KEY WATERGATE FIGURE

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP91-00901R000500110047-3
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
8
Document Creation Date: 
December 15, 2016
Document Release Date: 
November 24, 2003
Sequence Number: 
47
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
March 29, 1973
Content Type: 
NSPR
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP91-00901R000500110047-3.pdf577.19 KB
Body: 
M]'.7 i0^:; Tfl`ES Approved For Release 2003MM,','',Cf,[DP91-00901 Key Va.tMl", 7tc FI g_T e James Walter 1M7cCord Jr. WASHINGTON, March 28 -Ever since the police ar- rested five teen inside the headquarters of the Demo- cratic National Committee headquarters last June, in- vestigators and the curious have been asking questions about them --- particularly about the chief of the break- in squad, Janus Nan Walter McCord In the Jr. \Vho was McCord working News for? was his role at the Committee for the Re-elec- tion of the President? How much did he know ;shout who ordered the Watergate operation? Where did he come from? . Only a few of the ques- tions about the Watergate affair and aoour the plan have been a nmvcred. Pre- sunlably sonic of diem were ashi?.t] a,,hcn Mc- Cord testified in i)r ate be- fore a select Sedate commit- tee. McCord was on employe of the Centrr:l lntcu rice Agency for more 1; in o years. Some :,:y he was just a technician, a Ss ordinate whose days were consumed assigning g.uercl , pua,rding safes and gr'::erally s(, urir..c: the C.I.A. ,1("cigivirte 11d- den in the v:aods it :_ang- ley, Va, Reputed Security Chief Others ray lie seas the chief of ell security for tie agen- cy."IIe wat3 ti e No. I man L. I is taco Pec:ut ; , i 'tired Air )-'era, Colo::rl, < ...ert Cord by idi_lil foroier C.LA. iii,cOw-j s\iin :aid, 'fie.:c is in', t,il, recat!s P-lr. P;-c!Tif , v.-bn ila.S just sviitiCll a hob., e 5'- etC )l'"1111, ] in 1'-., lii floc son: S. 1 i. ltltroc:o('tst n at a ri. ctii'g ci :;:?(:0 11 a!i Ili- l'(Irt'_ t:aiun rll )tl,.; 1, Worked as F.B.T. Clerk- Mysterv also shro,irls Mc- Cord's private life. lie rras horn soniewhere in -Ieyes- tltose who ]:now will not say definitely where or when. When he was arrested on Jane 16, 1072, McCord told lse police he wtis born Oct. 1015. 17" did not give the place. Later, ]hail records in- dicated he was horn July 26, Th,se. data wo:: d make the baldish McCord, who has kkeut his sturdy l hysique, either 4f> or 54 years old. Reports have, floated around Washington that he and his wife. Sarah, are both graduates of Itavlor Univer- sity, but officials there say he never attended the school. The first concrc to bit of James Mr-Cord's biography begins with the Federal 1311- reau of Investigation, where he heg;:n as a class: in 1912. IIe ?l,as still a'clerk when, in 19-16, he left, for what rea- son has not been dctcrruioed. In 1945 lie returned to the Star-au as a Special agent. Aid for the Handicapped McCord joined the C.I.A. in 19,i] and is believed to have played a role in the abortive flay of Pigs invasion of Cuba in 1"61. Lttt _ else is I:IOWA of Its in eitll _' ~ncy. :ot'c is al)otit Ccrd's life after h'.s retire- mcin.t in 1`970. lie v.cut to his i,sstor, the \',-alter C. _tnit'1 of the Rockville Uni:eti 1-:i.tltodi;t LI-id stta;d ~sel' :t day P: e!; s o: :ing, for ti(' CG roil. Mr. Sii.ith, s':i?:o gelid at- tr?r..i; 1 church ( r r~.- tit:rd:.v f(r f; of o1c], 1: STATINI`SLTATINTL 000500110047-3 "They are just a lovely family, and wonderful neigh- bors," according to one house- ww?ife living on the cul-do-_ac in Rockville r.-here the Mc- Cords reside in their S33,000 brick home. Taught at College The neighbors say the htc- Cord's son, Michael, is a junior at the Air Force Acad- emy and that their other daughter, Carol Anne, attends the University of ?,taryland. McCord taught at nearby Montgomery College for two semesters in 1911. '[l-,e course, "Industrial and Retail Seca ritv," was described in the school catalogue is "the his- torical, philosophical and legal basis of government and industrial security programs in R. den;ocratic society." McCord now has a new secret. During the 16 clays when he was on'i trial he Spent hours writing, in a spiral nosei:oo;: in the court room. \Vhc'n asked se. hat he was writing, McCord, a pare garious man, even dr.ring th(, trial, would smile but would not answer the question. ..?,J, t'r- ten- lied (iui.,ltot eJ the a,rnil u. Approved For Release 2003/12/03 CIA-RDP91=00901 R000500110047-3 Approved For Release 2031 : F-RDP91-00901 CHARLES BA,RTLETT l' 1 -i The suburban mausoleum housing the CIA's unique collection of intelligence- gathering talents is an unhap- py corner of town under its tough-minded new manage- ment. The CIA had not appeared a / likely candidate . for the woodshed. The agency emerged from Vietnam less scarred than any of the other participants. It has managed its ticklish responsibilities in Laos with admirahle skill and slowly recouped, through per- sistent prudence, the standing that was lost 12 years ago at the Bay of Pigs. The force behind the move to shake up the CIA is Presi- dent Nixon. While Henry His- singer has usually seemed satisfied with the intelligence he's been f tting, Nixon has tended to regard the agency .as a last stand of the old school tie, a vestige of the Eastern estahlishnient 1:-.it he dislikes so inlensciy. It is probable he has not forgiven the CIA for creeling; in I 'V,0 the missile-gaap illusion that worrc>d against his eke don. Moreover the vast coat of photographic ir;teliittcnce, the rich harvest of the satellites' ranging; eyes, has contributed to an ul,co!nfortahie swelling of the intelligence community budget. It scan is now at about $15 billion, enough to raise outside suspicions that secre- cy may be serving as a cush- ion to sof tell the fiscal squeeze that afflicts the rest of gov- ernment. The President's chosen in- strument for the CIA shakeup is James Schlesinger, a 42- year-old recruit from acade- mia who has made his pres- ence felt in a series of kev administration jobs. Solid and self-assured, Schlesinger of- fers a sharp contrast to the "band of brothers" style of leadership with which Allen Dulles ran the CIA. The new director did not want the job but he has moved into it hard. His conduct suggests his embrace of a thesis that the CIA has been functioning in a cozy, self-protected world which has grown somewhat isolated in suburbia and more remote than it should be from those who make the policies. Schlesinger appears lx'nt on disrupting the traditions that defer to the intelligence mores of an earlier era and deny the new importance of technology. He is going after some of the protective devices. Ile wants estimators who will lay their jedgmenis on the line instcau of hedging so they are never \ holly right or wholly wron;r. lie has taken an ax to the personnel deadwood, seemi .'iy undcierrred by his p! cci :eesscrs' fear of provok- ing discharged e;w 1 oes into becoi~iin; security risks. It all adds up to rough treat- ment of an elite agency and complaints are stirring at what some describe as need- less brutality. Schlesinger is criticized more for his style than for what he is doing, but the bitterness is enlarged by lingering resentments against the callous way in which the President replaced Richard 1/ Helms, the previous director who had staked a strong claim to his subordinates' loyalty. Schlesinger's track record in Washington portends that he knows what he is doing. There is no graceful way tol shake up an agency. But he will need to shift, at some point, from being the CIA's shaker to ]king its leader and he may find he has paid a price in demoralization, per- haps in the loss of men he can ill afford to lose, for his pre- cipitous manner of taking command. If Schlesinger can make the CIA leaner without causing its employes to feel they are being puiushcd, his intrusion on the rn.,,rb'=.e innusoleum will be a healthy thing. It is pat- ently clear that an era of wary clotenle is not going to diminish the need for good intelligence and it is useful to have a Wise outsider examine an operation long run by in- siders. ITAT Approved For Release 2003/12/03 : CIA-RDP91-00901 R000500110047-3 1 YOR{ TILtES Approved For Release 20031'1U` b&ZF DP91-00901R C.I.A. AIDE TO TELL OF I. T .T. DEALINGS, Official to Testify on Chile in Unusual Arrangement By EILEEN SHANAHAN Special to The New York 1 of WASHINGTON, March 26- The Central Intelligence Agen- cy and a special Senate sub- committee agreed today on an unusual arrangement whereby a C.I.A. official will testify to- morrow about his dealings with the International Telephone and Telegraph Corporation in connection with the political situation in Chile. Events at issue occurred in 1970 and 1971, before and im- mediately after the election of President , Salvador Allende Gossens, a Marxist. Testimony already heard by the Senate subcommittee on multinational corporations shows that I.T.T. officials, including Chairman Harold S. Geneen had repeated / contacts with William V. Proc, (set . v:iutout. dis- clnsmc rccnned "i1 it :! eturit~ and' hs;' r. t t'. d , utc ly lore it then the C.I.A.'s director of clandestine activities in Latin America. Company documents appear to show that Mr. Broc endorsed the view of the company that) all possible steps should be l taken to prevent Mr. Allende's accession to power-including` attempts to geaerate a take- over by the military. System Used Sparingly The arrangements made by the subcommittee, after ex- tended neotiations with Janes R. Schlesinger, the new head I of the C.I.A., %%ill permit thel publication, after censorship, l of Mr. )`.roe's testimony before a closed session of the sub- connmittee. This is the sarne system that was Used last year by the senate ' r~acd Services Corn-I nii'.tce ;iir case of Maj. Gen. John l,. L.cyn ic, who eras de-1 r,~[,t?1 ,~,,;irr; discosures that c.rdered bu:ui~ nes rt;i. in that v:cic c` C. not .9 . d h.:? his sup. i !ors. it 1 Iii , etting 1 it Pr._.idcnt~ ]as tiuc/sit!r.er the United State:: c rvnm,ux:c r in Korea. STATINTL 00500110047-3 STATINTL It is unusual for any testi- l.mny of an official of the C.I.A. to be made public. C.I.A. cffi- c .Is said the only previous in- terces they could remember)I the testimony of Allen W.I Dulles. then C.I.A. director, he-i fore the Congressional Joint! i:conomi": Committee in the. late nineteen-fifties when he; expressed alarm that the Sovieti economy was growing faster than the American, and the testimony of Francis Garv Fowers, the U-2 pilot who was shot down and captured by the Russians. Approved For Release 2003/12/03 : CIA-RDP91-00901 R000500110047-3 Approved For Release 2003/12?.b :MI-l791-00901R ~ L, Quo 1. V2, STATISTATINTL ST TI TL 005 01100 7-3 U CIA equivalent of James that time, the Agency was a Bond's "itL" respectable haven for liberal Instead, according to Cl," intellectuals. During the Me- watchers here, he is being pro Carthy era he was investi- moted to i he U.S. embassy in rated for alleged Communist London. They regard this as a associations but was cleared. "kick upstairs." hi Fact, he had never been a In 1967, it was revealed that Communist synipaihizer. He )Meyer was in char-an of 120"Isoot] became as ardent for the ertly funding Encounter ma g-I Cold 'lW,ar as he had been for azine and other organization! . the United World Federalist Last stnner, he became the increment. object of further notoriety ?,Ieyer?', assignment to Lon- when he asked the I\ew fork don is seen by CIA watchers publisher ]Ia rper and Row to 1 as a part of the pure which show the CIA proofs of a book 10 agency is experiencing un? Wee published, called " Tne der its now director, James Politics of Heroin in South- Schlesinger, Reports in Wash- east Asia." The book linked lagoon this week say that the the CIA with the drug; traffic 18,400 pt>rsotutel is to in that area, he cut by 10 percent by June Meyer later denied that :1130. Schlesinger, a business- had been his intention to -Sit]). ratan with no intellit'ence hack- pre=s the book, ground, is said to be ma);ing Few details . are 1:1!o?.v'na throuth?goina reappraisal of about the nature or extent of the CIA's function's and op- CIA operations in En.r land. & R 57i c n'.5- Sources here say that there is a large base for covert action in premises within a few min- utes wall:. from the U.S. cnt- hassy in Grosvenor : quere. This is the heaclgtuu'teis fcr covert action in ;vestern and ea:-tern l:uropo and the \ledi- tcrrartcan. It ""as ill o v c d! front Paris to I,vndon A the time of Con. Charles no (gaulle's qurn'rel With Y \'fo land the United `,talcs. The CI.\ %~ ork cin : 1} with IlritisJl intellir,!tre and Clain; not to enwaee in ciwk,,tiac l activities in l)rii:eil. 11c~'cr's UM (?(,T is il !Agency's new station chief in' most brilliant men of his year London is Cord Meyer, hither-!at Yale University in the early to the agency's assistant de-j 1910's. fle lost an eye in a Ma- pnty director of plans in Wash-`nine landing in the PacWe war ington. I and wrote a short story about The planning department of,the experience called "16'avesj the CIA is responsible fori of Darkness." After the war, espionage and clandestine op-i he became a passionate advo- crations. Detractors of thei cate of world government -nd CIA call it the "Departmcntiwrote a hook on this subteet. of Dirty Tricks." He was a hero to the student Meyer was in line for pro-.generation of the late 1970'x. motion to be deputy director] He joined the CIA in 193 at of Maus--"UhP," the rtearesta the urging of Alan Dulles. At Approved For Release 2003/12/03 : CIA-RDP91--00901 R000500110047-3 4 THE MANCHESTER GURADIAN 22 March 1973 Approved For Release 2003/12/03: CIA-RDP91-00901RO planner i lan a 1L i.~, N~~ ] [21.], 110 11 -From PETER JENKINS, Washington, March 21 One of the Central Intelli? moved from Paris to London Bence Agency's most famous when General de Gaulle guar. "dirty tricksters" is to be its relied with NATO and the United States. new station chief in London. The CIA works closely with He is Mr Cord Meyer, hitherto British intelligence and claims the assistant deputy director of not to enzaze in clandestine .plans. The Planning Depart. activities in Britain. It operates ment of the CIA is responsible several communications inter- ception stations. The -special for espionage and clandestine relationship " between Britain operations. Detractors of the and the US is still alive in the CIA call it the " department of intellicence field. For exam- dirty tricks." pie. Britain has no satellite sur- Mr Meyer was in line for pro- veillance capability of her own motion to be deputy director of and relies on information?shar- plans--" DDP " t It e nearest in; with the US. CIA equivalent to James Bond's Mr Meyer. who will he in boss " M." Instead, according to charze of all this, has had a fas- CIA watchers here, he is being cinating career. He was one of promoted to the US Embassy in the most brilliant men of his London. They regard this as a year at Yale in the early 1940s. kick upstairs- He lost an eve in it marine In 1067. it was revealed that landing in the Pacific war and Mr Meyer wag in charge of wrote a short story about the covertly funding Encounter experience called " Waves of magazine and other or;anisa Darkness," which is regarded as tions. Last summer he became a minor American classic. Alter the object of further notoriety the war he became a passionate when he asked the New York advocate of world government publishers Harper and Row to and Wrote a book on the sub- show the CIA proofs of a book ject. He was a hero of the stu- since published called "The dent generation of the late Politics of ileroin in South-east 1940s Asia." The boo'- linked the CIA He joined the CIA in 1953 at with drug tragic in Southeast the urging of Alan Dulles. At Asia. Meyer later denied that it that time the agency was a had been his intention to sup- respectable haven for liberal press the book. intellectuals. D u r i n g the Few details are known about McCarthy era he was investi- the nature or extent of CIA Sated for alleged Communist operations in Britain. Sources associations but cleared. In fact here say that there is a large lie had never been a Coin. base for covert action in pre- monist sympathiser. mises within a few minutes' lI e y e r ' s assignment to walk of the US Embassy ii. London is seen by CIA Grosvenor Square. This is the watchers as part of the purge headquarters for covert action which the acncv~ is experienc- in Western and Eastern Europe in; under it; new director, and the Mediterranean. It was James Schlesinger. Approved For Release 2003/12/03 : CIA-RDP91-00901 R000500110047-3 Ci-iICAGO, ILL. t STATINTL SUN-TIMES Approved_FAr Release 2003/12/03: CIA-RDP91-00 T1T6UAq 10047-3 M - '536,108 S -709,123 MAR 1 l 1973 Mfg irk ~v being, but never beat him, he said. The slightly balding Downey was released to he at the bed. side of his mother, Marv V. Downey, 75, who suffered a 6 0 severe stroke Wednesday, She 1 ' l" remained in critical, but ini- J 1 proved condition, and visited twice with her son. Flanked by his brother Wil- liani and sister Joan Walsh, Downey was composed and joked occasionally. Asked learned the derails of his open- a b o it t any possible value ation before they camured his gained from his time spent in 41 ly:,t?' ~?:~,i ~ mss' NEW BRITAIN, Conn. - team of agents inside China Green Basket Prison, he repi- uldn Freed CIA a -cut John T. prior to shooting down his Bed: "I wo 't recommend it , Do". ney said Tuesday he was plane.. for character cter building," -uh;ected to intensive ques- (CIA agents operating in Asked with whe the he would re- tiotti;tg by his Communist cap- dati?.rroti revs are generally main with the CIA, he said: jri and told them "about ev- excluded from a Inoxled,e of At Present, I would say not." ery bit of information I had. any of the agency's activities Downey, y,-ho joined the CIA Downev, 42, rcuu'ecd here other than their immediate after he graduated from Yale londay night after more than