FBI declassifies files from assassination of Turkish diplomat
Forty years ago, in the Spring of 1982, Somerville Police
Officers arrived at the intersection of Webster Avenue and Newton Street to a
chaotic scene of residents and journalists crowded around a crashed vehicle.
The bloodied, bullet-ridden car contained the body of Turkish diplomat and
businessman Orhan Gündüz, assassinated in broad daylight during his drive home.
And while the scene was far from an ordinary sight, it was
unlikely that they knew this would be the beginning of a decades-long manhunt
in which no culprit was ever found and few answers would ever be brought to
light. “I’m calling on behalf of the Justice Commandos of the Armenian
Genocide,” an anonymous caller told the Los Angeles Bureau of United Press
International not long after the attack, “We just shot the Turkish consul in
Boston, Massachusetts. This is our style. We will strike again.”
Despite the seemingly overwhelming evidence, including the
murder weapons, several witnesses, a crystal-clear motive, and the discarded
jogging suit worn by the killer as well as their car, the case has remained
unsolved by the FBI for 40 years. However, just this year, MuckRock journalists
Gabriella Gage and Tom Nash have made a breakthrough in their 9-year-long
investigation into the killing, with over 3,8000 never before seen pages of FBI
files finally published as a result of their long-standing, repeated requests
for information.
“I just couldn’t believe there was so little information
about it,” said Gage “I grew up in Union Square, and just the fact that so many
people who live here now don’t know that this event took place, and that it is
rooted in intergenerational trauma for both [Turkish and Armenian] communities,
[led to me] obviously wanting to find out as much as I could about this.”
The story they found within the paper trail showed that the
FBI had made investigating this attack one of their top priorities. Identifying
culprits, hypnotizing witnesses for more information, utilizing a network of
high-risk informants, and starting a multistate gun trace on the murder weapons
were all done by the FBI in a desperate attempt to make sure that Orhan Gündüz
would be the last victim of the Justice Commandos of the Armenian Genocide.
Twenty-one Turkish diplomats had already been killed since
1975, JCAG invoked the Turkish genocide of 1.5 million Armenians and subsequent
denial and lack of recognition by the Turkish government and the US, whose
president would not formally recognize the violence as genocide until 2021.
This lack of formal recognition would become a motivating factor for radical,
often young Armenians who were frustrated with Turkish and US governments to
take action.
Thanks to the newly released FBI files, it is now clear that
the FBI were going to great lengths to prevent another attack. And while they
would never find the one responsible for Gündüz’s murder, their subsequent
investigation into JCAG would contribute to the militant organization’s
eventual dissolvement and would lead to the prevention of a JCAG bombing with
the potential to be one of the deadliest in US history.
Sources warned that JCAG would make an attempt to detonate
an explosive in the Philadelphia Turkish Consulate, given the building was made
entirely of glass and was located in a densely populated area, predictions
indicated that up to 3,000 people could be wounded or killed if the attack were
to be successful. Thankfully, the “Fauxbom” plot was stopped when the FBI
arrested five suspects, unfortunately none of whom could at the time be
connected to Gündüz’s killing beyond their involvement in JCAG.
Information surrounding the killing would slow after the
initial explosion of press. Somerville residents who had seen the gruesome
images of the slaying in their newspapers wouldn’t receive any further answers
to how this could have happened. Somerville being the home of the infamous
Winter Hill Gang, residents understood that speaking out as a witness,
especially in the case of organized crime such as this, could cost them their
life.
“There was not a lot of incentive to get involved or
possibly endanger yourself with trained assassins,” explained Gage, “I think
people recognized that these people weren’t messing around, and I think there’s
definitely truth to the fact that people got quiet very quickly.”
The Boston Herald even reported that a man
claiming to be a witness to the murder was shot and hospitalized near the crime
scene some months later. This story would never be corroborated beyond the
article, but the effect on resident’s willingness to act as witnesses was
nevertheless real.
And without the surveillance technology present in our
everyday lives today, investigators had limited resources to separate fact from
fiction and understand what had truly happened. “This sort of thing just
couldn’t happen today,” said Nash, “you couldn’t shoot someone in the middle of
Union Square and get away with it. Union Square has like seven different police
cameras pointed at it right now.”
To the many residents who knew Orhan Gündüz, complete
closure or answers relating to the death of their friend and pillar of the
community would remain out of reach. Having waited long enough, the thousands of
pages of FBI files released to the public just this year may contain some of
the answers that they were looking for.
“We really want to have full transparency and give anyone
who wants to look into this the tools to know what we know and to understand this
as much as possible,” said Gage, “We’re sharing all the files. So if you want
to spend a week reading a 2,000 page file on this, you can dive in and maybe
you’ll find something new.”
As much as this breakthrough is a sign of more answers to
come, thousands of unreleased files relating to Gündüz and requested by Gage
and Nash remain undisclosed. “A lot of this story is just figuring out what the
FBI has, and why won’t they just release it?” explains Nash.
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