(U) REMEMBERING CIA'S HEROES: LESLIANNE SHEDD
Document Type:
Collection:
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST):
06767088
Release Decision:
RIFPUB
Original Classification:
U
Document Page Count:
9
Document Creation Date:
March 8, 2023
Document Release Date:
July 25, 2019
Sequence Number:
Case Number:
F-2017-01475
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(U) REMEMBERING CIAS HERO[15653502].pdf | 1.11 MB |
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UNCLASSIFIED
(U) Remembering CIA Heroes: Leslianne Shedd
Currently, there are 117 stars carved into the marble of the Memorial Wall. CIA has released the
names of 84 employees; the names of the remaining 33 officers must remain secret to the world.
This story � in honor of the 20th anniversary of Leslianne death � was originally published on
CIA's public website.
Leslianne Shedd�a young, courageous, highly successful operations officer serving in East
Africa�was a passenger on an Ethiopian Airlines flight when it was hijacked and then crashed
into the Indian Ocean on 23 November 1996, killing 125 people, including Lesliarme. Survivors
said that she spent her final moments comforting those around her.
Lesli exploring Africa just a few months before her death.
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Early Years
Born in Binghamton, New York, Leslianne (known to friends and family affectionately as
"Lesli") moved with her family to the state of Washington when she was two years old. She
graduated with honors from Puyallup High School in 1986; graduating in the top three percent of
her class. She took on an active leadership role in school, and was a member of both the Spanish
and German clubs. She also participated in her high school's American Field Service program
for students interested in working with students from foreign countries.
Her high schootprincipal-recalled-that-Lesli-was-known-forbeineoutgoing-and-vivacious," and -
her English teacher remembered her as a warm, caring, and kind person. "She was perky and just
a little ray of light," she said.
Lesli went on to earn a bachelor's degree from the Jackson School of International Studies at the
University of Washington in 1990. She spent the spring 1988 semester studying in Cologne,
Germany.
At the University of Washington, Leslianne was a member of the Chi Omega Sorority. She
played intramural soccer and was also a runner. She enjoyed dance �jazz and ballet. She also
worked as a nurse's aide, a secretary at Weyerhaeuser Company, and a law office clerk and
paralegal researcher.
Life at CIA
Leslianne began working at CIA in February 1991. She received extensive training in operations
and completed the Career Training Program in 1992. Her training included an interim
assignment in the DO's Africa Division, where she was responsible for operational support to
several stations abroad.
Her first assignment was at Headquarters in the Africa Division, where she served as the desk
officer helping to prepare outgoing correspondence to the field, among many other tasks. By the
spring of 1993, she had also completed six months of French language training in preparation for
an assignment overseas.
In July 1993, Lesli began a two-year tour as a junior operations officer in West Africa. As a first-
tour officer, she impressed her colleagues and managers with her imaginative developmental
work, including risky but successful recruitment efforts aimed at targets with access to terrorist
groups. All of this added up to a highly successful first tour.
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It's going to be okay. We're in the safest part of the plane. It'll be okay.
Her Final Mission
Leslianne's second overseas tour began in summer 1995 at one of the DO's most active stations
in East Africa. Lesli arrived at an extremely dangerous time: there were increased threats against
US personnel in the region, and a terrorist group had recently staged an attack against Egyptian
President Hosni Mubarak while he was visiting Ethiopia.
Tensions were high in the region, which meant that she and her co-workers had to operate with a
heightened sense of personal and operational security. They also faced serious threats from
internal opposition groups.
Leslianne, however, appeared undaunted by all this. She was very successful in her mission,
which included developing and recruiting agents, some of whom provided critical information on
individual terrorist movements. She performed her time-consuming duties with distinction.
Her bosses and co-workers constantly highlighted her fun-loving spirit and brilliant use of
precise, pointed language in her reports and correspondence back to headquarters. The Chief of
Africa Division praised Lesli's courageous efforts against terrorist targets in Africa.
The Ill-Fated Flight
Leslianne Shedd was killed on 23 November 1996. She was a passenger on a hijacked Ethiopian
Airlines plane that crashed in the Indian Ocean near the Comoro Islands. Flight 961 was about to
take off from Addis Ababa when several apparently intoxicated Ethiopians boarded the plane
and demanded that it be flown to Australia. The hijackers ignored the pilot's repeated claim that
the plane needed to refuel.
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Several hours later, during an emergency-landing attempt at Moroni, the capital of the Comoro
Islands, the plane ran out of fuel and crashed into the ocean near a beach resort.
That flight was the first leg of what was to have been a Thanksgiving holiday in East Africa for
Lesli and several friends. About an hour into the flight, a hijacking was announced. Lesli and her
companions were seated in the economy class section toward the rear of the aircraft; the
terrorists tended to concentrate near the cockpit. As a result, the group got no more than a brief
glimpse of the hijackers.
No panic occurred; everyone-remained calm.
About three hours later the pilot announced that he was about to attempt a crash landing in the
Indian Ocean and that passengers should put on their life preservers. The plane headed toward
the water at 150 mph.
Leslianne did not panic. From her window seat, she assisted her friends sitting beside her. She
then spotted an elderly Ethiopian woman fumbling with her life jacket. Lesli unbuckled her own
seatbelt, stood up, and helped the woman. She then sat down and tried to calm her seatmate and
best friend in Africa.
Just before the plane hit the water, Lesli turned to her friend and said, "It's going to be okay. It's
going to be okay. We're in the safest part of the plane. The best part of the plane. It'll be okay."
Her friend, who survived the crash, could only remember being under what she estimated as
some 20 feet of water. The next thing she recalled was being on the surface, with no sign of
Leslianne.
Leslianne Shedd was survived by her mother, father, sister, and brother. She was 28 years old.
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Honoring Her Memory
Leslianne received a star on the Memorial Wall in 1996 and was posthumously awarded the
Agency's Exceptional Service medallion. Her name was unveiled in the Book of Honor in 2012.
During the 2012 Annual Memorial Ceremony, standing before the Memorial Wall in the lobby
of CIA headquarters, Director David Petraeus talked of the sacrifice and service of Lesli and her
colleagues. "The souls represented by the stars on the wall behind me all heard the same call to
duty and answered it without hesitation," he said. "Never for acclaim, always for country."
He continued, "They devoted their hearts and minds to a mission unlike any other, at an agency
unlike any other, serving on the world's most dangerous frontiers to defend our people, defeat
our adversaries, and advance our freedoms. Their words and deeds will inspire us forever, and
their service and sacrifice will never be forgotten."
Lesli's spirit of adventure and compassion toward those in need lives on in a scholarship for
students studying international affairs or public health. Just prior to her death, Lesli had applied
to a physician's assistant program � she wanted to make a difference by providing health care to
underserved communities in Africa. Her family started the Leslianne Shedd Memorial Fund at
the University of Washington in her honor.
Lesli's gravestone features a carving of a globe, reflecting her love of travel and
languages.
UNCLASSIFIED
Published: 12/20/2016 11:32 AM
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