William O'Neal made the mistake of stealing a car and taking it across state lines from Illinois to Michigan one night when he and a friend went joyriding. Read in this informative report how the FBI found out about what O'Neal did and threatened O'Neal on the telephone with imprisonment if he did not turn into an informant for the Bureau so that he could join the Black Panther Party Chicago, Illinois, Chapter. Find out about how William O'Neal became a security captain in the Black Panther Party as a result of taking on the role of FBI undercover informant and provided information to the Bureau about the leader of this politically active Illinois chapter of the Black Panther Party, Fred Hampton, which led to the death of Hampton in a Dec. 4, 1969 FBI-backed raid by the Cook County State's Attorney's Office and the Chicago Police Department. Also read about how Chicago offices of the FBI as part of the FBI's COINTELPRO counterintelligence program wrote phony letters to members of other Black groups in Chicago, such as the Black Stone Rangers, in addition to radical student antiwar groups such as Students for a Democratic Society, to foment tensions between the Black Panther Party and these groups as part of a strategy of undermining the unity of New Left political groups.