CIA DOCUMENTS REVEAL TRAINING OF AREA OFFICERS

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP89B00236R000500090014-5
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RIFPUB
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K
Document Page Count: 
2
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
May 29, 2009
Sequence Number: 
14
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Publication Date: 
January 11, 1976
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OPEN SOURCE
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Approved For Release 2009/05/29: CIA-RDP89B00236R000500090014-5 deacon to the Diocese of Virginia. am!?ee of the woman to whom Wendt granted such permission in the past. called the sentence sexist and charged the Bishop with using Wendt as a "scapegoat." Bishop Creighton "would have been more truthful" If he had brought Charges against her. she declared. (Story ...:5 WASHINGTON. D.C.. SUNDAY, JANUARY 11. 1976 1976 an extraordinarily tough bar- gaining year. industrial relatiods professionals predict. Some of them expect strikes to set back the econo' nay's recovery from the recession. Wage settlements could-kick off a new surge of inflation. 1'11 just pray?a lot." says'W. J.. Uselyl Jr.. director of the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service, who will bear a big part of the re- th Big Labor -New 'Surge pf/nf/ation~ Itisfied. sponsiti, Star's Annual Business and. Finance Outlook-Section E a nd corporations to terms. losses of production. sales and ,we ban profits. a peak, t.'nion and management negotia- den are ton are on the spot. They must fight .ad infa- to make up ?kut ground and protect the interests of their constituents ,over the next two or three years, is 1973 without any clear idea of what will n from happen to the economy over that decades. period. l huge The clash of interests will make REV. WENDT SENTENCED Today's Star Reveal Training Of Area Officers By AYan Frank County police also received training - many more than previously ac- kned - received CIA training In Intelligence and d assistance during the late 1960s and earl 1970s y dt flanked by the Rev. rs here yesterday that he cclosiastical sentence earlier by the Bishop of "11118M V. Creighton -- r again grant permission communion. Cheek, a allege Students With New Goals _ Moving Into .Male Careers Phan (202) 484 -4100 50 Cents an..rr CLASSIM 4844411110 THE PREDICANTS of Wood- cock, president of the United Auto Workers, and.Bommarito, president of the United Rubber Workers, show how drastically the negotiating cli- mate =Ted since 1973. Similar tales of woe are told by Frank Fitz. simmons of the International Broth- erhood of Teamsters, Paul Jennings of the International Union of Electri- cal Workers and leaders of other unions representing the 4.4 million workers bargaining in major units this year. When Woodcock negotiated the 1973 contracts that will expire next September, the national- unemploy- ment rate was 4.8 percent. only 1.9 percent of auto workers were jobless and overtime was fattening the pay envelopes of UAW members. If the workers worried about layoffs, they were reassured by the industry's See NEGOTIATIONS, iI44 CIA Documents rawer_ sw sun .'n,.. The Central Intelligence Agency has trairod o'.icers from at iaast three metropolitan area police de- partments to crack safes, conduct burglaries and replaster walls dam- hged during surreptitious entries and bugging operations, according to agency documents obtained by The assistance. Nearly a dozen police departments in California, mostly in the San Diego. San Clemente. Los Angeles area also got CIA training and equip- ment loans, the documents show. See CIA, A-14 The d Star. - The documents. released by the Senators Ford - CIA after a six-month review of a Freedom of Information Act request. Seek Reforms also show that nearly every police' Seek and the Jocal police wanted their - i?' -Ma ""'s""? unusual relationships to remain se- _ The Senate Select .COmmittee on cret. despite inquiries from reporters Intelligence and the Ford adnunis- and members of Congress. trption have agreed to work out )joint legislative p Is for the reform f the United States intelligence BESIDES THE REVELATION of o the extent of CIA activity-till-local po- lice departments, the chief sigtttffr Officials. - cane of the asserted documents is The unique plan to write 't that they provide many details about Lon satisfactory to both the Senate CIA-police relationships described and President Ford emerged during without much elaboration in the a series of private meetings between Rockefeller Commission report on Sen. Frank Church, committee CIA activities released last June. chairman. D: Idaho. Sen. John CIA officials "sanitized" the 189 Tower, vice chairman. D.-Tex? their documents before releasing them to key staff aides and senior White H ouse officials in December and The Star. Nearly every document contained some deletions. and some early January. The plan has Ford's were missing entire paragraphs or approval. pages. Another 46 documents re- It was one of the announcements at quested were not released for securi- a toe-level'White House meeting yes- ty reasons. terday on intelligence. The closed- d oor session, attended by the princi- The Rockefeller report disclosed percent of the women plan to enter The annual survey of entering col- that police in the District, Fairfax. GIs of the affected agencies, is the male-dominated careen, compared lee students conducted by the and in time that the vast options for ve- ?~ t 59 additi , o on percent in 1966 Uiitf Clifi L ry Chicago. :ica..nversy oaorna ate>s An-' form and reorganization of Intelli- New to k. and l they ey MORE THAN twice as many men geles and the American Council on York; aMiami. Boston. Los received Angeles. ainin country were g fence in this gathered - and than women still want to enter the Education also found that: from CIA agents, as did Virginia and in one briefing for top level offi--- - more- lucrative career fields al. *Enrollment of bla k c f ' h , res a men Stu Mld S cials and th Pidt -aryantate police.eresen though the percentage of men choos. dents has reached an all-time high of FORDWAS NOT expected to make .itional in the traditional "masculine 9 percent. after a two-year decline. The newly obtained documents final decisions on executive orders college fields" has slumped from 48.9 to 39.4 , The full-impact of federal and state contain information not specifically yesterday, but a series of orders, ropor- percent. largely because of a drop in student aid programs. particularly ? mentioned in the Rockefeller report some of which will remain secret, ter so- interest in business as a career. . - -- _111at officers from Alexandria A f r l l S may o ee Man A10 ow ahnrtlysenior White .' , ., - :ells," As a'result, for every three men tin on. Baltimore, Fairfax City -douse officials said. and planning to enter business, engineer- Falls Church and Prince Georges See INTELLIGENCE, A-14 ing law and medicine, there is now . one woman, in sharp contrast to the dents ratio of eigm-mender one man 10 I, 16.9 years ago. A.Look at the - Democr ^ ^ ^? Approved For Release 2009/05/29: CIA-RDP89B00236R000500090014-5 their contracts, which raised wages in step with rising prices. These COLA (cost-of-ii ' adjeetment) clauses have added It it an hour to auto wages since 1973, more than scheduled wage increases. '"'The rubber workers won bigger scheduled wage increases than auto workers in 1973, but they did not ob- tain a COLA clause.-Their wage in- creases have been wiped out by inflation and they have fallen behind their traditional wage parity with the auto industry. Bommarite. under fire within his union, will tight this time for big wage increases to catch up with the rankand-file's losses to inflation, plus a COLA clause to protect against future rises in the cost of liv. ing The rubber companies realize they Oill have to pay heavily for a settle. ment. but the union's demands will be to big that management will balk at' vast :.iitially. "It will take a mi a- CIA -lengthened vacations, )ob-transfer rights, curbs on subcontracting and Penalties on companies to deter lay. offs by making them costly. George B. Morris Jr., chief labor negotiator for General Motors, in- sists that SUB funding, at 14 cents an hour, costs too much already and there is no room for additional company contributions. "SUB has a limited purpose and it has worked very well. ' he says. "It never was designed to cope with this kind of recession. There's a bottom to the barrel, and when you get there, that's it." If the union is interested, he says, available SUB funds might be stretched to cover longer layoffs for senior employes by disqualifying those with less than five years of service. Morris emphatically rejects all Pn'posals' for shone- work time. Suorto.r tour, we don't need," he anu Liver. the-road truck drivers. The Interna- tional Brotherhood of Teamsters has already presented its proposals, which the main employer negotiating agency calculates would increase labor costs 50 to 60 percent over three years. The Teamsters are asking sched. uled wage increases of $1 an hour the first year and 75 cents in each of the next two years, with equivalent raises for drivers paid on a mileage basis. Hourly drivers now average $7.11. In addition, the Teamsters want semi-annual wage increases of I cent an hour for each rise of 0.2 points in the consumer price index, without any ca or limit on the wage escala- tion. The expiring contract has a less generous formula for annual cost-of. living adjustments, and limited them to 11 cents an hour each year. Team- ster President Fitzsimmons csti- riates tM! the cap has cost dri"ors 6? cents an hour. quest for the above training denied that he. had any di- lisle Jr. and several un- originated with senior offi- rest knowledge of CIA in named CIA-- security offi, cials of the Washington volvement i h hi w t s departil - cas. D.C., Metropolitan Police ment. Names of other local Continued From A-1 Department and was basi. In a Feb. 21, 1973. letter officials who attended the THE ROCKEFELLER call predicated an the need contained in-the package of seminars and presumably REPORT discussed some lb omba thi? tangible documents. Wilson wrote are still active officers were threats posed by radical CIA Security Director How- deleted from the docu- training given to police trrorist groups within its and Osborn : "It has come ments. officers here and else- jeurisdicti " on to my atttih where, but not.enon tat your specifi- Lally For reasons not given in organization has been criti. - ANOTHER SEMINAR de ribe the training in safe the documents, the Mont. cized for their involvement FOR police chiefs in 1970 cracking, urglary - gomery Cotuu)t_police de- hi Off-Vat and wall plastering. These pertinent actually had a from local CFga If p o I nice curity office c base "h ghly and other techniques "hotline" between its head- agencies... desirable . . considering apparently were included quarters and CIA head- It appears a g --clandestine collection ,methodology" in the report. The documents show that the CIA trained 24 safe- cracking students.from the District, Fairfax and Ar. lington police departments. A training document entitled. "Technical Train- ing .for Local Police De- partment." which appears typical of the training schedules devised for the local police read as follows: ? April 9.18 (1969) Photo Surveillance April 21.25 Surreptitious In 1968, 1969 ind 1970 the techniques which can'jbe if t theat Br ous i diss a nt CIA gave 44 police officers legally utilized on a local groups from focus on the Agen. Washington, Arling- level, then by all means cy.,,-- ton and Fairfax they should be mad il e ava - demonstrations ' of explo. able," Wilson's letter said. ' One of the documents The Marine Corps has sives that were " ostensibly You may rest assured identifies Durrer as the un- changed its policy on giving conducted by he A rthern tat, sshiuldhis ur worth named police official men- physieal examinations to Virginia y cloned to the Rockefetter new recruits after an inves- non-attributable to the while cause, this depart- report who received free tigation into the sudden Agency." the documents ment would be more than use of a rental car during .a death of a 19-yeerold Ma- say. willing to participate." - vacation in Puerto Rico in rine. Rep. Toby MoffetY'D- the documents shm that In 1968 Helms. was the return for earlier favors to Conn? said yesterday. CIA director Richard host-at a banquet for police the agency. Moffett said, the Marines Helms-and his successor.__cbiefs held in _ the CIA He-was in.charge of the now will require that all re- W illiam Colby. clearly executive dining room dur- Fairfax police department cruits receive a physical- on knew the aaebout and approved of ing-a "police liaison semi- - in the early 1970s when the their first day of basic i el n ? Et Problem e n testimony be. CIA facility (believed to be ' operitions in Fairfax Coup fore at the corps' striv in ? May 16.19 Audio Surveil= for 1973e a Senate Committee in Camp Peary, the CIA train. ty- recruit traininggcenter at lance , cited the Omnibus ing camp in southern Vir- Parris Island; S.C. ? June 2.3 Wall Restoration Crime Control and Safe ginia) the CIA held a simi? The Rockefeller reportof The congressman had ? June 4.6 l Restoration Streets Act of 1968 as au. lar affair for several police said that the giving undertaken a Operational thority for CIA assistance chiefs, including former gratuities to local police investigation into the death Problems Against Safesites personal to local police. That act D.C chief-John B. Layton, officials by the CIA should of Pvt. Lawrence Warner of t (secret CIA residences and later was amended to ex- former Fairfax chief Wil. be stopped. It also con- Plainville. Conn., who cot- offices) elude any CIA training of liam L. Durrer and former cluded that in spite of "a lapsed and died two days A FEB.-8, 1975, DOCU? local police. Arlington chief William G. few lapses" by the CIA after arriving at the Marine , . ?'MEIPI from a CIA securit Fawver. when it allowed its officers boot camp. office official to a deputy THE DOCUMENTS IN- - Also present were the to Participate in active pa. "`found out that tarry ._1 fo Of the CLUDED testimonial let- then New York City Police lice cases, the agency had not been given a physi- t agency dis- director ters praising the CIA from Commissioner Howard R. "generally" had not ex? cal since mid-October, even cussed the 1968 and 1969 several area police chiefs. Leary. then Boston com- ceeded its charter, which though he arrived at the f training given to D.C. po- notably from former D.C. misstoner Edmund L - does not permit it to be in. boot camp in early Decem- S ..lice. It said. "It should be Police Chief Jerry V. Wit. McNamara, then Chicago volved in domestic law en- ber,". Moffett said. "Such t noted that the initial m soy who has repeatedly Police Supt. James B. Con? forcement treatment is inexcusable." __......_............ ...~ W..., tea. 'eaa- Approved For Release 2009/05/29 : CIA-RDP89B00236R000500090014-5 con. Approved For Release 2009/05/29: CIA-RDP89B00236R000500090014-5 balloonist, waves to ant, mark the 183rd anniver? flight In America, TI Independence Hall In Phi subfreezing temperature: In the air for an hour Burlington County, N.J. Safer WaN For Teeti A National Institutes of Health scientist has de. veloped a faster, safer way .to Xsray teeth that reduces radiation exposure to as lit- tle as one-fiftieth the cur. rent dosages. Moreover, Dr. Richard L. Webber said in an NIH re- search publicat'an, there is no need for the dentist to handle film packets con. taminated with salivary bacteria in his new process. Current bite-wing dental x-ray=.technique,- y Ives insertion of a film packet inside the mouth, with X- rays gge~nerated by a ma. chine elitslde. WEBBER'S -technique reverses that process by Placing a shielded source of X-rays inside the mouth Marines to dive Physicals on 1st . Day of Basic