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Dianne Marie Donghi
BornFebruary 11, 1949
Neville-Sur-Sein, France
Other namesDionne Donghi, Dianne Marie Spiegel and Dianne Donghi Oberman
Known forFormer member of the 1970’s group Weather Underground Organization

Dianne Marie Donghi (1949-) is a former member of Weather Underground Organization.

SDS

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Donghi was identified as a leader of Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) and a member of the Weatherman by the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee (SISS) investigative report.[1] She was affiliated with the Columbia University SDS chapter as well as the New York chapter.[2] During July of 1969, Donghi was one of the SDS Weatherwomen who traveled with Bernardine Dohrn to Havana, Cuba to meet and talk with representatives of Cuba, National Liberation Front of South Vietnam (NLF) and the North Vietnamese governments.[3][4] Donghi spoke at a press conference held on August 19, 1969 at the New York City Diplomat Hotel after the group returned home from Cuba.[5] She also spoke at a National Action Conference held in Cleveland, Ohio during August 29-September 2, 1969.[6] In preparation for Action Week in Chicago, Illinois, Donghi as well as Bernardine Dohrn, Linda Evans, Mark Rudd and Jeff Jones helped to organize and recruit support for the October 8-11, 1969 Days of Rage, an event where Donghi herself was arrested.[7] On October 11, 1969 Donghi was arrested for mob actions, which she pleaded guilty on December 16, 1969; she was fined a $90 fee and sentenced to serve one day in the county jail.[8] In December of 1969, Donghi was one of many who attended the Weatherman “War Council” in Flint, Michigan.[9]

Weatherman

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Donghi became affiliated with Weatherman Cincinnati collective in Ohio on January 15th 1970 and eventually became sole leader of the collective. Later Donghi went to the Chicago collective then on to New York.[10][11] Sometime in February 1970, Donghi was arrested in Chicago by FBI on charges of interstate transportation of stolen weapons. The case was thrown out by the U.S. Attorney because it had been set up by an inside informer of Weatherman.[12] On April 15, 1970, after attempting to forge checks using a false name, Donghi and good friend Linda Evans were arrested in New York City.[13][14] Donghi was arrested in the Greenwich Village hotel room she had shared with Cincinnati collective member Larry Grathwohl (alias Tom Niehman), which she had formed a relationship with.[15][16] [17] Donghi and others had been suspicious of Grathwohl, who was in fact an undercover FBI agent who had to blow his cover in order to make the arrest.[18][19] Donghi was released from jail later that day with a bail of $10,000.[20] After being sought out by authorities for fugitive warrants on other federal or local cases, on July 23rd indictments against Donghi, Linda Evans, Mark Rudd, Bernardine Dohrn, Bill Ayers, Kathy Boudin, Cathy Wilkerson, Russ Neufeld, Jane Spielman, Ronald Fliegelman, Arlo Jacobs, Naomi Jaffe and Larry Grathwohl were handed out for conspiracy to bomb police stations and government buildings in four cities and to kill and injure people inside.[21][22] After attending her court hearings, Donghi decided to become apart of the Weather’s above ground support organization.[23]

Notes

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  1. ^ U.S. Senate Subcommittee 65
  2. ^ FBI Surveillance Files 274
  3. ^ FBI Surveillance Files 97, 107
  4. ^ U.S. Senate Subcommittee 13, 22, 65
  5. ^ FBI Surveillance Files 107
  6. ^ FBI Surveillance Files 109
  7. ^ FBI Surveillance Files 115
  8. ^ U.S. Senate Subcommittee 65
  9. ^ U.S. Senate Subcommittee 22
  10. ^ FBI Surveillance Files 274
  11. ^ Grathwohl 117, 118, 129, 173
  12. ^ Harold Jacobs 272
  13. ^ Harold Jacobs 272
  14. ^ Ron Jacobs 101
  15. ^ Harold Jacobs 270, 271
  16. ^ Ron Jacobs 108
  17. ^ Grathwohl 177
  18. ^ Harold Jacobs 272
  19. ^ Ron Jacobs 108
  20. ^ Grathwohl 178
  21. ^ Harold Jacobs 221, 222
  22. ^ Grathwohl 181
  23. ^ Ron Jacobs 114

References

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  • Federal Bureau of Investigation, “Weather Underground Organization (Weatherman)”, (Illinois: Chicago Field Office, 1976)
  • Larry Grathwohl, “Bringing Down America: An FBI informer with the Weathermen”, (New York: Arlington House Publishers, 1976)
  • Harold Jacobs, “Weatherman”, (Ramparts Press, 1970)
  • Ron Jacobs, “The Way The Wind Blew; A History of the Weather Underground”, (New York: Verso, 1997)
  • United States. Congress Senate. Committee on the Judiciary. Subcommittee to Investigate the Administration of the Internal Security Act and Other Internal Security Laws. “The Weather Underground Report of the Subcommittee to Investigate the Administration of the Internal Security Laws of the Committee on the Judiciary United States Senate Ninety-Fourth Congress First Session”, (Washington: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1975)
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