Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire

To Observe and Protect: Community Alert Patrol and the Fight Against Police Terror in the 1960s
Ron Wilkins
17 Jun 2020
🖨️ Print Article
To Observe and Protect: Community Alert Patrol and the Fight Against Police Terror in the 1960s
To Observe and Protect: Community Alert Patrol and the Fight Against Police Terror in the 1960s

The Black Panther Party modeled their policing initiatives after Black citizens’ patrols in Los Angeles.

“The problem of police terror has only worsened.in the 54 years since CAP’s existence.”

My name is Ron Wilkins and I headed the civilian police monitoring group in Los Angeles known as the Community Alert Patrol (CAP), founded in June 1966. CAP volunteers constituted the first community organization in the U.S. whose members put their lives on the line to police-the-police in an effort to end law enforcement’s campaign of terror against Black people. 

CAP’s efforts did not go unnoticed by local police or fellow movement activists across the country. Most notably, the Black Panther Party for Self-Defense, founded in Oakland in October 1966, came to model their policing initiatives after CAP. Wherever police were seen interacting with our people we emerged from our vehicles with camera in hand to prevent foul play. Unfortunately, the problem of police terror has only worsened throughout the U.S. in the 54 years since CAP’s existence, resulting in the murder of thousands of our brothers and sisters.

It is important to understand that racism is a public health crisis and that police are a racist criminal gang that routinely commits murder and operates above the law.

“We would emerge from our vehicles with camera in hand to prevent foul play.”

U.S. policing culture targeting Black people dates back to the racial profiling practices of slave patrols,” plantation police, and the like, which terrorized Black people for 150-plus years until the end of the Civil War. Virginia establishing slave patrols in 1726 and North Carolina and Georgia establishing them in the 1750s. With the end of the Civil War in 1865, the Ku Klux Klan’s methods mirrored the activities of the slave patrols, just as police department recruits were hired to enforce “Jim Crow.” Oftentimes Klansmen and police carried out lynchings together and many policemen were Klan sympathizers if not Klan members themselves. 

It is important to understand the roots of racism in policing and the roots of official terror as the core of policing culture. Historically, bands of armed white men organized slave patrols to track down, recapture, severely punish and/or kill runaway slaves. In areas where slave patrols operated all white men, whether slaveowners or not, had a duty to serve as members of the patrols. A gradual morphing of many slave patrols into police forces occurred throughout the South in particular, just as the anti-Mexican Texas Rangers evolved from racist bands of white men who received bounties for capturing enslaved runaways. Slave patrol routines included enforcing curfews, checking travelers for passes, catching those assembling without permission, and preventing organized resistance, just as modern-day police do. In due course, police came into play as union-busters suppressing organizing efforts and strikes engaged in by laborers seeking adequate wages and working conditions.

“The anti-Mexican Texas Rangers evolved from racist bands of white men who received bounties for capturing enslaved runaways.”

The U.S. government exercises power through its police and military forces, which makes it a police state. Mass incarceration, prison labor amounting to slave labor, holding political prisoners, maintaining secret prisons and torturing detainees, militarizing police, police in schools, massive surveillance, union-busting,  ongoing “regime change,” and even the weaponization of space are characteristics of the police state and interlocking component parts of the New World Order.

Currently, Black Lives Matter activists and their allies are demanding that local, state, and federal officials implement legislation to defund police and redirect resources into social services and social welfare programs. This initiative intends to address the overall health of our communities that ensures our public safety in ways that police cannot. Defunding the police is a transitional step to a much larger transformational demand to abolish police altogether.

Yet as we work to defund and eventually abolish the police, we must continue to monitor their actions in the interim. Community Alert Patrols are needed, now more than ever before. CAP’s are needed to monitor the concessions made by municipalities and law enforcement in the wake of the massive protests following the lynching of George Floyd. These concessions include ending chokeholds, eliminating racial profiling, requiring body-cameras, and more. Police will need to be monitored around the clock by civilian oversight groups to ensure that they are conforming to the new policies.

We have a responsibility to both our great African Ancestors and future generations to develop Community Alert Patrols (CAP) throughout the United States. CAP’s re-emergence, proliferation, and success is necessary if Black people are to survive and be respected as human beings in this country.

Ron Wilkins is a veteran activist living in Los Angeles.

COMMENTS?

Please join the conversation on Black Agenda Report's Facebook page at http://facebook.com/blackagendareport

Or, you can comment by emailing us at comments@blackagendareport.com

Police Repression

Do you need and appreciate Black Agenda Report articles? Please click on the DONATE icon, and help us out, if you can.


Related Stories

​​​​​​​ Ajamu Baraka, BAR editor and columnist
Fragmentation, Force, and Fascism: The Architecture of the Repressive National Security State
21 January 2026
The state is not drifting toward repression; it is building it with serious intent.
Pan-African Community Action , Black Alliance for Peace D.C Citywide Alliance
U.S. Domestic Colonial Occupation Must Be Met with a Struggle for Decolonization, Not Reform
24 September 2025
A federal crackdown in Washington, D.C., is escalating a bipartisan war against the Black working class.
Carrie Zaremba
U.S. Universities Spent the Summer Strategizing to Suppress Student Activism. Here is their Plan.
11 September 2024
Schools across the U.S.
Jacqueline Luqman
Defeat The Fascist War On African People In The US And Abroad!
19 June 2024
The struggle to defeat the war on African people can be understood through an analysis of the ongoing relationship between African people and t
Muslim student stands against NYPD
Margaret Kimberley, BAR Executive Editor and Senior Columnist
Eric Adams and the NYPD Repress Dissent
08 May 2024
New York City Mayor Eric Adams may well be the very worst of the Black misleadership class.
Saying Her Name
Heather Ann Thompson
Saying Her Name
19 May 2021
Remains that were found to be those of a Black MOVE teen-ager who was killed by Philadelphia police in 1985 were treated as an anthropological spec
The Police “Just Launched a War”
J. Lester Feder
The Police “Just Launched a War”
19 May 2021
Do some, most or all US police departments have a pattern and practice of racial bias that makes them fundamentally unable to regulate themselves?
Police and the License to Kill
Matthew D. Lassiter
Police and the License to Kill
12 May 2021
Detroit’s wanton killing of hundreds of Blacks in the civil right era shows why most of today’s proposals to make police more accountable are bound
What Police Impunity Looks Like
Eric Umansky
What Police Impunity Looks Like
21 April 2021
They came into his own home and took his life for no reason.
Murder of Daunte Wright Ruined Derek Chauvin Show Trial
​​​​​​​ Ajamu Baraka, BAR editor and columnist
Murder of Daunte Wright Ruined Derek Chauvin Show Trial
15 April 2021
The Black-murder-by-cop next door to Minneapolis shows the world the dehumanization that is built into the white supremacist DNA of settler-colonia

More Stories


  • Jacqueline Luqman
    Continuity of Social Control From Slave Patrols To Policing To ICE
    28 Jan 2026
    To understand the violence of contemporary immigration enforcement, one must trace its lineage directly to the antebellum slave patrols — a system founded on racial terror and complete state control.
  • Aby L. Sène
    Patagonia Forest Fires Reveal Imperialist Theft of Protected Lands
    28 Jan 2026
    The arson attacks that engulfed the protected forests of he Andean-Patagonia region serve as a reminder that Western conservation models, which dispossess Indigenous peoples of their lands, are…
  • Anthony Karefa Rogers-Wright
    Trump Derangement Syndrome Is Real, And It Obfuscates the Requisite Question of Self-Determination in the Heart of U.S. Empire
    28 Jan 2026
    When political energy is channeled into opposing an individual, that energy is diverted from the work of building the popular power needed to challenge the empire he represents.
  • Hanna Eid
    Iran and the Strategy of Tension
    28 Jan 2026
    The Cold War-era "strategy of tension" has evolved into a modern system of hybrid warfare targeting sovereign nations that challenge Western hegemony.
  • Julia Wright
    The Photos of a Five Year Old ICE Terror Doesn't Want Us to See
    28 Jan 2026
    The arrest of a five-year-old captured public attention and ignited a prisoner revolt inside a U.S. ICE detention center. Powerful imagery is a useful tool for the people, but dangerous in the hands…
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us