Vigilantism in the United States

Vigilantism in the United States of America is defined as acts which violate societal limits which are intended to defend and protect the prevailing distribution of values and resources from some form of attack or some form of harm.[1]

In the new nation a citizen's arrest became known as a procedure, based on common law and protected by the United States Constitution when civilians arrest people whom they have either seen or suspect of doing things which are wrong.

The exact circumstances under which this type of arrest, also known as a detention, can be made varies widely from state to state.[2]

History

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The Regulator movement in colonial South Carolina

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When the British set up the American colonies, they established law enforcement along British lines. Population growth was slow and the law enforcement system worked. One important exception came in North Carolina, where rapid migration to the frontier established a new western region without a strong local government. There emerged the only major vigilante movement in colonial America. The term "vigilante" was not yet in use, and the acitivists called themselves "regulators." The poor farmers bitterly resented the overpaid corrupt local officials appointed by a distant elite, By 1768 the decentralized movement was highly popular in the backcountry. When two local leaders were arrested, 700 Regulators turned out to free them. In 1771 the governor led a force of a thousand men into the heart of the uprising, but Regulators led twice that number into the Battle of Alamance. The insurgents lacked leadership and strategy. They were quickly routed with nine Regulators dead. Seven of the leaders were executed and others fled the state. When the American Revolution broke out four years later, North Carolina's elite supported the Patriot cause, while the Regulator districts were much more likely to be neutral or pro-British.[3][4]

San Francisco 1850s

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Portsmouth Square in 1858, San Francisco Committee of Vigilance site of origin

The San Francisco Committee of Vigilance was a vigilante group formed in 1851 and reorganized in 1856 in response to rampant crime and corruption in San Francisco, California. The need for extralegal intervention was apparent with the explosive population growth following the discovery of gold in 1848. The small town of about 900 individuals grew to a booming city of over 20,000 very rapidly. This growth in population overwhelmed the small law enforcement system. The boss-controlled Democratic Party machine was dominant, and used Irish Catholic men to manipulate the precinct vote totals. The opposition Know Nothing movement represented the Protestant businessmen, and they formed the vigilance movement to counter the Democratic machine. The vigilantes hanged eight people and forced several elected officials to resign. The Committee of Vigilance formally relinquished power after three months, but its retired leaders ran the new Republican Party and controlled local politics for the next decade.[5][6]

The Night Riders

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Headline in the Lexington Herald-Leader of December 10, 1907

The Night Riders was the militant, terrorist faction of tobacco farmers during a popular resistance to the monopolistic practices of the American Tobacco Company (ATC) of James B. Duke. On September 24, 1904, the tobacco planters of western Kentucky and the neighboring counties of West Tennessee formed the Dark Fired Tobacco District, or Black Patch District Planters' Protective Association of Kentucky and Tennessee (called "the Association" or PPA). It urged farmers to boycott the ATC and refuse to sell at the ruinously low prices being offered in a quasi-monopoly market.[7]

Groups of a more militant faction of farmers, trained and led by Dr. David A. Amoss of Caldwell County, Kentucky, resorted to terrorism—most notably, the lynching of the Walker family and the lynching of Captain Quentin Rankin and the kidnapping of Colonel R. Z. Taylor. Becoming known as the Night Riders, due to their night-time activities, they also targeted and destroyed the tobacco warehouses of the ATC. Their largest raid of this type was their occupation and attack on areas of Hopkinsville, Kentucky, in 1907.[8]

Mexican border

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  • Formed in 2000, Ranch Rescue was an organization in the southwest United States. Ranchers called upon Ranch Rescue to remove illegal immigrants and squatters from their property. It was shut down later.[when?]
  • The Minuteman Project has been described as vigilantes dedicated to expelling people who cross the US-Mexico border illegally.[9][10]

Other episodes

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  • Lynching was the most common form of vigilantism in the United States with several thousand episodes during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The great majority of victims were African American men in the South.[11]
  • In the 1750s, Gideon Gibson Jr. became a significant landowner in South Carolina. Due to various tax acts, some shareholders abandoned their lands along the Santee River, resorting to raiding others' farms for survival. With no help from the distant Royal Governor, the local farmers formed vigilante groups to capture and publicly punish these raiders, marking the rise of vigilantism in the area.
  • The San Luis Obispo Vigilance Committee in San Luis Obispo, California, was known to have hanged six Californios, as well as engage in battles around the area.[12][13]
  • During racial unrest in Newark, New Jersey, in the late 1960s, local activist Anthony Imperiale, later a city councilman and state legislator, founded a neighborhood safety patrol that critics claimed was a vigilante group.[14]
  • Operating since 2002, perverted-justice.com opponents have accused the website of being modern-day cyber vigilantes.[15]
  • In a number of U.S. cities, individuals have created real-life superhero personas, donning masks and costumes to patrol their neighborhoods, sometimes maintaining an uneasy relationship with local police departments who believe what they are doing could be dangerous to the costumed crusaders themselves, or could devolve into vigilantism.[16][17][18][19]
  • In October 2011 in the United States, a vigilante operating in Seattle, named Phoenix Jones was arrested and forced to reveal his true identity, after a confrontation with two groups who were fighting.
  • On October 9, 2013, the Federal Bureau of Investigation apprehended members of the New York divorce coercion gang, a rabbinical group that administered extrajudicial beatings and torture to Jewish husbands.[20]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ "Phenomenology of Vigilantism in Contemporary America - An Interpretation". Office of Justice Programs. Retrieved January 21, 2023.
  2. ^ Wollan, Malia (May 6, 2016). "How to Make a Citizen's Arrest". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved April 26, 2018.
  3. ^ William A. Link, North Carolina: Change and Tradition in a Southern State (2009) pp. 88–93.
  4. ^ Richard Maxwell Brown, Strain of Violence: Historical Studies of American Violence and Vigilantism (Oxford UP, 1975) pp. 67–90.
  5. ^ Brown, Strain of Violence, pp. 134–143.
  6. ^ Roger W. Lotchin, San Francisco, 1846-1856: From Hamlet to City (Oxford UP. 1974), pp. 213–275.
  7. ^ Suzanne Marshall, Violence in the Black Patch of Kentucky and Tennessee' ' (U of Missouri Press, 1994).
  8. ^ Albin Lee Reynolds, "War in the Black Patch." Register of the Kentucky Historical Society 56.1 (1958): 1–10. online.
  9. ^ Casey Sanchez (August 13, 2007). "New Video Appears to Show Vigilante Border Murder". Southern Poverty Law Center. Retrieved 2009-03-21.
  10. ^ "Vigilantes Gather in Arizona". Anti-Defamation League. April 7, 2005. Archived from the original on April 16, 2009. Retrieved 2009-03-21.
  11. ^ Stewart Emory Tolnay, and Elwood M. Beck, A festival of violence: An analysis of southern lynchings, 1882-1930 (University of Illinois Press, 1995).
  12. ^ Krieger, Dan (July 13, 2013). "Lynch mobs part of area's history". The Tribune. Retrieved May 29, 2020.
  13. ^ Joseph Hall-Patton (June 1, 2016). "Pacifying Paradise: Violence and Vigilantism in San Luis Obispo". California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo. Retrieved 2021-07-11.
  14. ^ Halbfinger, David M. (28 December 1999). "Anthony Imperiale, 68, Dies - Polarizing Force in Newark - NYTimes.com". The New York Times. Retrieved 18 February 2015.
  15. ^ ABC News, A. B. C. "Controversial Web Site Claims to 'Out' Would-Be Child Molesters". ABC News. Retrieved 2022-09-07.
  16. ^ Gold, Jim (14 February 2011). "Costumed crusaders taking it to the streets". NBC News. Archived from the original on March 7, 2021. Retrieved 14 October 2011.
  17. ^ "News - Nationwide Phenomenon: Real-Life Superheroes Fighting Crime". InsideEdition.com. 2011-02-16. Archived from the original on 2011-09-27. Retrieved 2011-10-14.
  18. ^ "¡A luchar por la justicia!, Articulo Impreso Archivado". Semana.com. 26 February 2011. Archived from the original on 7 May 2011. Retrieved 22 May 2019.
  19. ^ "Group Dresses As Superheroes To Combat Crime". NewsOn6.uk. 2010-12-16. Archived from the original on 2016-08-19. Retrieved 2011-10-14.
  20. ^ Saul, Josh; Italiano, Laura (2013-10-11) "Orthodox Rabbis Beat Me, Stunned My Genitals", New York Post

Further reading

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  • Bancroft, Hubert Howe. Bancroft's Works: Popular Tribunals vol. 1 (1887) online vol 1 covers San Francisco in 1850s.
    • Bancroft, Hubert Howe. Bancroft's Works: Popular Tribunals vol. 2 (1887) online vol 2, covers San Francisco in 1850s.
  • Brown, Richard Maxwell. Strain of Violence: Historical Studies of American Violence and Vigilantism (Oxford UP, 1975) pp 91–180.
    • a reprinting of Richard Maxwell Brown, "The American vigilante tradition." in Violence in America: Historical and comparative perspectives (1969): 1:121-169. online
  • Chang, Lennon YC, Lena Y. Zhong, and Peter N. Grabosky. "Citizen co‐production of cyber security: Self‐help, vigilantes, and cybercrime." Regulation & Governance 12.1 (2018): 101–114. online
  • Culberson, William C. Vigilantism: Political history of private power in America (Greenwood, 1990).
  • Dillon, Mark C. Montana Vigilantes, 1863–1870: Gold, Guns and Gallows (University Press of Colorado, 2018) online
  • Grimsted, David. "Rioting in its Jacksonian setting." American Historical Review 77.2 (1972): 361–397. online
  • Han, Lori Cox, and Tomislav Han, eds. Political Violence in America (2 vol, Bloomsbury, 2022).
  • Hernando, Matthew J. Faces like Devils: The Bald Knobher Vigilantes in the Ozarks (U of Missouri Press, 2015).
  • Hing, Bill Ong, "Vigilante Racism: The De-Americanization of Immigrant America" Donkeyphant, Vol. 9 (Summer 2002). online
  • Hoehne, Patrick. "" Murderous, Unwarrantable, and Very Cold": Mapping the Rise of Extralegal Collective Killing in the United States, 1783–1865." Journal of Digital History 2.1 (2022): 20211007. online
  • Jacobs, David, Chad Malone, and Gale Iles. "Race and imprisonments: Vigilante violence, minority threat, and racial politics." Sociological Quarterly 53.2 (2012): 166–187. online
  • Lancaster, Guy. "Lynching White Men in the Arkansas Delta: Understanding Vigilante Violence beyond the Racial Frame?" Arkansas Review: A Journal of Delta Studies (2022) 53#2 pp, 88–100.
  • McGrath, Roger D. Gunfighters, Highwaymen and Vigilantes (U of California Press, 1984)
  • Messner, Steven F., Eric P. Baumer, and Richard Rosenfeld, "Distrust of Government, the Vigilante Tradition, and Support for Capital Punishment," Law & Society Review (September 2006) online
  • Nisbett, Richard E. Culture of honor: The psychology of violence in the South (Routledge, 2018).
  • Noble, Madeleine M. "The White Caps of Harrison and Crawford County, Indiana: A Study in the Violent Enforcement of Morality" (PhD dissertation, University of Michigan; ProQuest Dissertations Publishing,  1973. 7415815).
  • Rosenbaum, H. Jon, and Peter C. Sederberg, eds. Vigilante politics (U of Pennsylvania Press, 1976), essays by experts on USA , Africa and Ireland. online
  • Rosenbaum, H. Jon, and Peter C. Sederberg. "Vigilantism: An analysis of establishment violence." Comparative Politics 6.4 (1974): 541-570. online
  • Shapira, Harel. "The Minutemen: Patrolling and performativity along the U.S. / Mexico border" in Vigilantism against Migrants and Minorities ed by Tore Bjørgo and Miroslav Mareš (Routledge, 2019) pp 151–163.
  • Tolnay, Stewart Emory, and Elwood M. Beck. A festival of violence: An analysis of southern lynchings, 1882-1930 (U of Illinois Press, 1995).
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