NEVER LOST HOPE, FECTEAU ASSERTS

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP83-00764R000300070004-9
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
2
Document Creation Date: 
November 11, 2016
Document Release Date: 
August 6, 1999
Sequence Number: 
4
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
December 16, 1971
Content Type: 
NSPR
File: 
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PDF icon CIA-RDP83-00764R000300070004-9.pdf132.68 KB
Body: 
i Approved For ReI a'se 1999/09/271:, CPYRGHT STATINTL NEVER LOST ROTE, )IlK 3,ZUE9 *If 3-00o4R000300070004-9 CPYRGHT Mr. Fectcau' who is 43 years old and whose home is in Lynn, M 9 ass, Li on three of the -J .11.x;'( American n prisoners as John T. FEC E Y ilJl 7 ASSER~S~ howney 41 of New Britain , Says He Was Alone 'So Long He Isn't Used to Talking PTT(~HNTxVTTTn, n T'J 1'e (UPI)-Richard G. Fectcau sai( today that during his 10 year: of imprisonment in China 11, was in solitary for so mucl time I'm not tised to conversa Lion.?' Mr. Fectcau made the stale meet at the first news confer. cnce, held since he and Mary Ann Harbert were released by China on Sunday. Both were taken to the Valley Forge Army Hospital here yesterday. Speaking in a, barely audible voice and wringing his hands, Mr. Fectcau, who is 6 feet tali and weighs about 175 pounds, said that during his entire pe- riod of captivity "I never gave up hope." He said, "you get used to" solitary confinement, then added, "that's my prob- lem." Miss Harbert, captured in Chinese waters while on a pleasure cruise between Hong Kong and Japan iii April, 1968, posed for 10 minutes for pho- tographers a short time after Mr. Fecteau's news conference but would answer no questions. A hospital spokesrtian said she would hold a news conference at 1' P.M. tomorrow. Responds to Questions Mr. Fectcau, wearing a `blue hospital robe over his pajamas, stood before a brightly lit Christmas tree during the news conference, which he opened by saying: "I came in here to give a short. statement but I do not wish to answer questions at this time. I'm in good health." But then he began to respond to questions relating to some of his experiences - during his captivity. He said lie was in a prison camp either in or 'near Peking and that the only other prison- ers in his cellblock were other Americans. He said that during the middle years of his im- prisonment, he had a Chinese cellmate but that other times he was alone. Conn.; Capt. Philip Smith, 37 of the Air Force, and Lieut. Comdr. Robert J. Flynn of the Navy. Mr. Downey, who is still in prison, was captured with Mr.. Fectcau when their military aircraft was forced down in Chinese territory in 1952, dur- ing the Korean war'. No Comment on Spy Charge The United States has said only that the Iwo were civilian employes of the United States Army at the time of their capture. Unoffiical sources identified them as employes of the Central Intelligence Agency. Asked at the news confer- ence if lie was a spy, Mr. Fec- tcau replied, "No comment." Miss IIarbdrt, 26, of Palo Alto, Calif., sat on a couch, with a nurse in lyr second- floor hospital room clad in a light green dress when she met photographers. She smiled broadly when a newsman shouted, "Welcome home," but said nothing. Mr. Fectcau said he was able to read newspapers and niaga?? nines during his imprisonment. He said lie knew the United States had put a man on the moon, that President Nixon planned to visit China and that lenry Kissinger the presidential adviser had been to China. A medical bulletin released by the hospital said Mr. Fectcau and Miss Harbert were fatigued but otherwise ? normal. Both complained of eye disorders, which Chinese doctors diag-, nosed as trachoma. The hospital said both had been eating and sleeping welll. For R1ea'e -1999110912 1writing and walking outside 111AL1IINGTOti FO3 ,Approved for Relee 1999/g9EC1Q1RDP83-00764R000300070004-9 CPYRGHT U.S. ~won't Concede. Or Deny Fecteau was on Spy fission; clined to concede that one of the two Americans released by China was on an espionage mission when captured in 1952. But it was learned they o longer deny the charges. Expressing reluctance yes- terday to talk about "so darned sensitive a matter," government sources neverthe- less said "we are not arguing" any more with the Chinese who insist that Richard Fee- teau and John Thomas Dow- ney were engaged in ! espio- nage when arrested. Fecteau was' released Mon- day after serving 19 years, of a turned to the United States along with Mary Ann Harbert, an American from Menlo Park, Calif.,`who was arrested. In 1968. Downey remains in China, but his sentence was reduced from life to a term scheduled to end in about five years. ? Speculation , that Fecteau and Downey might have been,. dropping Nationalist Chinese agents on the mainland as charged was raised to a possi billty Monday when Fecteau's former wife was reported by' several newsmen as saying' that "the Chinese haven't been lying." She was said to have ex plained, "It's very involved and I'm not supposed to get? into it. He was a civilian work- ing for the U.S. government. I know what'he was doing, but I- :can't 'say. Let me put it this way-?the Chinese haven't been lying," Mrs. Fecteau denied later that she said this, but she would not elaborate. Two re porters who interviewed Mrs.; Fecteau quoted the same lan- guage in their Monday stories.. When asked about Mrs. Fee- teau's reported assertion,. State Department spokesman Robert J. McCloskey said yes- torday, "I don't see any use- ful basis on which I could, at this time, discuss his previous employment." But other officials said pri- vately that the administebtion` no longer is following, the: original U.S. cl aracterization ,that the charges , against' Fete For Release 1999/09/27 CIA-RDP83-00764R000300070004-9 STATINTL