With passage of the Third Enforcement Act, popularly known as the Ku Klux Act, Congress authorizes President Ulysses S. Grant to declare martial law, impose heavy penalties and use military force to suppress terrorist organizations—particularly the Ku Klux Klan (KKK).
Passed as the third in a series of increasingly stringent laws, the act came in response to a an increasingly brutal campaign of violence and intimidation by the KKK and others to repress Black Americans' expanding political and civil rights. The law made it a federal crime to deny any group or individual “any of the rights, privileges or immunities, or protection, named in the Constitution.” And it gave the president enforcement powers, including deployment of the military, suspension of habeus corpus or “other means, as he may deem necessary.”
Founded in 1865 by a group of Confederate veterans, the KKK rapidly grew from a secret social fraternity to a paramilitary force bent on reversing the federal government’s progressive Reconstruction era-policies in the South—especially those that elevated the rights of Black Americans. Under a platform of philosophized white racial superiority, the group employed violence as a means of pushing back Reconstruction gains under the 13th, 14th and 15th Amendments to the Constitution, which granted Black Americans emancipation, citizenship, voting rights, due process and more.