SPY TIP FOLLOWED TAROT CARDS

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CIA-RDP90-00552R000201670066-5
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RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
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6
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
July 19, 2010
Sequence Number: 
66
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Publication Date: 
June 6, 1985
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OPEN SOURCE
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Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/19: CIA-RDP90-00552R000201670066-5 F ARTICL Tarot Car s S i py Tp FollOwed Ex- Wife Agonized for a Year Before Calling FBI By Sharon LaFraniere and Ruth Marcus . The month that her son reported for duty on the USS Nimitz, Barbara Joy Crowley Walker was agonizing over whether to tell authorities she suspected her ex-husband was a Soviet spy, according to a friend of the fam- ily who said Walker turned to her for advice. Shalel Way, 29, whose parents befriended Barbara Walker after she moved to Skowhe- gan, Maine, in 1976 following her divorce from John A. Walker Jr., said that in January 1984 Barbara Walker asked her for a tarot card reading to help her decide whether to go to the FBI. "She said she suspected he was giving se- crets to the Russians. She said he would get drunk and call her on the phone and brag about it," Way .said in an interview at her apartment in Skowhegan, a tiny factory town. in central Maine. She said Barbara Walker discussed whether she should contact author- ities while sitting in Way's mother's kitchen on a.wintryafternoon in January.1984.. As she considered whether to implicate her former husband, Way said, Barbara Walker was apparently unaware of the alleged in- volvement of her son, Navy Seaman Michael Walker. "She's just about destroyed," said Way, who stated that she overheard part of a telephone conversation between her mother and Barbara Walker after Michael Walker's arrest. Way said that during that conversation, Barbara Walker told her mother that she doesn't believe her son was really involved and thinks her ex- husband is somehow framing Mi- chael to punish his ex-wife for. tip- ping off the authorities. Barbara Walker's sister-in-law, Pat Crowley, also said Barbara Walker - had no clue her actions would lead to her son's arrest. Walker apparently' deliberated for about a year before calling the Hyannis, Mass., office of the FBI about six months ago, providing the tip that triggered the arrests of her ex-husband, a retired chief warrant officer; her son; her former broth- er-in-law, retired Navy lieutenant commander Arthur James Walker; and a friend and former Navy col- league of John Walker's, retired communications specialist Jerry Alfred Whitworth. A fifth person, "F," also may be implicated in the alleged espionage ring, according to an FBI affidavit. Barbara Walker told The Los An- geles Times yesterday that her for- mer husband began spying for the Soviet Union in the late 1960s to get money for a failing South Car-, olina restaurant in which he had invested. She said he had received "well over.$100,000" for his alleged espionage activities. She said she never would have gone to authorities if she had known it would lead to the arrest of her ,only son, 22. "I love Michael so much," she said. "I love my country, but I never could have brought myself to do it. if I had known he was' part of this thing. I was devastated when I learned Michael was involved." She said her daughter, Laura STAT In other developments yesterday: a A source familiar with the inves- tigation said the FBI plans today to interview a person at the Naval Air Station in Pensacola, Fla., in con- nection with the alleged espionag case. ^ Former CIA director Stansfiel Turner blamed the engt y e STAT uncovering the alleged espionage rm~m mart on a educed emphasis on CIA counterintelligence during the 1970s. The espionage may have begun as long as 20 years ago, ac- cording to a federal affidavit. At a breakfast meeting with re- porters, Turner, a retire admiral, said he is alarmed by the possibility that John Walker gave the Soviets "absolutely vita inte igence a out submarine deployment. "What re- ally bothers me," he said, is that such information might accelerate the Soviets' research into methods of locating U.S. submarines below the surface. awl he Pentagon said that Whit- worth was- twice reapproved for a I "top secret" security clearance dur- ing the period in which he is ac- cused of conspiring with John Walk- er to spy for the Soviet Union. John and Arthur Walker, who both held top secret clearances during their Navy careers, were never subjected to reviews of their security clear- ances, which are supposed to be Mae Walker Snyder, had told her conducted every five years, accord- 'John Walker tried to enlist her as STAT ing to a statement from the office of spy in 1979 when the daughter was Michael I. Burch, chief Pentagon an Army communications specialist spokesman. at Fort Polk, La. 4s for why she finally went to the FBI, Barbara Walker said, "I wanted to protect my children. Was I seeking vengeance? Well, a part of me wanted to see him get what he deserved." The interview took place in her apartment in West Dennis, Mass. Mrs. Walker, who had worked in a Skowhegan shoe factory after her divorce from Walker in 1976, moved to the Cape Cod community last summer to live with her daughter. a Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman David F. Durenberger (R- mn. ca a on the Reagan admin- istration "to cut in half the amount of information we classify and cut by more than a the number of people who have access to it." .. . He said security checks for those. cleared to see sensitive information, were inadequate and that a ten en-: cy to classify too much information created a situation in which those with clearances feel "everything can't be that secret so people treat nothing as secret." Durenberger said in an interview that he believed "we're getting et- ter" at finding spies. At the same time, he said, there is "more spying going on and a lot more clever spy- ing going on." w Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/19: CIA-RDP90-00552R000201670066-5 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/19: CIA-RDP90-00552R000201670066-5 ^ A memorandum filed in federal court in Baltimore said that John Walker, despite a net worth of $174,785 at the time of his arrest May 20, cannot now afford to pay for a lawyer. Walker's court-appointed law- yers, federal public defenders Fred Warren Bennett and Thomas B. Mason, said in the memorandum that Walker cannot afford to pay the estimated $20,000 to $75,000 costs of his legal defense because the government has placed tax liens against some of Walker's property and seized other assets, including ten 100-ounce bars of silver bullion valued at $6,100. ' . The Internal, Revenue Service yesterday placed liens on Walker's land holdings in North Carolina and South Carolina. It had placed liens I Tuesday against his assets in Nor- folk, The IRS said he owed $252,487 in back taxes, interest and penalties for the years since 1979. . . The IRS often moves to recover back taxes, interest and penalties against those accused of a crime when agents believe a person may not have reported all of his income, legal or illegal. In the interview yesterday, Way said that Barbara Walker hesitated before going to the FBI because she was uncertain whether John Walk- er's talk of his escapades 'as a Soviet spy were true or mere boasting from a man who, friends say, bragged about everything from his detective abilities to his many girl- friends. "She would say, 'Are you' just talking, Johnny, or is this the truth?'-" Way said. Way said Barbara Walker hoped the tarot cards would help illuminate the matter. She said she, advised i Walker to "be very cautious and make sure you know the whole story, make sure it's not braggadocio." In a black notebook,.Way wrote this account of the afternoon: "Wo- man holds secret that is of military importance. regarding ex-husband John. Will reveal eventually. Cau-, tion." While Way said Barbara Walker was "not a bitter woman at all,"' friends in Skowhegan said she had little reason to feel kindly toward her ex-husband. After 19 years of living with her husband in Norfolk on a comfortable income, she had to struggle to make ends meet after their divorce. She had to rent an apartment for $35 a week in a rundown building, they said, before she could afford to move to ,a nicer two-story house. She found a job doing piecework at a shoe factory and, according to her sister-in-law Pat Crowley, would work an extra hour in the morning and through her lunch hour to add to her paycheck. Way, who lives in an apartment behind the house Barbara Walker rented, said she came home in jeans and a sweatshirt covered with soot and glue, too tired to change clothes. "She'd say, 'Johnny Walker did this to me,' " Way said. Crowley remembered an occa- sion when Barbara Walker "passed out at work one time, she was so tired. "We kept after her. I said, 'You're working yourself to death and then where will your children be? She'd say, 'Yeah, but I have to pay the fuel bill.' " Way said that while it appeared .from talking to Barbara Walker that her ex-husband "was cruel to her," patriotism was a -large part of the reason why Barbara Walker wanted to talk to the FBI. She said Barbara Walker, who always hung a flag outside on Me- morial Day, once told her, "Johnny Walker is a traitor to his country. I'm really going to get him for this. That's my country." She said Barbara Walker decided to go to authorities once she had the facts, despite fear of reprisals by her ex-husband. "She is a very courageous woman." Although Barbara Walker's oldest daughter Margaret and son Michael were close to their father and moved back to Norfolk where he lived, friends said her two middle daugh- ters, Cynthia and Laura, seem. to share her ill opinion of their father. They complained that he had "mis- treated' their mother" and favored Michael, Way said. "Michael got' all the presents, the money and the trips, and they got nothing." For his part, John Walker com- plained that his two middle daugh- ters "only called when they wanted money," according to. his business partner, Laurie Robinson. Michael Walker held a special place in his mother's affections, Way said. Barbara Walker made a trip to attend Michael Walker's graduation from boot camp, accord- 'ing to Crowley. In a note on one of her tarot 'reading sessions with Barbara Walker, Way wrote, "Michael, fa- vorite." Staff writers John Mintz, Joe Pichirallo and Molly Sinclair contributed to this report. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/19: CIA-RDP90-00552R000201670066-5 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/19: CIA-RDP90-00552R000201670066-5 ILRTICLI Pl RID illt PaG!ca__=L_! WASHINGTON POST 7 June 1985 Spy Ring Damage Called `Serious,' By George C. Wilson and John Mintz ' Washington Post Staff Writers j The Navy, after sifting through piles of ' documents and studying interviews conducted with a wide range of present and former ac-, quaintances of four members of the, alleged Walker spy ring, has tenta- tively concluded that it has suffered a "serious" but "not disastrous" loss of its secrets to the Soviets, accord- ing to a top Pentagon official who has been briefed on the case. Other high-ranking Pentagon of- ficials said yesterday they shared that assessment. . Although the concern of Defense Secretary Caspar W. Weinberger has increased as he learns from his frequent damage assessment brief ings about what might have been lost, the worst fears of Navy lead- ' ers-that'the Soviets would learn, the Navy's innermost secrets about submarine warfare-have not yet ` been realized, officials said. Near the top of this Navy list are the advanced techniques for mon- itoring and, in wartime, destroying Soviet submarines, and for making U.S. submarines invisible during the silent combat that could take place under the sea someday. No evidence yet is in hand, offi- cials said, to suggest that any of the accused in the Walker spy organ-, ization managed to break through the several rings of secrecy around such "black" programs. A U.S. intelligence official said another prime area of concern is what the Soviets may have, learned about top secret communications equipment, en lion techniques and daily code cards from two of the. accused who had access to that in- formation while in the Navy. Under the worst case scenario, the official said, the Soviets could have received manuals on the cod- ing machines themselves, together Not `Disastrous .with "key. cards" used to transmit secret messages on cryptographic gear. With this combinatioa, the Sovi- ets may have been able to detect patterns that could compromise U.S. military codes. There is no evidence to date, officials added, that this has happened. The FBI and the Naval Investi- gative Service, officials said, have cast a broad net in hopes of learning what information the Soviets did receive. The FBI, as part of this inteucive damage assessment ef- fort, has been giving he detector tests, to, present and former ac- quaintances of:the:suspects in the`- :Walker spy ring. c A "All we've got now are the papers' the Russians didn't get,"' said one Pentagon official .,~, , John A. Walker Jr., 47, a retired Navy chief warrant officer, was ar- rested May 20 on an espionage charge after allegedly leaving a bag of classified documents for a Soviet diplomat in a rural section of Mont- gomery County. Three other for- i mer. and .current Navy personnel ;also have been charged with espi- onage: Jerry Alfred Whitworth, 45,. Walker's son, Michael Lance Walk- er, 22, a Navy 'seaman; and John . Walker's brother, retired lieutenant commander Arthur James Walker, The fears of civilian and military, officials are offset somewhat be- cause the United States has new ways to use sound waves to find Soviet submarines if the present- .1day listening systems have been irreparably compromised by secret papers sent to the Russians. . The Soviets have had ' years to gather information about the Sosus (sound surveillance system), the of underwater submarine- detecting microphones strung along the Atlantic and Pacific coasts dec- ades age. Given that, some subma- rine specialists doubt that the spy ring could add much to the Soviets' ~d Weinberger is worried about what the Soviets might have learned about the whole range of U.S. military -operations and capa- bilities that uniformed specialists might regard as close to routine. Asked yesterday if Weinberger's concern has increased because of what he has learned in his most re- cent briefings, Pentagon spokesman Michael I. Burch said the defense secretary's ce week concern when he termed the loss "serious. If you want to say even more serious, that's fair enough." Burch added in an-interview that it would be premature to characterize the loss of military secrets as the biggest the Navy has yet suffered. Sen. David F. Durenbergerr((R Mann.). Shijoan of the. Senate telligence Committee, downplayed the possible amage. -I'm not that worried about the information" the suspects had access t'6. Durenber er said. "It certainl wasn't helpful for the ' ormation to en u in vier aniT sdTut it wasn't of such si cane that there's any kind of alarm. I think a lot of information may corroborate stuff that is stolen outri ht" or inter- cepted electronically by Soviets. "Brut it isn't dama in m the larger sense that, for example, the theft of some plans for some supersecret in- telligence collector ce a spy sat eellite might be. uren erger added, 'Tm not min- imizing this. I'm saying it is a good Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/19: CIA-RDP90-00552R000201670066-5 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/19: CIA-RDP90-00552R000201670066-5 reason for the American public to pressure the bureaucracy of the gov- ernment to change the way we han- dle national security information." From the professional military viewpoint, the investigation to date points to John A. Walker Jr. as the " top biggest risk because of access to secret crpyto" information, service on a nuclear powered missile subma- rine and work as a Navy radioman at the Navy's Atlantic Fleet submarine headquarters at Norfolk. "Everythig flows thraathhaatt"" retired vice admiral Bobby Kay nman former y ea o e ation- di- a Security enc an eputy rector ~o t Centra . Intelligence A en said o e ea uarters. ou to pis c out a sensitivea ty m t e fleet that would rank in one of the top 20 or sot that would be it, . Walker served there from to 1969. Copies of radio messages be- tween the headquarters and the submarine fleet at sea, Inman said, would be e*tremely valuable to the Soviets because."there are no other regular sources of -submarine infor- mation, no constant flaw. of infor- mation about what their do and bow Analysts said that even if John Walker provided the Soviets with techni ues si natures call sins sensitive information about the Unit- frequencies ... . In the intelligence ed States submarine force as early as ra e, t ere are no secrets more se- the 1960s, the Soviets are unlikely cret, none you want to protect to change their submarine tactics in more n those dealing wi com- a way. that would reveal their knowl- mumcations. Military officials agree that the Compared with the information John Walker had, the access en- joyed by his older brother Arthur originally. seemed to be minor. But some officials recently have become more concerned about the risk he may have posed. Arthur Wale, who joined the Navy as a seaman in 1953, received submarine training and served on a number of subm** rines in the 1950s and 1960s. He specialized during his career in an- tisubmarine warfare, and may have told the Soviets about U.S. tactics, Pentagon sources said. In the late I960s and early 1978s, Arthur Walker, then a lieutenant least informed of the four alleged spies is Michael Walker. Working in the operations department of the aircraft carrier Nimitz, he would have known about the daily work- ings of the carrier and nearby ships. He had access to materials bound for the "burn bag," a device used in destroying -documents, but he saw te= nothing more sensitive than ma rial wmable under his relatively lowly "secret" clearance. Staff writers Ruth Marcus and Molly Sinclair contributed to this report. commander, was an instructor in an-. tisubmarine warfare tactics at the Atlantic Fleet Tactical School. , Arthur Walker's work at VSE Corp., a Chesa eake, a., ense contract. r w e: a he wor ed on mamtenance sc edu es or s , was lmost nn ante com ea to uie mte ence tentia com romi 'b trot er o n, sat former j rector tans ie urner.. Military experts have varying views about the potential damage done by Whitworth, a 21-year Navy unications veteran who was a comm specialist assigned to duty in the Pack Ocean. His most sensitive assignment was in 1982 and 1983, when he was communications watch officer aboard the USS Enterprise, an aircraft carrier. ' jhtriteg asst of his career be held sensitive jobs handling communica- tions and codes.. ' Whitworth ' had access to many manuals on building and operating conmm tions gear. Military of- ficials. fear that Whitworth - might have given away both the content of messages he read, as well as the de- tailed plans for the, machinery. However, Whitworth's access to the most sensitive material would have been limited. "A radioman is terribly helpful to d yaw e A. Carver Jr. a say orme deputy error. t s not the compromise of any smg'le message It's,_ the compromise oof Inman characterized John Walk- er's service from 1965 to 1967 as senior chief radioman on the nucle- ar missile submarine Simon Bolivar as his second most sensitive assign- ment. Walker received his "top secret crypto" clearance, allowing access to highly sensitive material, in 1965 and held; it until he retired from the Navy in 1976 with the rank of chief uments say the spy ring may have been in operation as curly as 1965. The communications Walker might have seen, if presen ted'to the Soviets, might appear 'to have no value today. But sub a specaa>r ists said.they might" be damaging because of what they ? might reveal. about. the general pattern and area of missile submarine operations. Missile 'submarines must know in advance the-features on the bottom of the ocean. so they., know exactly where they are at every second of their slow patrol. Otherwise, they could not achieve accuracy with their missiles. Also, certain conditions are needed for maximum stealth and re- liable communications. 4 . Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/19: CIA-RDP90-00552R000201670066-5 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/19: CIA-RDP90-00552R000201670066-5 Risk of Customs Detection If Mr. Walker had received large amounts of money overseas, he would have risked being caught by customs officers when returning to the United States, said Mr. Crowley, the former C.I.A. official who recently wrote a book on the K.G.B. "It might have been discovered with the money, and it might have tripped a h e said. ac makes more sense to curity reasons, they said, there ap. met union an excuse tar posting a alas, peared to have been few, if any, recent relatively large number of K.G.B. pay him in the United States." Law-en- face-to-face meetings in the United agents in Vienna posing as diplomats. forcement officials say they believe States between Mr. Walker and Soviet The Austriaa?Government is thought to that Mr. Walker received hundreds of have relatively little surveillance of thousands of dollars from Soviet agents agents. foreign intelligence agents, they said. but have so far been unable to trace Intelligence analysts said they be- Andrew Daulton Lee, a California most of the money. lieve that a Soviet diplomat who was man who admitted in 1977 that he had Mr. Walker was arrested after leav- named a co-conspirator in the alleged sold secret documents to Soviet agents ing a bag containing more than 100 se- spying operation was a relatively low- about American spy satellites, re- cret Navy documents at a site in rural level K.G.B. agent who may never ceived espionage training in Vienna, of. Maryland, the F.B.I. has said. have met Mr. Walker. Instead, they ficials said. Clues about the espionage operation said, the diplomat had been assigned to The F.B.I. has said that it knows of at were provided in a secret note report- pick up documents that Mr. Walker left least eight meetings in Vienna between edly written last year by Jerry A. Whit- 'secluded sites. Soviet agents and Mr. Walker since worth, the California man arrested in atMr. uded sites. bson and a 1976. the case. According to the F.B.I., the man his hdescribed brother, h as his fat "I'm sure Vienna was the standard note said that American locations were California Walker, debriefing site," said Ra lime, for- "always" used by the Soviet agents friend have been arrested in what the mer deputy director o t> f Cenral In- when they passed money to Mr. Walk- 'JARED , N.Lw YORK 'I'Ir'hS July 1985 U.S. Analysts Offer an Account Of HowA lleged Spy Ring Worked Vienna Seen as Center for Espionage - Walker Is Said to Have Received Soviet Military Rank By PHILIP SHENON tection against surveillance by Amer- cers," Mr. Cline said. Spacial to The New York Times ican law-enforcement agencies. The of- Other meetings took place in the WASHINGTON, July 8-- Federal of- ficials cautioned that many, and per- Philipp } eco to ficials and intelligence analysts say haps most details of the purported Mr. Cline, now professor of B.I. that John A. Walker Jr. passed Navy scheme will never be known unless Mr. interna- tional relations at Georgetown Univer- secrets to the K.G.B. in an elaborate Walker, who is accused of forming the sity, said those countries were prob- scheme that apparently involved espio- spy ring, begins to cooperate with law ably chosen because Soviet agents felt nage training in Austria and the use of enforcement authorities. that law-enforcement agencies there Soviet couriers in Washington. What is known, officials said, has were relatively lase in their surveil- In their most extensive account of been determined largely from personal lance of foreigners. "It would be a how they believe the espionage opera- papers, travel receipts and telephone safer environment," be said. tion was carried out, officials said that records that were found in searches of Because of tighter security by Amer. Mr. Walker almost certainly dealt with Mr. Walker's home and office in Nor- scan law-enforcement agencies, offi- several agents of the K.G.B., theSoviet folk, Va., as well as statements made Gals say, it appeared- that relatively few, if any, face-to-tace meetings be. intelligence agency, in what they say to investigators by his son, Michael L. tween a 20-year spying career. Walker and brother, Arthur J. Walker. Soviet agents and Mr. Walker took Intelligence analysts speculated that They said that Mr. Walker's case place in the United States in recent Mr. Walker was awarded a high rank in seems to follow what one investigative years. they said, the Soviet agents the Soviet armed forces, probably the source described as a "common pat- used sites in suburban areas near Soviet Navy, and received decorations tern" of Soviet intelligence agencies. Washington, D.C. Parcels of informa- for his information. "He might very "We don't know nearly ash much as don were left by Mr. Walker and re- well have tried on his Soviet uniform," wed like," the source said. "But from trieved later, by Soviet agents, they said Robert T. Crowley, a retired sen- what we do know about the K.G.B., its said. ...not that difficult to come up with a rea- exchange they said, the agents for offs o t e entral Intelligence sonable understanding" of the ' y ring. That t opera- i - used the ~e sites to leave packages Agency. tion of the purported of money for Mr. Walker. The officials Mr. Walker has been indicted on es- derstanding, he stressed, "is based, to said large cash payments to Mr. pionage. charges but has pleaded not a large extent, on well-informed specu- Walker for his information were made guilty. lation." in the United States, another effort to Frequent Trips to Vienna Any training that Mr. Walker may avoid detection. have received, post likely in the use of While details remains sketchy, the secret cameras and audio equipment, authorities say the K.G.B. asked Mr. probably took place in Vienna, where Walker, a retired Navy warrant offs- the Soviet Union has a large embassy cer, to make frequent trips to Vienna, and controls numerous safe houses, of- where he woull pass along secret infor- ficials said. mation collected from other members U.N. Ageney In Austria of the purported Navy spy ring. The International Atomic Energy Vienna, they said, was also where Agency, a United Nations agency, is Mr. Walker probably received training based in Austria. According to inteW- in the techniques of espionage. For se- gence specialists, that has given the The note also said that Mr. Walker guilty. been the spy capitals since the end of " He added that Soviets The K.G.B. scheme, officials said, World War II. was designed to offer maximum pro- agents preferred Austria. "The Swiss are pretty tough on intelligence offi- fficials said they had little informa- A Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/19: CIA-RDP90-00552R000201670066-5 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/19: CIA-RDP90-00552R000201670066-5 tion about a Soviet aipiomat, Alexsey G. Tkachenko, who was recalled to Moscow after prosecutors named him as a co-conspirator. The F.B.I. said its agents had seen him in the vicinity of the site in rural Maryland that Mr. Walker is charged with visiting on the night of his arrest. The F.B.I. has identified Mr. Tka- chenko as a vice consul in the consular division of the Soviet Embassy in Washington, a relatively low-ranking diplomat. Officials said that he may have been one of a number of K.G.B. agents in the embassy who were periodically as- signed to pick up material left by Mr. Walker at drop sites. "Over the years, the case had be- come routine," said David A. Philupss, a former C.I.A. agent "`Moir uitTE re over the years the yeomen got the job of going to these drop sites." Some intelligence analysts say they believe that Mr. Walker's chief Soviet contact is a senior K.G.B. official work- ing in Moscow. Mr. Crowley, who was the C.I.A.'s assistant deputy director for oepra- tions, said he suspects Mr. Walker may have known the official for several years, and perhaps even have been re- cruited by him. While moving up through the K.G.B. hierarchy, the official probably turned over the details of the case to other agents, Mr. Crowley said. But he sug- gested the official might have met with Mr. Walker on occasion. "He would still find time to fly in and spend a few minutes with Walker," Mr. Crowley said. "He would build Walk. er's morale, tell, him how much the work had meant to the Soviets." They said that some spies who were caught in the United States in recent years had probably been given a uni- form that he was allowed to wear at meetings with Soviet agents. This, they suggested, would have pleased Mr. Walker, who has been described by a former employee, 1k. K. Puma, as a self-deluded "James Bond." "It's very possible that he is a com- modore or an admiral by now," said Mr. Phillips, the former C.I.A. agent. "That might appeal to Walker, and an astute Soviet agent would know it." Mr. Walker retired from the United States Navy in 1976 as a chief warrant officer. "Most warrant officers wonder why they didn't become at least a sec- ond lieutenant," Mr. Phillips said. "Here was a situation where the Sovi- ets could make him not only a second lieutenant but an admiral." 0Z Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/19: CIA-RDP90-00552R000201670066-5