Bureau of Investigation
By the first years of the 20th century, it had become clear that the U.S. Department of Justice lacked sufficient resources to investigate violations of the law across a sprawling, quickly growing nation.
In 1908, President Theodore Roosevelt, who had taken office after a deranged anarchist assassinated President William McKinley in 1901, gave his approval for his attorney general, Charles J. Bonaparte (a grandnephew of Napoleon) to bypass Congress and form his own investigative squad.
In a memo dated July 26, 1908, Bonaparte stated that a “regular force of special agents” would handle all investigative matters from U.S. attorneys. This force, which included some former Secret Service agents, would become the nucleus of the new Bureau of Investigation.
Renamed the U.S. Bureau of Investigation in 1932, the bureau wouldn’t receive its current name, Federal Bureau of Investigation, until 1935.
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Get the story behind America's domestic intelligence agency.
Mann Act
The new bureau took the lead on investigating violations of the Mann Act (known as the “White Slave Traffic Act”), passed in 1910, which barred the transportation of people across state lines for the purposes of engaging in sexual activity.
During World War I, passage of the Espionage Act of 1917 led the bureau to launch its first nationwide domestic surveillance program, including wiretapping conversations and opening the mail of suspected radicals.
J. Edgar Hoover
Fears of communism on the rise in the United States grew into a full-fledged “Red Scare” by early 1920, after a series of bombing attacks by anarchists on national leaders.
On the authority of Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer, the young Justice Department lawyer J. Edgar Hoover directed the bureau’s agents to sweep up between 6,000 and 10,000 Americans, in mass arrests that became known as the “Palmer Raids.”
Though the raids initially made headlines for their success, the bureau was almost immediately criticized for violating the civil liberties of thousands of people. Hoover’s star rose quickly at the Justice Department, however, and in 1921 he was named the Bureau of Investigation’s assistant director.
Three years later, Attorney General Harlan Fiske Stone tapped Hoover to serve as acting director on an interim basis. Just 29 years old at the time, Hoover would remain in the director’s post for the next 48 years.