“and Agee's writings about the CIA are also well known. It is to be expected that those who read I the Scelso report would then turn to Agee's book. John F. Pereira 5 SECRET”
“and Agee's writings about the CIA are also well known. It is to be expected that those who read I the Scelso report would then turn to Agee's book. John F. Pereira 5 SECRET”
“Phillips’ anecdote about the prospects of the Agency printing counterfeit tax stamps and the details involved in such planning, even. though perhaps presented in jest would not be viewed as such in the eyes of many individuals in the United States today. Page 16: Because Philip ”
“14-00000 . OUNCE SECRET EYES’ ONLY 3. Office of Security indices reflected no traces in the name of Ron CASPER, The Washington Post correspondent who was in contact with AGEE. However, it is believed that CASPER may be identifiable with Ronald KESSLER, who was mentioned i”
“HAD WORKED VERY CLOSELY WITH AGEE DC ON PREPARATION HIS BOOK. SAID SHE AND WEISSMAN AND AGEE VERY ANGRY WITH JOHN MARKS FOR PUBLISHING HIS BOOK "HOW TO SPOT A SPOOK” THEY TOLD HIM THIS WOULD ONLY ALERT CIA TO CHANGE ITS TACTICS. BUT MARKS PUBLISHED BOOK ANYWAY AND THEY NOW CO”
“13-00000 1 % DEC 11 ‘95 11:14AM ,P.1 COVER H SCT FAX To: Mr. Burry Harrelson Wax #: (703) 351-2114 Subject: December meeting Date: December 11, 1995 Pages: 3, including this cover sheet. COMMENTS: The types of information that the Board needs to know about each of th”
“(Ibid, pp. 45,46) NW 66000 Docld:32271295 Page 3 (DAVID PHILLIPS) Insert into VECIANA fonzi 182 189 David Atlee Phillips testified before the committee in Executive Session on April 25, 1978. He said he never used the name Maurice Bishop. 182 of anyone in the CIA who used the nam”
“1 0 On 6 June 1969, Tighe recorded that Jim McCord advised him on that date that he, McCord, had visited Wiley in New York City on the 4th and 5th of June 1969. McCord gave Tighe photographs from Wiley which had been "entrusted" to Wiley "many years ago" by Morse Allen: Th”
“61 until April 30th, 1965. (Classified Top Secret testimony, 8/17/78, p.4) During t he course of the deposition, the following questions and answers were recorded: XXXXXXXXXXXXXXX Q: Do you know or did you know Maurice Bishop? A: Yes. Q: Was he a n agency employee? A: I believe s”
“14-00000 c. Item 17 - William Harvey - Approximately 50 documents, virtually all of which concern the estab- lishment, maintenance, and use of cover for Subject during his career with the Agency as a Staff Employee from 1947 to 1967. d. Item 27 (1) International Rescue Co”
“REASON WHY HE HAD BEEN ARRESTED IN THE FIRST PLACE WAS THAT HE HAD ■ WORKED WITH LEE HARVEY O SWALD IN AN ASSIGNMENT WITH A "U.S. INTELLIGENCE AGENCY." IT WAS A LONG STORY, HE SAID, AND HE DID NOT WANT TO GIVE ME ALL THE DETAILS, BUT INSTEAD WANTED TO ASSURE ME THAT HE HAD:”
“14-00000 QFODET C. Item 17 - William Harvey -- Approximately 50 documents, virtually all of which concern the estab lishment, maintenance, and use of cover for Subject during his career with the Agency as a Staff Employee from 1947 to 1967. d. Item 27 (1) International”
“would be denied as an employee of the Central Intelligence Agency from the date he entered on duty through the date of his departure. Attachment E is a personal letter received from Mr. Whitten after he was notified that his name might be released in connection with declass”
“14-00000 SECT C. Item 17 - William Harvey - Approximately 50 documents, virtually all of which concern the estab lishment, maintenance, and use of cover for Subject during his career with the Agency as a Staff Employee from 1947 to 1967. d. Item 27 (1) International Re”
“as being an Agency employee. d. Page 26: I think it is unwise for Mr. Phillips to conjecture on the reason why there are few blacks employed in the DDO. His reasoning may be correct, but I would venture that not everyone who reads his book will believe so, and the Agency may”
“4-00000 At . 46 24 1P F-5564 Chief, Contact Division 25 January 1957 ATTN : McConnell Chief, Hew York office AG8014 Clandestine Operations In Nev York by Agency Personnel- E 5 -350 5141 1. - Our contact in the Harold Oram Agency public relations office advises -' th”
“TOP SECRET 51 Phone (Area 202) 544-6000 1 an employee who was working in the hiomadlor- lorsat some point in their 2 career? 5 Mr. Maheu. Yes, we did. 4 Mr. Madigan. Would you recall that to be around 1968, 5 or do you have a specific recollection? 6 Mr. Maheu: It w”
“rich experience in counterintelligence. 12 And normally I kept outside leaks to anybody in the business inion, O.C. 20003 19 I had men who stayed with me for 11 years, Rocca was with 20 me for 31 years, even though they went into operational situa- 21 410 First Street, ”
“arranged to have Wiley call Cecil Tighe, SRS, the following Monday and for Tighe to advise Wiley to come to Washington in the near future to discuss the matter with Tighe and Gaynor. Apparently, Allen was removing himself from contact with Wiley at about this time. Apparent”
“use my judgment, seek out persons who might be of interest, and take advantage of opportunities which might arise; that I would be given recruited agents to handle as the need arose; that, per the limitation concerning my cover, I was not to engage in actual recruitments, but was”
“corded in the briefs filed by both the plaintiff and the defendent that CIA was, in fact, the Government agency of interest. Close coor dination was maintained during this period with Justice and State. At our request a representative of the U. S. Attorney's Office in New Yo”
“0 TO P SECRET 60 Phone (Alea 202) 544-6000 1 conversations with Seymour Boultin — 2 Mr. Baron. Walt Elder? 3 Mr. Halley. I talked to Walt Elder on the phone. You know 4 the people who are involved in this thing. I have asked for 5 that, I talked to our attorney, Clarke—”
“SEUnE! aruro arity EYES BalY the periods 6-9 October, 27 October-10 December 19’71 and on 3 January 1972.. In addition to physical sur veillance, an observation post was maintained in the 1 5 Statler Hilton Hotel where, observation could be main- tained of the building ”
“regarding the 20 penetration of our own organization. And we worked down to an 21 identity. And the FBI disagreed with us. And I am talking 22 about not a few minutes, but several weeks and months f work. 4 1 0 First Str 23 And the Bureau's attitude was, you have got th”
“IN24738, 7/2/62).. De NW 66000 Docld:32271295 Page 2 Insert for VECIANA McCone insert 205 200 fonzi On August 17, 1978, the Committee deposed John A. McCone, the Director of the Central Intelligence Agency (205) from October, 1961 until April 30th, 1965. (Classified Top Secret te”
“IUP DECKEL Phone (A rea 202) 544-6000 128 1 of it, General Bennett and General Philpott feel that they are 2 embarrassed to refute the fact that they had already been doing 3 the work for the CIA t do halcoone 4 Now, all those things were not ordinary garden variety 5 dai”
“14-00000 5/01 c. Item 17 - William Harvey Approximately 50 documents, virtually all of which concern the estab lishment, maintenance, and use of cover for Subject 4 during his career with the Agency as a Staff Employee from 1947 to 1967. d. Item 27 (1) International Res”
“would be denied as an employee of the Central Intelligence Agency from the date he entered on duty through the date of his departure. Attachment E is a personal letter received from Mr. Whitten after he was notified that his name might be released in connection with declass”
“CEODET OLVIV 1 % 8BOX Record Number 157-10011-10121 1 April 1974 MEMORANDUM FOR: Deputy Director of Security SUBJECT Charles William Wiley Attached herewith for your information is a summary report covering Subject prepared by.CIA Cover Employee Louis W. Vasaly an”
“be denied as an employee of the Central Intelligence Agency from the date he entered on duty through the date of his departure. Attachment E is a personal letter received from Mr. Whitten after he was notified that his name might be released in connection with declassificat”
“7 operations- or projects. He added that there would, have, also been many Wad hoc" actions. "Under questioning, he, stated that it is possible that he' was responsible for as many as 14 to 1.7 ongoing operations and 3 to 6 developmental stage operations. Most of these, o”
“CIA until 1973 for expenses, but was paid $253,000 in cash by Morris Bishop when he was terminated. WARNING NOTICE SENSITIVE INTELLIGENCE SOURCES AND METHODS INVOLVED SECRET RECORD CY E2 IMPDET CL BY 025231 RETURN TO CIA Background Use Only Do Not Reproduce LX-4229 21 77 201-3129”
“cannot accept. New Subject: Release of William Pawley's name 3. It is agreed that an attempt will be made to locate Pawley's next of kin to request their permission to release information pertaining to his relationship with CIA. If the next of kin cannot be indentified or lo”
“worked for the Agency in his application for employment with USIA. WH Division, to whom this request was forwarded, was advised the PERRY was not to diselosa his cast employment with this Agency, a Division, in turn, informed Security or their desires that USIA be informed of”
“the statement, "Under the cover of investigating a leftist campaign to drive U. S. Government spokesmen and recruiters for government agencies from the colleges, I talked over the situation with those listed below, the following report is based on the combined thinking of al”
“recorded, "Jim McCord notified me today that Wiley would arrive in Washing ton, D. C., tonight for a meeting with McCord concerning some Mayday Project that has been assigned to Wiley." On 5 June 1969, Tighe recorded, "Wiley telephoned from New York City on 4 June 1969 to r”
“American trip expense of @2234.72 was offset against income and there is no record of an advance. No foreign travel is reflected in the Federal Income Tax Returns or files for 1966 or 1967. The 1968 Federal income tax return reflects a 55 day trip to Athens, Cairo, Indo-Chin”
“oFonrT Cor-L Sr * : 11 before being expelled. He has visited the USSR, and several Iron Curtain countries, the Far East, Middle East and Africa, Central and South America, Korea and the Republic of China. His interviews at the front in Vietnam with American enlisted men ”
“13-00000 - ----- FT de OVERSEAS FaMiLi article have not sought to reluiu or confirm each and every assertion made by its author, Thomas C. Lucey, Mr. Lucey, despite his citing a'substantial number of inaccuracies, has nonetheless depicted a vast area of what may be termed the”
“TOP SECRET P h o n e (A re a 2 0 2 ) 5 4 4 -6 0 0 0 114 1 Mr. Schwarz. Now, that purports to be from LTG Bennett 2 no Colonel Wune.cis / and has the text in it which you sent on o tto Colonel Wimero7 4 Mr. Phillips. Yes. 5 Mr. Schwarz. And what is your best recollectio”
“IVP DECKEL P hone (A re a 2 0 2 ) 5 4 4 -6 0 0 0 112 1 Mr. Schwarz. And this is a cable releasing officer Willia 2 Broe, authenticating officer David A Phillips, dated Octo- 0 ber 14, 1970, from CIA headquarters to Santiago, CIA. 4 And it says: 5 "Please deliver the fol”
“program are Fred Cook, Mark Lane, Harold Weisberg, all of whom who have been outspoken critics of the FBI.>- / The Central Intelligence Agency, according to Mr. Rocca, was concerned over the appearance of their ex-employees - Victor Marchetti and George O’Toole. he Mr. Rocc”
“IUP DECKEL P h o n e (A re a 2 0 2 ) 5 4 4 -6 0 0 0 141 that moment began cooperating with the Chief of Station. I don’ t Do recall any instance where' there was any indication of hesitancy 01 on his part about doing what he was doing. And I certainly can’t comment a”
“14-00000 CONFIDENTIAL * 4. In summary, the SSU joins those who feel that this book would better have been left unwritten. It is a text replete with names, details, operational information and close personal privileged information based upon the author’s assignments which ”
““ni’ fits Vn I % e # Phone (Area 202) 544-6000 0 YOn mean a source of — Il n Source of information of another agent. Another agency agent. / 0. Do the files of the Agency reflect any matter? 5 A To my knowledge I don’t recall anything like that but A C: ■ it is en”
“Following the approval of the project funding, McCord contacted Lee Pennington, of the Americanism Committee of the American Legion in Washington, D. C., asking, and receiving wholehearted agreement, for Pennington to provide • cover for Wiley’s work. The cover arrangements w”
“through .photographs as an official from CIA headquerters, then located on "E" street in Washington, D.C. Motivated by a degree of naivete and the Agency's subtle reminders that I owed a greater duty to my country than to the military establishment, - I . served as a non-paid,”
“confident all would turn out well. (S)■ 6. After our meeting with Whitten, I spoke with Gunn about how this issue would be handled by the Board. Gunn - believed that it was more than likely that the Board would agree , to protect him and that he would make the strongest arg”
“TOP SECRET 79 Phone (A rea 202) 544-6000 1 Mr. Liebengood. Do you know who accompanied Meier and 2 F. Donald Nixon on this trip to the Dominican Republic, the 5 celebrated trip? 4 Mr. Maheu. No, I do not. 5 Mr. Liebengood. As far as you know, they had nothing to 6 d”
“turn out well. (S) 6. After our meeting with Whitten, I spoke with Gunn about how this issue would be handled by the Board. Gunn believed that it was more than likely that the Board would agree e to protect him and that he would make the strongest argument he could to them. ”
“CIA until 1973 for expenses, but was paid $253,000 in cash by Morris Bishop when he was terminated. WARNING NOTICE SENSITIVE INTELLIGENCE SOURCES AND METHODS INVOLVED SECRET E2 IMPDET CL BY 025231 RECORD COPY NW 65990 Docld:32394065 Page 2 LX-4229 21fa77 201-312966 SECRET”