MCCONE MADE BIG WW II PROFITS

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP64B00346R000400030022-5
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RIFPUB
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K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 15, 2016
Document Release Date: 
April 15, 2004
Sequence Number: 
22
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Publication Date: 
January 11, 1962
Content Type: 
NSPR
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JANUARY 11, 1962 Approved For Release 2004/05/05 : CIA-RDP64B00346R000400030022-5 'The Whington Merry-Go-Round THE WASHINGTON POST Thursday, January]] 1 1962 B 17 McCone Made Big WWTIIiProfitq By D rew P earson I confirmation as chairman of close financial kinship be tal, someone should come for. With eight high, officials the Atondc Energy Commis- fired from the Eisenhower Ad. sion on July 3,' 1958, he let slip fo .. r;. one Interesting fact which inistrati n Democrats and Republicans take a very close look at the conflict-of- interest issue ing and con- firming n e w men. Mc-No" John A . Cone, picked Pearson to ? replace Allen Dulles as head of the vitally important :Central Intelligence Agency, has a record which is interest- ing on three counts: 1. He has made more money out of Uncle Sam on war con- tracts than perhaps any other man now working for the Gov- ernment. 2. He has had a continuing close financial connection with the Henry J. Kaiser interests to which, as Under Secretary for Air, he'gave a very inter- esting quickie contract for making Flying Boxcars (C-1.19) in the, record time of 10 days, at 'a price three times greater than that of Kaiser's competi- tor, Fairchild. . . 3. He is shrewd and able, which accounts not only for his capacity for making money but for his agility in keeping high Government positions under both Republicans wand Democrats. When McCone came up for puts him in a position of hav- ing a possible conflict of in- terest. Answering a question from Sen. Clinton Anderson (D.- N. M.), he said: . "Yes, I have some business relationships with Kaiser, inas- much as a jointly owned com- pany, 25 per cent of which is owned by H e n d y (Joshua Hendy Corp. of which McCone owns all the stock) and 50 per cent is owned by Kaiser Aluminum, has a long-range Contract to transport Kaiser's bauxite from Jamaica to Baton Rouge." Yet when McCone was be- I ing investigated by the late Sen. Styles Bridges (R.-N. R.) and the Senate Armed Serv- ices subcommittee regarding his quickie C-119 contract to Kaiser, he claimed: "I have had no business relationship with. Kaiser for years. . I have no benefit to gain from the affairs of his companies. The $taternent therefore that I was a link in Henry Kaiser's `chain of influence' should be corrected. Nonetheless, SenatoF Bridges showed that McCone went to amazing lengths to switch part of a C-119 Flying Boxcar con- tract away from Fairchild in Hagerstown, Md., to Kaiser at Willow Run, Mich., at a cost figure which turned out to be $1,339,140 per plane as against Fairchild's $260,000. A third congressional hear- ing, Sept. 25, 1946, shows the why it was possible for Kaiser to barge ir} on McCone, have luncheon with him, and walk out with a tmultimillion-dollar contract as good assigned. This third hearing probed the phenomenal war profits rolled up by both McCone and Kaiser when they were ship- building partners' during the war, and when they parlayed an investment of $100,000 into a profit of $44,423,000. McCone was then president of the California Shipbuilding Co., organized about one year before Pearl Harbor, when Todd Shipbuilding put up $50,000, with another $50,000 coming from the Betchel-Mc- Cone-Parsons Company, Henry Kaiser, and other companies associated with Kaiser and Betchel-McCone in building Boulder Dam. 'Phenomenal War Profits This combine made a kill. ing. Uncle Sam needed ships, was willing to pay any price for them, and the Todd-Mc- Cone-Kaiser combine went to town, though later Todd got out and left the West Coast field to Kaiser and McCone: According to the sworn statement of Ralph E. Casey of the General Accounting Of- fice before the House Mer- chant Marine Committee in 1946: "It would seem. when profits from Government contracts paid from public funds soar to such astronomical heights in proportion to invested capi- ward with a satisfactory ex- planation.." He went on to testify: "The California Shipbuilding Corp. was incorporated Jan. 6, 1941, and the entire cash investment represented by 1000. shares of capital stock at a par value of $100 consisted of $50,000 in- vested by the Todd shipyards and $50,000 invested by 10 companies affiliated with Hen- ry J. Kaiser. "About a year later, on Feb. 19, 1942, a meeting was called for the purpose of declaring dividends out of the surplus. The minutes of the meeting said: After a full discussion upon motion duly made . .. it was unanimously resolved that a dividend of $1000 per share be, and the same hereby is, declared."' This, concluded GAO execu- tive Casey, was a profit of $1,000,000 on the investment of $100,000 within one year-all at the expense of Uncle Sam's shipbuilding business. The profitable partnership between Kaiser and McCone continued until it rolled up a war profit of $44,423,000 and, according' to McCone's own testimony, the association is continuing in the form of 'a joint shipping line today. In between McCone; as Under' Secretary of the Air Force, helped swing one of the juiciest airplane contracts in Copyright, 1962, Bell &'ndJeate, Approved For Release 2004/05/05 : CIA-RDP64B00346R000400030022-5