REQUEST FOR MEETING WITH DCI
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
CIA-RDP81-00142R000600100001-7
Release Decision:
RIPPUB
Original Classification:
K
Document Page Count:
12
Document Creation Date:
December 9, 2016
Document Release Date:
June 4, 2001
Sequence Number:
1
Case Number:
Publication Date:
November 24, 1978
Content Type:
MF
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Body:
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F-7 i
24 November 1978
MEMORANDUM FOR: Director of Central Intelligence
VIA: Deputy Director of Central Intelligence
FROM: John F. Blake
Deputy Director for Administration
SUBJECT: Request for Meeting with DCI
REFERENCE: Letter from Wm. J. Casey (ER 78-3970)
1. ACTION REQUESTED: See RECOIND.IENDATION, Paragraph 4.
2. BACKGROUND: Mr. William J. Casey, former OSS officer
and now counsel-far the New York law firm of Rogers & Wells,
has written to say that he is at work on a book on the value
of clandestine operations in the war against Hitler. He
proposes to call you after the Thanksgiving holidays to
discuss his book and its value to the Agency's mission, and.
to ask your assistance in gaining access to OSS documents
which have hitherto been denied him. [Letter, Tab A.]
Mr. Casey, who served during Warld War II as Chief of the
European SI section of OSS [see Biographic material, Tab B]
has levied a number of requests under the Freedom of Infor-
mation Act in support of his book. [See Tab C for a list of
his requests and.our responses.] The three requests which are
still pending cannot be completed for some months; the DDO unit
which is doing the search is heavily backlogged. Meanwhile, to
provide some interim material for Mr. Casey to work on, we have
arranged to make available similar information already released
STATINTL to another requester, This will be sent to our
reading room in Rosslyn or Mr. asey's perusal on 30 November.
He has been informed of the time and place.
STATINTL another long-time customer, sent Mr. Casey
STATINTL an_. opy 01 his new book, Mr. Casey
SIHIINIL that he has been granted material for which Casey is still
STATINTL waiting. In fact, requests have been more modest
and better documented than Mr. Casey's. One of Mr. Casey's
requests for example, is for the reports on all of the JEDBURGH
teams which were sent into Germany (he was not satisfied with
the summary which we provided at first). There were 92 such
teams, and their reports are scattered through 104 volumes of
material, comprising almost 10,000 pages. At last report, the
OSS researcher had found 49.
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Mr. Casey understandably feels that he should receive
better service and has frequently complained to IPS officers
of the delays. Unfortunately, our backlog requires him to
wait his turn. We have made considerable efforts to provide
material responsive to his request, short-cutting wherever
we could. We cannot, in fairness to the other requesters,.
give him-additional special priority. Eventually, our OSS
holdings will be transferred to National Archives where they
can be made available to all researchers. The OSS materials
have been undergoing systematic classification review since
1974, but it will be at least another year before this review
can be completed.
3. STAFF POSITION: Mr. Hetu has suggested that he,
rather than you, should take Mr. Casey's call, and that he
will then decide whether you and Mr. Casey should meet.
4. RECOMMENDATION: Recommend that Mr. Casey's call
be routed to the Office of Public Affairs.
Attachment
APPROVED
irector o entry me igence
DISAPPROVED:
Director o central Intel igence
DATE :
Distribution:
Orig - DCI (for return to DDA) w/atts
1 DDCI w/atts
i - ER w/atts
1 - PA', w/atts
DDA SubI w/atts
DDAChrono
1 IPS Chrono
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=AM P. ROGERS
If
N A. W ELLS
SAR L.,217ASSY .
ENE L 80NDY, JR.
7ERICK W 5. LORENZEN
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_LEN LOCHNER
W_RT E_ FRISCH
_IAM 7.11 O=GEL
_IAM R. GLENDON
=NE T. ROS SIDES
MERICA P. GLICK
-AVANTE G. PEPROTTA
VAS H. Mc BRYDE
N B. LOUGHRA1
P. LARKIN,JR.
-ILEY GO y07SKY
BERT C. EARNSHAW
ER A. CLARK
-HESTER GRANT
,ERT 0. LARSEN
^0 W. aFRNSTEIN
RLES A. SIM4ONS
3PH DIAMOND
HON? F. E53AYE
-1ARO N. WINFIELD
aN J. SAE#HY
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WARD O. STEVEN30N, JR WASHINGTON, D.C. 20
ALAN M. 51554H l //////l 1 T. ELEPHONE (002) 331-778
IKGREENAWALT / 0! /? IN~T'ER NAT/OVAL TELEX 249 G. TATE WILLIAM S
JOHN H. LIFTIN
24, RUE GE MADRID
HOWARD T SPROw
TELEPHONE (212) 972-7000
75008-PARIS. FRANCE
LOREN C. BERRY
GEORGE 0. DESHENSPY
INTERNATIONAL TELEX
TELEPHONE 522.42. 50
TELEX 293567
C. GRANT ANDERSON
PETER J. WALLISON
RCA 224493
--
JAMES B. WEIDNER
I T T 424493
ONE FINSEURY SQUARE
RONALD E. BRACKETT
LONDON EC2, EN G LAND
FR IEDA A.WALLI SON
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TELEPHONE: OI. 62&.010
NORMAN WISE
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TELE% 884984
MALONEY
JAMES J
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JOHN H. CARLLY
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CABLE ADDRESSES
MELVIN L.SCHWEITZER
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PAUL N. HOPKINS
"YOLKLAW
NEW YORK
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ALEXANDER MARQUARDT
WASHINGTON
WALAW
PETER W. WILLIAMS
"EURIAW" PAR14
,JON1 LYSETT NELSON
NOVe1T~ber 11
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19143
"USLAW LONDON
WALTER R. BAdLEY
STEPHEN FROLING
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STATINTL
Admiral Stanfield Turner
Director
Central Intelligence Agency
Washington D.C. 20505
Dear Admiral Turner:
I am writing a book on the value of clandestine
operations - intelligence, deception, support of resistance,
guerilla action - in the war against Hitler.
I believe this can help public understanding of
the value of good information and assessments and the
necessity to have a structure on which to build these
capabilities if our country and its interests should come
under attack. I enclose a talk I had occasion to make a
few years ago to show you what I have in mind. This
speech resulted in my being persuaded by friends sharing
an interest in national security that I should develop it
into a comprehensive account of clandestine activities in
the European war.
I have two requests to make of you:
1. About two years acro I requested your informa-
tion and privacy office to let me have'a copy of a report
which John Oakes_ and Edward weissmuller_haclwritten in 1.946
on .the. operation of turned agents.. I was told, at"about the
time you were coming on board at'CIA, that you would have
to personally decide. on this request because it related to
protecting sources. For a year and a half tnow I have heard
nothing further. I would urge'that this material can now
be released in view of the fact that a report on the British
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-2-
operation of turned German agents written in 1946 was
published about 10 years ago. (The Double Cross System
by Sir John Masterman - in MI-5 during the war.) Just
last night I read Ronald Lewin's "Ultra. Goes to War"
(published in England and to be published here by McGraw-
Hill), which spells out the relationship between our reading
of German wireless messages and the operation of controlled
agents. After all, in these activities we were, during
World War II, amateurs under British tutelage and I would
think it would be hard to justify withholding a report by
two junior officers after similar post-operational reports
by an. officer at a high level in British deception work
have been published. The British Cabinet has commissioned
Michael Howard, a distinguished military historian at
Oxford, to write a volume on deception for the British
Official History.of World War II. So I hope you will
approve my seeing the report on controlled agents which
John Oakes and Edward Weissmuller- prepared in 1946-1947
STATINTL and which when director of. CIA's Information
and Privacy Section, had identified.
2. I would like to come in to visit you to talk.
about.how my book can be helpful to your mission and how
the agency may be more helpful to my work. I am probably
the only one still around who had personal. experience with
the full range of American clandestine activity in the
European Theatre during World War II. I think the story
should be told in a factual and comprehensive manner. My
manuscript is now in publishable form, but I want to leave
no stone unturned which might make it more accurate and
more useful.
I have, incidentally, talked to all my still
living colleagues who had senior responsibility in intelli-
gence and resistance movements in the countries of Western
Europe and Poland as well. I will be in Europe. until the
week after Thanksgiving and I will call your office when I
return to see if I can arrange a visit.
91t NJ 919 91 Aou
J3
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Mr. Casey is lawyer and author, soldier and diplo-
mat, banker and regulator. He has also been active
in business and in educational, civic, and humani-
tariun enterprises. He is now Counsel to the New,
York, Washington, and Paris law firm of Rovers
& Wells. He was Chairman of the Securities and
Exchange Commission in 1971-73, Under Secre-
tary of State for Economic Affairs in 1973-74,
and Chairman and President of the Export-Import
Bank of the United States in 1974-75. Mr. Casey
has served on the General Advisory Committee on
Arms Control, the Commission on the Organiza-
tion of the Government for the Conduct of Foreign
Policy, and the Presidential Task Force on Inter-
national Development. He is now a member of the
President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board.
During World War 11, he served as a naval officer
and a civilian in the Office of Strategic Services
and was Chief of OSS Intelligence in Europe in
~}}
1944-45. From 1945 until resuming government
law and
service in 1971, Mr. Casey practiced
wrote books on legal, financial, and economic sub-
jects. He has served as President of the Interna-
tional Rescue Committee, President of the Long
Island Association, trustee of Fordham University
and Catholic. Charities, and director of various
business corporations.
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CASEY, WILLIAM J(OSEPH)
Mar. 13, 1913- United States government 4-
Address: b. Securities and Exchange Commis
sion, 500 N. Capitol St., N.W., Washington.
D .C. 20549; h. Glenwood Rd., Roslyn Harbor,
spring of 1971 as chairman of the Securities and
Exchange Commission, the federal monitor,"
agency for the securities industry, William J'
Casey requested from Congress broad statutory
authority that could radically change Wall Stree`.
relationship with Washington. Casey's intention;
however, was not to discourage self-regulation e-
the stock exchanges, but to step in when self-re."
ulation fails, in order to protect investors from
recurrence of the Wall Street crisis of 1969-1t
-1r pen-} in f'iiv T,w h, hac had wide experienC :..
a decisive, swift-acting "doer." His chief earlier I
involvement with the securities market was as a
titure capitalist willing to take risks, as he once
nlained, because of the "interest, satisfaction,
experience that comes from investment and ac
tivve participation in new enterprises concerned
,rich development and change in our society."
William Joseph Casey was born in Elmhurst,
Queens County, on Long Island, New York on
Nt.trch 13, 1913. While growing up in Queens he
was so energetic that the other youngsters on his
block used to call him Cyclone. He graduated
from Fordharn University with the B.A. degree in
1934 and then began legal training at St. John's
University Law School, obtaining the LL.B. de-.
erne in 1.937. He was admitted td the New York
bar the foilowing year. In 1954 he was admitted
to the bar of the United States District Courts
for the southern and eastern districts of New York
acrd in 1961, to the bar of the District of Colum-
l'i:r. where he practised before the Federal Com-
:nrmications Commission.
During World War II Casey worked as an as-
.i.t:int to David K. E. Bruce, who had helped to
,,rC:inize the Office of Strategic Services, in co-
,,. !inatin, the activities of the French Resistance
1,i,-pnr.uorv to the Normandy landings of the At-
7 111 17'0011,;. For the last two years of the war he
n?d ruiner Bruce as chief of OSS intelligence
r,tiuns in the European theatre of operations.
I') i7--1S C:,,ey was employed in Washington,
I ! t :, as spe-cal counsel to the Small Business Com-
:eh e of the United States Senate. Having be-
'nnr interested in international relations through
1- wartime activities, in 194S he served as asso-
-rtr- general counsel at the European headquar-
t?r, for the Marshall Plan. In that post he resumed
iii, association with Bruce, who at that time ad-
ministered the Marshall Plan as director of the
F. ononic Cooperation Administration mission to
trance.
After the soar Casey also began teaching at
:? York University, where he lectured in tat
!..v from 1948 to 1962. During part of the same
period, from 1950 to 1962, he also lectured at the
Pnrr?tising Law Institute in New York. In collab-
oration with Jacob K. Lasser he wrote several
honks on subjects in which he specialized, includ-
ing Tax Planning on Excess Profits (1951), Tax
yh'?Itered Investments (1952), Executive Pay Plans,
%`)52-1.95.3 (1953), and Tax Shelter for the Fam-
ilY (19.33), all of which were published by Busi-
ness Reports. A second edition of the last-named
book was published in 1955 by the Institute for
Bnciness Planning, a subsidiary of Prentice-Hall.
Becoming a member of the editorial board of
se Institute for Business Planning, Casey wrote
edited for that publishing firm about thirty
s, some of them manuals, on tax, real estate,
?.-estment late, and other business and financial
ejects. During 1965 he produced desk books is
rou.:nting, estate planning, law, real estate, tax
arming (second edition), and mutual funds.
An^ong his other books are How to Buy and Sell
t."nd (1966 ), How to Raise Money to Make
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Money (1966), How to Build and Preserve Ex-
ecutive Wealth (1967) and Encyclopedia of Mu
tual Fund Investment Planning for Security and
Profit (1968). With the editorial staff of the In-
stitute for Business Planning he wrote How Fed-
.
eral Tax Angles Multiply Real Estate Profits (1963)
Meanwhile, Casey practised law as a partner of
the New York firm of Hall, Casey, Dickler
Howley and the Washington, D.C. firm of Scrib-
ner, Hall, Casey, Thornburg & Thompson. "I was
never in a law firm where I wasn't bringing in
75 percent of the business," Casey once remarked.
as quoted in the New York Times (March 26.
1971). He was also directly involved in the se-
curities industry, both as an investor and as a di-
rector of several business ventures, including the
Roosevelt Raceway and the Fund of America, and
he had a part in the founding of the Kalvar Cor-
poration, a New Orleans-based manufacturer.
Through his law practice and various enterprises
he amassed a sizable fortune. His annual income
was estimated at $250,000.
One of Casey's law partners was Leonard W.
Hall, chairman of the Republican National Com-
mittee from 1953 to 1957. Also a dedicated Re-
publican, Casey has served the party in several
important roles besides contributing to its cam-
paign coffers. In 1960 he headed a foreign policy
resgarch group engaged in preparing position
papers for the Republican Presidential candidate,
Richard Nixon, whom he had met when Nixon
was Vice-President.
Casey himself ran for elective office in 1968,
seeking the Republican nomination for a seat in
the United States House of Representatives. His
opponent in the primary was a Barry Goldwater
supporter, Steven B. Derounian, whose conservative
convictions left Casey by.comparison a moderate
who won the backing of Republican Senator Jacob
K. Javits. In the Third New York Congressional
District, on the north shore of Long Island, Casey
addressed upper-middle-class voters of consider-
able political and financial acumen. Discussing
his ideas concerning the securities industry in his
campaign speeches, he proposed a broadening of
.LLLIII L1811 UUL LLLO LLLL 1f..DL LJ a.L LI.L-L+ 3CUL3 s: L -- -L- f
ber of families whose incomes exceeded $10,600 i
had increased eightfold, the number of stockhold-
ers had increased only threefold. The country's
economy would be stronger, he argued, if more
families had a share in it through stock owner-
ship. He recommended an increase in profit-shar-
ing plans and the financing of stock purchases in
much the same way that the purchase of an auto-
mobile or some household appliance is financed.
His losing to Derounian in the primary election
of June 23, 1968 by no means curtailed Casey's
activities in public life. Later in that year he was
elected chairman of the executive committee of
the International Rescue Committee, as a director
of which he had, visited refugee camps in South
Vietnam and Hong Kong during the preceding
April. He took part in the successful campaign in
1968 of Richard Nixon for the Presidency. The
following year he became the founder and chair-
man of the Citizens Committee for Peace with
Security, which supported the President's anti-
ballistic missile program. An advertisement that
the committee placed in newspapers to promote
the ABM proposal stirred up a controversy after
it was established that fifty-five of the 344 signers
of the ad had connections with the defense indus-
try. During 1969, also, Nixon named Casey to the
Advisory Council of the United States Arms Con-
trol and Disarmament Agency. When his nomina-
tion came before the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee for confirmation, Casey clashed with
Senator J. William Fulbright over the ABM ad-
vertisement, but the committee approved his
appointment.
"I've made all the money in business that my
family could ever spend," Casey was quoted as
saying during his campaign for Congress in 1966.
. I want to do something more meaningful and
I'm convinced that with my qualifications I can
make a real contribution in public office." He was,
therefore, ready to accept the $40,000-am-year post
on the Securities and Exchange Commission, to
which President Nixon named him on February 2,
1971. Soon afterward the Senate Bankin4 Com-
mittee approved his nomination by a vote of nine
to three, but hearings on his appointment were
reopened in early March as a result of disclosures
in. the press regarding Casey's involvement as a
defendant in.three civil cases between. 1962 and
1965.
One . of the lawsuits concerned a plagiarism
charge in which Casey was named because of his
membership on the editorial board of the Institute
for Business Planning. A question of mistrust arose-
when Casey changed his testimony at his second
Senate committee hearing, admitting that it was
he and not the judge who had taken-the initiative
in having, the record of the trial sealed. Another
suit had been brought by a stockholder of the
electronics company Advancement Devices Inc.,
of which Casey was chairman and a director. The
claim of the dissatisfied investor was settled out of
court. In the third suit, still pending and dormant
since 1968, the Kalvar-Corporation was alleged to
r- s'nra N' -r nTOrf APT-TY 1 97' i1 72 CURRENT BIOGRAPHY 1912
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lftwNW,
The lawsuits, Casey maintained, were min
masers, the sort of usual legal battles that an ac-
tive businessman might be expected to have to
fight, Some Senators, according to Newsweek
(March Z2, 1971), felt that Casey's "rough-and-
tumble background" would be an asset in cop:!! 17
with the problems awaiting him on the Securities
and Exchange Commission. "Indeed," the New-
week writer reported, "not a few observers note
that Casey's career bore an uncommon resem-
blance to that of industrialist Joseph P. Kennedy,
-,,,-ho, after making a fortune in daring and in-
herently risky ventures, became the first and per-
haps the toughest and most effective chairman of
the SEC in its stormy 37-year history."
ing month, and with Senator William Proxmire
strongly dissenting, the Senate Banking Commit-
and was designated by Nixon as chairman of the
five-man commission for a term expiring on Juno
5, 1974. Casey's predecessor, Hamer H. Bud? e,
who resigned as chairman, had preferred to thin:
of the commission as five equal members rather
servers predicted that Casey would play a muc^
more dominant and aggressive role than Bud-,,.
who had taken a somewhat laissez-faire attitude:
in carrying out the SEC mandate of promotia
fair competition and otherwise safeguarding the
interests of the public and investors against mrti'
practices in the securities and financial markets.
Assuming the SEC chairmanship at a crude'
time for the stock markets, Casey faced the re
sponsibility of recommending solutions to . such
problems as a paper-work jam because of an un-
precedented volume of trading; operating break-
downs that had forced 129 brokerage houses into
liquidation or merger within a two-year period
consumer protests that small investors were rc:
receiving fair treatment; and the question . t,
whether to allow membership on the New Yer
and American stock exchanges to mutual fu:_:'
and other money-managing institutions. In his
testimony in November 1971 before: the House
Commerce Committee's subcommittee consider':g:
stock market difficulties, Casey took the positicu
that the traditional self-regulation of the securitie;
industry-under government, or SEC, supervision
proved." He told the Congressmen that the SEQ
requestedtnot new statutory powers, but rather a'
adequate budget and personnel to make full u_'
of the powers it already had. The following mots:::
Congress accordingly voted the SEC an additio.
$1,500,000, which was used to hire more law er,
accountants, and other specialists to carry ou_
agency's work.
At the end of the year, however, on. completion
of a three-volume SEC study of the trout-11,; 1=
setting the securities industry in, recent
Casey asked Congress, which had Dade
t+t),ti c.L~ LU p)tUCeeL li,tc,CUty "Vila ct 5C.)I:LtLiU1L u
tl;e pear collapse of the securities markets in 1969-
70? In a letter to Congress in late December 1971,
-,,ansmitting the "study of unsafe and unsound
practices," Casey asked for greater control over
the stock exchanges as well as the National Asso-
ci:ttion of Securities Dealers, which regulates the
u, er-the-counter market. He described SEC's au-
thority as "an illogical patchwork of provisions
which falls short of giving the commission au-
thority to act promptly and effectively where a
title, or a proposed rule, is or might be injurious
to the public interest."
Also in his transmittal letter Casey named four
"critical areas" in which the SEC needed to apply
:additional statutory -authority: the processing of
securities transactions, the rule-making powers of
self-regulatory organizations, the enforcement of
the rules of these organizations, and the admin-
istration of the disciplinary action undertaken by
therm. He asserted that his ultimate goal was to
restore the confidence of investors, to have them
:assured that the savings they entrusted to capital
tu)arkets would be protected against "structural
weaknesses." Information about the performance
of companies in which their money was being put
ti' ?vork should also be made available to investors,
Casey argued. In early December 1971, speaking
Is-lore a convention of the Investment Bankers
\,.ociation, he had suggested a number of steps
t h:at could be taken in 1972 to rekindle investor
trust. His proposals included using "a combina-
hma 4 a composite tape and recall box to bring
III transactions out in the open to make prices,
t . 'I utee and quotes in all markets available to all,"
William J. Casey is married to the former
Sophia Kurz. They have a daughter, Bernadette,
tt Ito works as a librarian at the Center for Presi-
dential Studies in New York. The tall, white
haired lawyer has been a ,member of the Brook
nt s Institution's advisory committee on Presiden-
tial selection studies. At the time of his SEC
appointment he was serving as chairman of the
I Board of the Long Island Association of Com-
,nerce and Industry. He is a trustee of Fordham
I iiv-ersity and in 1965 was chairman of the Bish-
rtP's Committee for the Laity for Catholic Chari-
tit'.s. He founded the Sophia and William Casey
foundation, which gives grants to-high -school
Students to help them work on scientific and ar-
tistic projects during their summer vacations.-The
Casey home is an old landmark house at the edge
Ref rences _
N Y Times pl+. F 3:'71 por; p53 Mr
Newsday p5. fa 29 _771; p80 F 3 '71 por
Washington (D.C.) Post A p1+:ja 29 '11;
Dp7F3'71por-
Martindale-Hubbell Law Directory,-1970
Who's \'Vhe in America, 1972-73-
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Mr. Casey has levied the following requests under the
Freedom of Information Act:
Case No. Status
F75-0374 We released the Casey Report; a report
on the SUSSEX mission; the Cookridge Bib-
liography; and The OSS, Volume I.
F75-6021 We were unable to locate the material he
asked for. Recommended that he consult the
National Archives or the Eisenhower Library.
F76-0578* We released 200 BREAKERS cables. The
Oakes-Weismiller-Wai.th report [A Histor
(This is the of OSS/X-2 Operation of Controlled Enem
request which A ents in France an.. Germany, 1944-1945
Mr. Casey cites was Jena Bain tot-6 'y DD un er exemptions
in his letter.) (b)(1), (b) (3) , and (b)(6). (Information
from foreign liaison; intelligence sources
and methods; individual privacy.) OSS review
group felt that so much would have to be
removed that the remainder would not be
worth the trouble.
F77-0212 Various documents concerning SUSSEX, JED-
Pending BURGH, and scientific and operational re-
ports. Granted in part. Subsequently
reopened to accommodate additional queries.
F78-0389 Liaison relationship between the OSS and
Pending NKVD. Request sent to DDO 24 March 1978.
F78-0776 Review of documents deposited with the
Pending Hoover Institute in Palo Alto. Sent to
DDO 12 July 1978.
F78-0835 Request for the _cables. We were STATINTL
able to provide a copy of the - case STATJNTL
study, which covers the same ground and which
proved satisfactory.
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T UNCLASSIFIED CONFIDENTIAL SECRET
Approve
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9
GC
10
LC
11
IG
12
Compt
13
D/PA
14
D/EEO
15
D/Pers
16
AO/DCI
17
G/IPS
18
19
20
21
22
SUSPENSE DATE:
Remarks: 41
33.C.
Approved For Release 200/08/07: CIA-RDP81-0014 8 g e
~(~1-7
SENDER WILL CHECK CLASS: AIYIOP! TOP AND BOTTOM
adz, t1
OFFICIAL ROUTING SLIP
TO
NAME AND ADDRESS
EO/ DDA
DATE
INITS
A/DDA
4
5
JD e
6
Reg - subj cc.
ACTION
DIRECT REPLY
PREPARE REPLY
APPROVAL
DISPATCH
RECOMMENDATION
COMMENT
FILE
RETURN
CONCURRENCE
INFORMATION
SIGNATURE
Remarks
Action cc sent direct to IPS.
U 'L
v
FOLD HERE TO RETURN TO SENDER
FROM: NAME. ADDRESS AND PHONE NO.
DATE
proved For Release 2001/08/07 : CIA-RDP81-00142
R00066000011 00
UNCLASSIFIED
D C(7NFIDIsNT1AL
SECItI?T
A
FORAM NO, 017 Use previous editions (40)
UNClA51F1D, ; CONFIDENTIAL SECRET
prov~d';IaF flee; 2Q01it 1~DP81-00142R000600100001-7
SECRETARIAT (0/DCI)
EXECUTIVE
,
Routing Slip
ACTION 11;= INFO
SUSPENSE DAT '.:
Prq d Far l r s h fiJ / NOT lCIA RDP81-00
x.;,361! (4-761 I~r w " t f: s'}~ i I
bD/NFA
DD/CT
DU/A
19
20
21
22
-`J 1-7
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