial figure. However, he was never convicted of any wrongdoing.

Rowe surfaced in 1975 before a congressional committee. Wearing a bizarre cotton hood that resembled the Klan headpiece to conceal his new identity, Rowe told the Senate committee that the FBI had known and approved of his violence against blacks. He testified that the FBI did nothing to stop the violence, even when he gave them advance warning.[12]

In 1978, Rowe confessed to killing an unknown black man in a riot with a firearm, a previously undisclosed crime. By making this confession, one of the investigation memos suggests that Rowe may have been bargaining for blanket immunity for whatever occurred while he was an informant.[13]

In 1979 his autobiography was adapted into the NBC TV movie Undercover with the KKK starring Don Meredith as Rowe.

At the age of 64, Gary Thomas Rowe Jr. died of a heart attack on May 25, 1998, in Savannah, Georgia. He was buried under the name Thomas Neil Moore, the name given to him by the Witness Protection Program. According to Eugene Brooks, who had been Rowe's lawyer, Rowe had become bankrupt and had long been divorced from his fourth wife.[7]

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Gary Thomas Rowe Jr. (August 13, 1933 – May 25, 1998) was a paid informant for the who infiltrated the in , from 1960 to 1965, rising to a leadership position within the organization while reporting on its plans and activities to federal authorities. Recruited after attempting to impersonate an FBI agent, Rowe received monthly payments ranging from $80 to $250 plus expenses, with his operations personally approved by FBI Director , as part of efforts to monitor and disrupt Klan violence amid the . To maintain his cover, he participated in assaults and other violent acts, including leading a Klan attack on at the Birmingham bus station on May 14, 1961, and being present during the March 25, 1965, murder of civil rights activist near . Rowe's intelligence contributed to federal convictions, most notably in the Liuzzo case, where his testimony in 1965 helped secure guilty verdicts against three Klansmen on civil rights violation charges, resulting in 10-year prison sentences each, though a state jury acquitted them of murder. He received immunity from prosecution for his actions in exchange for cooperation, but suspicions persisted regarding his role in other incidents, such as possible involvement in the May 11, 1963, bombing of a motel room occupied by Martin Luther King Jr. and the September 15, 1963, Sixteenth Street Baptist Church bombing that killed four girls, though investigations found no direct evidence linking him. Despite FBI directives to avoid violence, Rowe's aggressive tactics drew accusations of provocation, blurring the line between informant and participant in Klan extremism. In later years, Rowe lived under an alias in the program following the end of his FBI tenure; Alabama authorities indicted him for Liuzzo's murder in 1978, but the charges were dismissed due to his prior federal immunity. He died of a heart attack in , where he had returned after a peripatetic life marked by multiple marriages and limited formal . His dual role remains a point of contention, exemplifying the ethical ambiguities of undercover operations against during a period of intense racial conflict.

Early Life and Background

Personal Background and Pre-Informant Activities

Gary Thomas Rowe Jr. was born on August 13, 1933, in . He grew up in the Jim Crow-era South, where was rigidly enforced under state laws and customs, though specific details of his family's remain undocumented in primary records. Rowe dropped out of school during his adolescence, limiting his formal education. In his early adulthood prior to , Rowe accumulated a civilian that included arrests for carrying a concealed and impersonating a , reflecting associations with local petty crime circles in Georgia. Physically, he was described as a redheaded man with blue eyes, standing about six feet tall and weighing approximately 220 pounds in a stocky build—traits consistent with his regional upbringing. By the late , Rowe had relocated from Savannah to , engaging in transient work and maintaining a lifestyle marked by these prior legal entanglements.

Recruitment and Infiltration

FBI Recruitment and Informant Agreement

In spring 1960, the (FBI) recruited Gary Thomas Rowe Jr. as a paid to monitor activities in , where the group was linked to intensifying violence against civil rights advocates. Barrett Kemp initiated contact after Rowe impersonated a during a bar altercation, identifying his preexisting ties to local Klansmen and his professed interest in roles as assets for infiltration. With clearance from Birmingham in Charge Clarence Kelley, Rowe was selected for his willingness to penetrate violent Klan units, such as the Eastview 13 klavern, to supply actionable intelligence on membership, plans, and operations. Rowe's agreement formalized a voluntary, confidential without granting him official FBI employment or immunity at the outset. He was directed to collect and relay details on Klan violence—planned or executed—while refraining from direct involvement, receiving explicit cautions from Kemp on April 10, 1960, to "stay out of it" during confrontations. Instructions emphasized building rapport within Klan circles post-meetings for deeper insights, with handler oversight ensuring reports aligned with FBI priorities; flexibility emerged later to permit minimal, non-lethal participation (e.g., fistfights) solely for cover preservation. Kemp served as Rowe's initial handler through June 1961, conducting regular debriefings to process . Compensation structured Rowe as a salaried asset rather than episodic , beginning with modest outlays and scaling with proven value. An early disbursement on February 18, 1961, covered $155 for information and $57.66 in expenses, reflecting initial low-volume reporting. Stipends escalated over time, reaching $250 monthly for services and $60 for reimbursements by April 17, 1964, contributing to cumulative payments surpassing $22,000 from 1960 to 1965. This remuneration supported Rowe's operational needs while incentivizing sustained infiltration amid personal risks.

Joining the Ku Klux Klan

Following his FBI recruitment, Gary Thomas Rowe Jr. joined the Eastview Klavern 13 of the Alabama Knights of the in , in the winter of 1960. This unit, comprising around 100-150 members at its peak, was among the most aggressive Klan chapters in the region, linked by federal investigators to multiple bombings and assaults amid rising civil rights tensions. Rowe gained initial acceptance by portraying himself as a committed segregationist, leveraging his physical build—standing six feet tall and weighing approximately 220 pounds—and vocal opposition to federal integration efforts, which resonated with klavern recruiters like Loyal McWhorter. He underwent the standard initiation rite, swearing oaths of secrecy and loyalty during a cross-burning , and began attending weekly meetings at sites such as the Woodrow Wilson Avenue home of klavern leader Robert Shelton. To build trust without immediate exposure, Rowe performed low-level duties, including guarding meetings and distributing Klan literature, while avoiding overt provocation that might arouse suspicion. Within months, Rowe's apparent dedication propelled him to inner-circle status, culminating in his appointment as the klavern's security chief by early 1961, a role entailing oversight of member protection and event enforcement. This position afforded proximity to planning discussions, reflecting the klavern's lax vetting amid its emphasis on ideological fervor over rigorous background checks. His ascent was facilitated by the group's internal dynamics, where proven reliability in routine operations outweighed formal hierarchies.

Informant Role and Intelligence Operations

Surveillance of Klan Activities

Gary Thomas Rowe Jr. conducted routine surveillance of operations in , from 1961 to 1965, focusing on Eastview Klavern 13, where he attended meetings and documented attendance, membership rosters, and internal discussions. On January 3, 1961, he submitted a detailed membership list to his FBI handlers, followed by reports on financial activities on January 18, 1961. These weekly updates, derived from passive observation at gatherings, allowed the FBI to map Klan organizational dynamics and monitor recruitment without reliance on Rowe's personal initiatives. He also covered events such as opposition to integration in Bessemer in July 1964 and a Warrior rally on , 1964, providing verifiable data on attendance and rhetoric. Rowe's intelligence extended to Klan plans targeting civil rights figures and events, independent of execution. He reported a July 20, 1962, discussion of murdering Rev. at Birmingham's airport Dobbs House, detailing a proposed staged fight and knife attack; FBI notification prompted extra police presence, preventing the scheme. Similarly, his September 1964 alert on a Flame Club attack—aimed at a civil rights-associated venue—led to its cancellation by October 1, 1964. A June 8, 1963, tip about a Klan convoy to Tuscaloosa resulted in preemptive arrests, as documented in declassified FBI memoranda (BH 157-191-625). These warnings, conveyed via teletypes like the May 12, 1961, alert, highlight intelligence that disrupted potential escalations, though some plans proceeded despite notification. Rowe also captured Klan suspicions of communist infiltration in civil rights groups, relaying discussions that echoed FBI concerns about subversive elements. On July 14, 1960—setting a pattern for later reports—he noted Klan claims tying Senator Kennedy to the and communists, reflecting paranoia over external influences in organizations like the (SNCC). This provided dual-sided insights: Klan views on perceived threats in SNCC and similar groups, which the FBI cross-referenced with its own informant data identifying SNCC as a communist target. Declassified files, including an eight-page April 1, 1965, report on plans for the Selma to Montgomery march, underscore how such monitoring informed broader counter-subversion efforts.

Reporting and FBI Payments

Rowe submitted reports to the FBI through a combination of telephone calls, in-person meetings, and written submissions, with frequency varying from weekly to daily depending on Klan activities. reports were common for urgent updates, often occurring late at night or immediately following events, while in-person debriefings with handlers like Joseph F. Kemp or SA Shanahan typically lasted several hours in vehicles or neutral locations. Written reports were mailed weekly under the pseudonym "Karl Cross" to a blind , providing detailed accounts corroborated by FBI cross-checks that validated leading to Klan arrests. Compensation began modestly but escalated with the perceived value of Rowe's , particularly during heightened Klan in 1964-1965, reflecting FBI assessments of his access to inner-circle operations. Initial payments in early 1961 included $155 for specific plus $57.66 in expenses, evolving by April 1964 to authorizations of up to $250 monthly for services and $60 for expenses; overall, Rowe received over $22,000 from 1960 to 1965, with a final $10,000 lump sum in January 1966 for and witness services. At peak periods, monthly stipends reached around $300, structured not as a fixed but contingent on report quality and risks incurred, distinguishing Rowe from informants paid solely per tip. FBI handlers evaluated Rowe as highly reliable, with internal assessments praising his detailed reports on Klan structure and plans as "most valuable" for enabling preventive actions, despite acknowledged risks of exposure or over-involvement. Agents like SA Robert M. Schuler and supervisors noted consistent corroboration of his information through independent sources, justifying continued payments amid operational hazards; however, some reports showed minor inconsistencies, and directives occasionally urged withdrawal from high-risk roles to mitigate liabilities, though his overall utility prevailed in evaluations.

Involvement in Key Incidents

Attack on Freedom Riders (1961)

On May 14, 1961——a mob organized by the attacked arriving at the Birmingham Trailways and bus stations, beating passengers and bystanders with baseball bats, chains, pipes, and fists in a coordinated assault lasting approximately 15 minutes without police interference. Gary Thomas Rowe Jr., an FBI informant who had infiltrated the Eastview Klavern #13 of the Klan, provided the bureau with advance notice of the planned violence around three weeks prior, detailing the Klan's coordination with local authorities to allow unimpeded access to the riders. Rowe actively participated in the violence to preserve his undercover status, helping organize the Klan response, leading a group of attackers, and personally joining beatings, including pummeling black bystander George Webb with fists and a in the Trailways baggage room until halted by a . The FBI, informed through Rowe's reports, opted against intervention or alerting local , citing jurisdictional limits over interstate commerce protections despite federal authority, thereby prioritizing his role over immediate prevention of the assault. Several sustained severe injuries, including broken bones and concussions, necessitating hospitalization, while the mob dispersed without hindrance as police dispatchers had cleared the area in advance. No arrests occurred for the participants, including Rowe, in the immediate aftermath, enabling the attackers to evade accountability at the scene.

16th Street Baptist Church Bombing (1963)

The occurred on September 15, 1963, when members of the detonated 19 sticks of dynamite adjacent to the church's basement during Sunday services, killing four African American girls—Addie Mae Collins (14), Denise McNair (11), Carole Robertson (14), and Cynthia Wesley (14)—and injuring over 20 others. Gary Thomas Rowe Jr., as a paid FBI embedded in the Eastview Klavern No. 13 of the , maintained tangential connections to the perpetrators through this chapter, which included violent actors such as , convicted in 1977 of first-degree murder for building and helping place the bomb. Alabama investigators in 1978 alleged Rowe either accompanied Chambliss to plant the device or possessed advance knowledge of the plot but withheld it from the FBI, based on klavern associations and inconsistencies in Rowe's accounts. Rowe consistently denied any role in constructing, transporting, or detonating the bomb, attributing such accusations to efforts by Birmingham police and Klan rivals to discredit him; however, he failed two examinations on these denials, registering as "deceptive." FBI records document Rowe telephoning his handler, John C. O'Connor, shortly before the 10:22 a.m. explosion to ask whether a had gone off "around daylight," suggesting possible foreknowledge of planned violence against Birmingham targets that morning, though not a specific alert about the church. Rowe later disavowed making the call, claiming no recollection, while the bureau's files confirmed the contact amid broader reports of escalating Klan threats in the city; no preventive measures followed from this or related intelligence, allowing the attack to proceed.

Murder of Viola Liuzzo (1965)

Following the successful conclusion of the Selma to Montgomery voting rights marches on March 25, 1965, members from Birmingham's Eastview Klavern 13 mobilized to patrol and intimidate civil rights participants returning from Montgomery. Gary Thomas Rowe Jr., embedded as an FBI to monitor such Klan activities, rode as a passenger in a red-and-white driven by fellow Klansmen Collie Leroy Wilkins Jr., William Oscar Eaton, and Eugene Thomas. That night, near a in Selma, the Klansmen spotted —a 39-year-old white civil rights volunteer from —driving a green 1963 with 19-year-old black activist Leroy Moton as her passenger, whom she had picked up as a hitchhiker to shuttle back to Selma. Interpreting the interracial occupancy as a direct affront to , the group pursued Liuzzo's vehicle in a high-speed chase along U.S. Highway 80 in Lowndes County, approximately 20 miles west of Selma. During the pursuit, multiple shots were fired from the into Liuzzo's car; Wilkins, seated in the rear with , delivered the fatal .38-caliber bullet that struck Liuzzo in the head, killing her instantly and causing her vehicle to crash into a . Moton, wounded but surviving by smearing himself with Liuzzo's blood and feigning death, was left unharmed by the Klansmen. claimed he urged the others to abandon the chase and return home, attempted to grab Wilkins's gun to prevent firing, and refrained from shooting himself to avoid exposing his role. The Klansmen immediately fled eastward toward Birmingham after the shooting. Rowe contacted his FBI handlers shortly thereafter, prompting his extraction for protection; all four were arrested within 24 hours, though state murder charges against Rowe were dismissed after nine days upon disclosure of his status.

Testimony in Liuzzo Murder Trial

In December 1965, Gary Thomas Rowe Jr. served as the principal eyewitness for the prosecution in the federal trial in , against three members charged in the murder of . Rowe detailed how, on March 25, 1965, he accompanied Collie Leroy Wilkins Jr., William Oscar Eaton, and Eugene Thomas in a pursuit of Liuzzo's vehicle along U.S. Highway 80 near Selma, after spotting her transporting black activist Leroy Moton. He recounted Wilkins firing multiple shots from a .38-caliber into Liuzzo's car, striking her in the head, while Eaton discharged a 12-gauge and Thomas urged the attack, though Rowe claimed he only extended his arm in pretense to avoid suspicion among the group. Defense counsel rigorously cross-examined Rowe, portraying him as an unreliable accomplice complicit in Klan violence, including prior assaults, and questioning the lack of forensic corroboration such as fingerprints on the weapons or casings. The Klansmen's attorneys argued that Rowe's status incentivized fabrication and that federal evidence tying bullets to Wilkins's gun was insufficient to support his narrative over their denials of intent to kill. Despite these challenges, Rowe's account, bolstered by his immediate post-incident report to FBI handlers and ballistic links, proved pivotal. The jury convicted Wilkins, Eaton, and Thomas on December 3, 1965, of conspiring to deprive Liuzzo of her civil rights under 18 U.S.C. § 241, imposing the maximum 10-year sentences on each. These outcomes represented pioneering applications of Reconstruction-era federal statutes to secure Klan convictions for a civil rights-related killing, bypassing state-level failures where all-white juries had deadlocked or acquitted in earlier murder trials. The appeals court upheld the verdicts, affirming Rowe's testimony as credible despite credibility disputes.

Contributions to Other Klan Convictions

Rowe's infiltration of the Ku Klux Klan's Eastview Klavern #13 in Birmingham, Alabama—one of the most violent units in the South—provided the FBI with granular details on its leadership hierarchy, membership rolls, and tactical planning for assaults and intimidations against civil rights activists during the early 1960s. This intelligence enabled federal agents to map and target the klavern's operations, resulting in arrests of key figures and erosion of its cohesion through membership expulsions and internal distrust. Beyond structural exposures, Rowe's reports contributed to federal prosecutions of multiple Klansmen under civil rights statutes for assaults and related offenses, as his tips furnished evidence of conspiracies and direct participation in violence. FBI evaluations from the era highlighted his role in yielding actionable data that supported these cases, with payments totaling over $12,000 from 1960 to 1965 reflecting the volume and utility of his submissions. Declassified assessments and Rowe's own congressional underscored how his preemptive disclosures thwarted several planned attacks, including ambushes on activists, by alerting authorities to imminent threats and Klan patterns, thereby averting casualties without public disclosure of specifics at the time.

Controversies and Assessments

Accusations of Provocation and Participation in Violence

A 1975 Justice Department investigation into FBI handling of informants concluded that agents had knowledge of Rowe's participation in violent acts, including beatings of civil rights activists, but failed to report or curb such behavior to protect his cover, with some evidence suggesting in downplaying his role. The documented instances where Rowe engaged in physical assaults during Klan actions, such as the 1961 attack on in , exceeding his mandate as a passive observer. Rowe faced specific accusations of direct involvement in shootings, including a claim that he shot and killed an unidentified Black man during a 1963 in , as asserted in his own statements to investigators. Separate inquiries linked him to the 1964 shooting of an off-duty Birmingham policeman, though no charges resulted, highlighting patterns of unreported gunfire incidents tied to his Klan activities. In the early 1980s, the family of filed a $2 million lawsuit against the (Liuzzo v. United States, E.D. Mich. 1981-1983), alleging that Rowe, as an FBI present in the vehicle during her 1965 murder, either fired the fatal shot or provoked the killing through active participation rather than prevention, with the Bureau complicit in enabling his provocations. Court documents in the case revealed FBI payments to Rowe totaling over $48,000 despite awareness of his violent tendencies, and claims that he failed to intervene per policy, though the suit was ultimately dismissed on grounds in 1983.

FBI Oversight and Alleged Cover-Ups

A U.S. Department of Justice report issued in 1979 concluded that FBI handlers systematically minimized or omitted Rowe's participation in violent Klan activities from official records to protect his status, including coaching him to deny involvement in the May 14, 1961, Trailways bus station beating of despite photographic evidence placing him at the scene. Agents such as Joseph F. Kemp and Lawrence V. Blake exercised broad discretion in reporting, documenting only what they deemed "serious" violence while allowing Rowe to engage in lesser assaults to maintain credibility within Klan circles like the Eastview 13 klavern. This approach extended to events like the summer 1963 shooting of an unidentified Black man, where Rowe's role was not escalated internally or to local authorities, reflecting institutional tolerance for complicity when intelligence yields were prioritized. Delayed internal reporting further underscored oversight deficiencies, as Rowe's debriefings on Klan shrapnel discussions from September 12, 1963, were withheld until May 7, 1964, and details of informant Robert Thomas "Huey" Lipscomb's bomb-making instructions surfaced only three days before the September 15, 1964, , often in vague terms that obscured actionable leads. The absence of mandatory immediate reporting protocols enabled such lags, with handlers like Blake advising Rowe to embed deeper with violent elements—such as retaining blasting caps issued in February 1964—without contemporaneous risk assessments or referrals for prosecution. These practices sustained Rowe's cover but compromised timely disruption of Klan operations, as evidenced by unheeded warnings of plots like the July 1962 attempt on Rev. . FBI protection of Rowe from state prosecution exemplified prioritization of long-term over legal accountability, with no referrals despite documented violence in incidents like the 1963 of motel owner A.G. Gaston's home; instead, agents viewed him as indispensable amid local law enforcement's Klan sympathies. Federal immunity granted to Rowe on April 14, 1965, and his swift bond release after the March 26, 1965, arrest tied to Viola Liuzzo's killing underscored this shield, as supervisors weighed his utility in penetrating action squads against exposure risks but opted to retain him. Declassified FBI memoranda reveal awareness of these liabilities, yet decisions favored continuity, citing headquarters pressure for Klan penetrations in a context of jurisdictional limits. Within the FBI's -White Hate initiative, launched September 2, 1964, to neutralize Klan threats, oversight of Rowe involved calculated trade-offs between anti-supremacist operations and monitoring civil rights groups, acknowledging informant perils like death or compromise but implementing minimal safeguards to avoid alerting targets. The program directive of April 17, 1964, preceding formal , urged aggressive infiltration, leading handlers to instruct Rowe to "stay with" violent Klansmen without revoking his access to explosives or squads, as on bombings outweighed isolated in bureau calculus. This risk prioritization, absent clear guidelines, persisted despite internal recognition of potential criminal exposure for both Rowe and agents.

Defenses of Informant Necessity and Effectiveness

FBI officials and civil rights era analysts have defended the deployment of informants like Rowe by emphasizing the practical imperatives of infiltrating tightly knit, violence-prone groups such as the , where superficial intelligence gathering proved insufficient amid widespread local reluctance to pursue prosecutions. In the South, state and municipal authorities often sympathized with or feared Klan reprisals, necessitating federal embeds capable of earning internal trust through demonstrated loyalty, including participation in low-level activities to avoid suspicion. This approach aligned with established precedents, where informants in or extremist networks have historically engaged in sanctioned minor infractions to sustain cover, yielding broader preventive and prosecutorial gains. Rowe's effectiveness is evidenced by his intelligence facilitating key convictions, including the 1966 federal trial of three Klansmen—Collie Leroy Wilkins Jr., William Oscar Eaton, and Eugene Thomas—for the March 25, 1965, murder of , prosecuted under the Enforcement Act of 1871 (). His testimony detailed Klan logistics and motives, contributing to guilty verdicts that marked one of the era's early successful applications of Reconstruction-era statutes against white supremacist violence, countering arguments of futility. Overall, FBI networks, including Rowe's Eastview Klavern 13 penetration from 1960 to 1965, supported dozens of Klan-related indictments and disruptions, as federal oversight bypassed state-level impasses. Such defenses underscore causal trade-offs: absent embeds willing to navigate ambiguities for credibility, Klan —fueled by operational and jurisdictional friction—would have prolonged unchecked , as passive surveillance yielded negligible results prior to intensified infiltration post-1964. Rowe's handlers vetted his reports for reliability, prioritizing outcomes like averted escalations in Birmingham's volatile climate, where his positioning within Klan hierarchies enabled preemptive federal interventions. Critics' focus on isolated provocations overlooks these validated contributions, which aligned with FBI directives to neutralize threats through embedded rather than overt confrontation.

Later Life and Legacy

Witness Protection and Post-Informant Career

Following his key testimony in the December 1965 federal trial for the murder of , the FBI placed Rowe in the federal program, assigning him the alias Thomas Neil Moore to shield him from retaliation by members who had issued death threats against him for cooperating with prosecutors. The program facilitated his relocation from to , where he established a new life under close federal oversight to mitigate ongoing risks from former Klan associates. In Savannah, Rowe pursued a series of low-profile occupations typical of participants seeking to avoid detection, including manual labor and private security roles, while the FBI's financial support—initially including relocation assistance and stipends—tapered off after the immediate post-trial period, leaving him to sustain himself through ordinary employment. His family life, including raising three sons, remained deliberately obscured from public view to preserve his anonymity, with limited contact maintained only with select relatives like a sister. Rowe resided in Georgia until his death from a heart attack on May 25, 1998, at age 64, having lived "hiding in the open" without further high-profile involvement in or public affairs.

Publications and Public Statements

In 1976, Gary Thomas Rowe Jr. published the memoir My Undercover Years with the through , in which he portrayed his FBI role as essential for disrupting Klan activities and claimed to have prevented numerous violent acts through timely intelligence reports, while denying personal provocation of violence beyond maintaining his cover. The book detailed his infiltration experiences from 1960 to 1965, including admissions of participation in some assaults to preserve credibility among Klansmen, but asserted that FBI handlers directed or approved such involvement to gather actionable information on bombings and murders. Rowe testified before the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence (Church Committee) on December 2, 1975, wearing a hood for , where he defended the necessity of aggressive tactics against the Klan, stating that embedding deeply within the group yielded critical leads on planned attacks that could not otherwise obtain. In response to questions about ethical boundaries, he emphasized the overriding value of the intelligence produced, which he said contributed to over a dozen Klan convictions, over concerns about informants engaging in minor violence. Amid media scrutiny reviving allegations of his direct role in Klan violence, Rowe issued public statements accusing Birmingham police of shielding Klansmen and obstructing FBI efforts, reiterating that his methods, though controversial, were indispensable for penetrating a secretive terrorist network and prioritizing outcomes. He countered critics by arguing that without informants willing to operate in moral gray areas, the FBI would have failed to avert or prosecute major civil rights-era atrocities, framing his service as a net positive despite the personal toll.

Death and Posthumous Evaluations

Gary Thomas Rowe Jr. died on May 25, 1998, in , at age 64 from a heart attack. In the years following Rowe's death, historical analyses, particularly Gary May's 2005 book The Informant: The FBI, the , and the Murder of , scrutinized his tenure as an FBI , drawing on declassified files to depict him as a figure whose contributions—such as leading to convictions in the 1965 Liuzzo murder—were offset by documented participation in Klan violence, including beatings and the 1963 bombing of the A. G. Gaston Motel in Birmingham. May's examination, based on FBI records and trial transcripts, argues that the bureau's decision to retain Rowe despite knowledge of his provocateur activities exemplified a dysfunctional informant system prioritizing short-term gains over ethical oversight, resulting in unintended escalation of racial tensions. Posthumous evaluations remain divided on Rowe's net impact. Civil rights historians and advocates, citing FBI internal reports released after his death, contend that informants like Rowe blurred lines between infiltration and incitement, potentially prolonging Klan terror by embedding agents who encouraged rather than solely disrupted violence, as evidenced by Rowe's role in the unhindered 15-minute Klan rampage against Freedom Riders in Birmingham on May 14, 1961, coordinated with local police. Conversely, law enforcement perspectives, echoed in defenses of COINTELPRO-era tactics, maintain that Rowe's embeds yielded actionable intelligence curbing broader Klan operations, with over 20 convictions linked to his tips between 1960 and 1965, justifying the moral trade-offs in a context of unchecked domestic terrorism that claimed dozens of lives annually. These debates underscore causal tensions: while Rowe's information facilitated prosecutions, archival evidence suggests FBI tolerance of his excesses may have eroded public trust in federal civil rights enforcement, complicating long-term deterrence of white supremacist networks.

References

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