Rolling Stones Were Targeted By FBI In Conspiracy To Destroy Band
Charlie Watts, Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Bill Wyman and Brian Jones in 1964
Jul. 26 2023, Published 7:00 p.m. ET
The FBI has been accused of teaming up with British lawmen to destroy the Rolling Stones by hatching a bizarre plot to get the controversial rockers thrown in prison on drug charges, RadarOnline.com can report.
Thatâs the shocking story behind the Stonesâ 1967 arrest during the infamous âRedlands Drug Raidâ as revealed in author Philip Normanâs blockbuster book Mick Jagger, which details the life of the legendary bandâs lead singer.
Although Mick Jagger ended up behind bars after the raid, the trans-Atlantic operation failed to destroy the chart-topping group.
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Mick Jagger and Keith Richards performing with The Rolling Stones in 1976
Formed in London in 1962, the Stones were regarded as a shocking and âdirtyâ alternative to the mild mop-topped Beatles.
In the button-down era of the early 1960s, the sexual lyrics of their hits like â(I Canât Get No) Satisfactionâ and âLetâs Spend the Night Togetherâ raised eyebrows. The Stones even had to change their hit to âLetâs Spend Some TIME Togetherâ when they appeared on The Ed Sullivan Show in 1967.
The bad-boy band was secretly declared âsubversiveâ by COINTEL-PRO, an FBI Counter Intelligence Program launched by director J. Edgar Hoover to maintain social and political order. Agents reached out to the Stonesâ homeland for help to ensure theyâd never come to the United States again.
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Mick Jagger, Ron Wood, Charlie Watts, Keith Richards
Along with their counterparts at Britainâs hush-hush MI5 police agency, the FBI tried to set up Jagger and the rest of the Stones â guitarist Brian Jones, guitarist Keith Richards, bassist Bill Wyman and drummer Charlie Watts â in an elaborate drug sting that would put them out of circulation.
The raid was conducted at Richardsâ cottage called Redlands outside West Wittering, a small seaside resort in Sussex, England.
The police agencies used an American known as âAcid King Davidâ to befriend the band. A failed TV actor whose real name was David Snyderman, the hippie was drifting around Europe when he was caught with drugs in his luggage at Londonâs Heathrow Airport.
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Charlie Watts, Keith Richards, Mick Jagger and Ron Wood
Instead of being thrown into jail, âBritish Customs handed him over to some âheavy peopleâ who hinted they belonged to MI5 and told him there was âa way outâ of his predicament,â writes Norman. âThis was to infiltrate the Rolling Stones, supply Jagger and Richards with drugs, and then get them busted.â
Acting on government orders, the dealer befriended the Stones with an ample supply of drugs. Snyderman arrived for a weekend at Redlands with âa business-like attachĂ© caseâ filled with LSD.
At 5 p.m. on a Sunday, police got a call from an anonymous male informing them of a âriotousâ drug party at Redlands. Officers tore the house apart â but missed the incriminating drug-stuffed briefcase, which was sitting in the middle of a room.
At one point, a young cop started to examine it, but backed off when Snyderman shouted the bag contained undeveloped film.
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Richards, now 79, was found guilty of allowing Redlands to be used for smoking pot. Jagger, who turns 80 today, who was hauled off in handcuffs and jailed, got a three-month sentence for possessing four amphetamines â even though his lawyers pointed out the pills were freely available to combat travel sickness in mainland Europe. Both were eventually freed on appeal.
Ironically, the FBIâs alleged sordid scheme was totally unnecessary. Jones was later busted on marijuana charges and couldnât get a visa, which kept the Stones out of America.
However, Jones drowned in his swimming pool in 1969 â and soon afterward the wild boys launched âa triumphant American tour.â
Snyderman died in 2004 as the band was preparing its 40th anniversary tour.