EX-CIA AGENT AND INFORMER MULCAHY IS FOUND DEAD AT VA. MOUNTAIN CABIN

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00552R000706890004-9
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RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
July 23, 2010
Sequence Number: 
4
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
October 27, 1982
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00552R000706890004-9.pdf105.19 KB
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STAT 71 Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/23: CIA-RDP90-00552R000706890004-9 ART 7 r..^r..:..:D THE BALTItfi,;?E SUN 27 rOctcber 1962 Ex-CIA agent and informer Mulcahy is found ? - dead at Va._mountain cabin By Vernon Guidrv Washington Bureau of The Sun Washington - Kevin Mulcahy, the ex- CIA agent who turned in Edwin Wilson and other former U.S. spies for allegedly help. ing Libyan terrorists, was found dead yes- terday morning on the porch of a tourist cabin he' had rented in the Shenandoah Mountains of Virginia. The body was discovered' slumped against the front door of the cabin by an- other resident of the Mountain View Court Motel at Bowman's Crossing, about 7 miles south of Woodstock off U.S. 11 in Shenandoah county. Local authorities said there were no sigma of injury or foul play. The body was taken to Fairfax county in the Washington suburbs for an autopsy, which is expected today. Federal officials said early reports did not indicate foul play but that they were waiting for the medical examiner's report. In Washington, the FBI said it was watching the case to determine if a feder. al investigation would be necessary. Mr. Wilson is awaiting trial on a number of federal charges stemming from his work for Libya. He was indicted in 1980 along with another former spy, -Frank Terpil, who remains at large. Earlier this year, Rafael Villaverde, a Cuban who allegedly met with Mr. Wilson to discuss an assassination plot, was killed in a boat explosion near Miami. Bahamian authorities ruled that no foul play was in- volved. Mr. Mulcahy, 39, was found minutes af- ter 8 a.m. and had apparently been dead for hours, according to Gary Dalton, a county deputy sheriff. The body was found between the cabin's screen door and the locked front door. Deputy Dalton told the Associated Press that the FBI had sealed off Mr. Mul- caby's room. FBI spokesman Roger Young Sun Graphs said in Washington that the step was taken "as a precaution in the event this was in any way related to the government's in- vestigations of Wilson and TerpiL" According to the account given local re- porters -by other residents of the tourist court, Mr. Mulcahy's last days appeared to be filled with bouts of drinking and dis- turbances. The grim, nighttime finale came at the cabin's locked door where Mr. Mulcahy slumped, his wool suit trousers at his ankles, while rain fell and overnight temperatures dropped to 34 degrees. As reporters Tim Justice and Jean MacCracken of the Northern Virginia Daily at Strasburg reconstructed events, Mr. Mulcahy checked into the motel Octo- ber 20 and by Monday, October 25, motel operator David Stalker had asked him to leave because of his drinking. In one episode, Mr. Mulcahy was said to have fired a shotgun through a glass door. In another, be attempted to drive his pick up truck but repeatedly slumped over on the steering wheel, sounding the horn and calling out "David," in a possible refer- ence to the motel operator. The body was found by Della Morris, a permanent resident at the motel. Last Saturday, Mr. Mulcahy left 'the motel and returned with a case of what witnesses said appeared to be bottles of liquor. - Mrs. Morris told reporters that Mr. Mulcahy had a confrontation with the mo= tel operator and appeared to be "real stag- gery" Mr. Mulcahy had a history of problem drinking. In fact, it was when be appeared to have overcome the problem in 1976 that be went to work at $50,000 a year in an ex. port business run by -Mr. Wilson and Mr. Terpil. Mr. Mulcahy discovered their dealings with the radical regime of Libya's -Col. Unammar el Kadafi and finally went to U.S. authorities after becoming convinced that their actions were not sanctioned by the CIA that once employed them all. The dead man was the son of a career CIA agent. His own CIA career lasted five years in the mid-60s, when be was an ex- pert in computers and communications. An intelligence official who remembers the younger Mr. Mulcahy says be was good at technical aspects of his job, but was'too naive and not good at "agentry." He-re- signed in 1968 to enter a private electron- ics business. Mr. Wilson is being held in lieu Of '460 million bail. He is charged with illegally shipping explosives to Libya and with oth- er crimes. Federal prosecutors say be- de-veloped a terrorist training program -in Libya, where be lived from 1980 to 1982. - This summer, the Justice Department set an international trap that lured Mr. Wilson to the United States. He was appre- hended at Kennedy Airport after arriving in New York via the Dominican Republic. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/23: CIA-RDP90-00552R000706890004-9