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The Good Ol' Boys Roundup was an annual whites only event run by agents of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms in southern Tennessee from 1980-1996. A senior manager at the Knoxville U.S. Attorney's Office warned personnel not to attend due to reports of "heavy drinking, strippers, and persons engaging in extramarital affairs".〔(OIG Good O' Boy Roundup Report, D. Management Knowledge. )〕 After allegations emerged that a "Ku Klux Klan attitude" pervaded the event a Senate Judiciary Committee was formed to investigate. ==The event== The founder of the event, ATF agent Raymond Eugene Rightmyer, was "known—or he had been accused—of having racist tendencies."〔(【引用サイトリンク】 title=Good O' Boy Roundup Report )〕 Rightmyer insisted that, although there was racist conduct at the event, he had often tried to halt it. In its first year 1980, it drew 58 attendees; but by 1994 it had grown to 341 attendees.〔 Around 1980, they moved down river below the dam. Ronald Bramblet, a Paramedic in Tennessee discovered the network and tried to blow the whistle on them. Some people from Alabama went and sneaked in and got pictures and other evidence that was sent to California Gov. Pete Wilson who was running for president of the United States. Gov. Wilson dropped out of the race and went to the Department of Justice and demanded an investigation into the allegations. The event grounds consisted of "motor homes, trailers, tents and pickups gathered around a large beer truck".〔 Admission was varyingly charged between $70-90 per person, and law enforcement officers from outside the ATF were allowed to attend if invited by an ATF agent.〔 After the 1995 scandal the Treasury Department banned its agents from attending. In 1995, Jeff Randall of the Gadsden Minutemen militia infiltrated the event, and took clandestine video. The footage resulted in a Washington Times article. The photos and video he took of the event in May of 1990 broke open the scandal detailing alleged racist activities at the annual roundup. A Justice Department investigation and congressional probe resulted from the attention. Mike Kemp of the Gadsden Minutemen claimed the only real action taken as a result of the exposure had been threats and "kill the messenger" efforts to discredit his group.〔 accessdate=March 5, 2012〕 The OIG report acknowledges occurrences of racially hostile conduct, but found it not to be pervasive or sanctioned. A non-law enforcement attendee at one of the first events describes the atmosphere as exceptionally drunken, but peaceable, contained, and not overtly racist; the OIG report indicates that as guests and party crashers began to outnumber the law enforcement attendees, that changed. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Good Ol' Boys Roundup」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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