WILLIAM J. CASEY
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Document Creation Date:
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Document Release Date:
December 5, 2005
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Content Type:
BIO
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Born 13 March 1913, New York City
1919-30 Public and parochial schools, New York City and Long Island
1934 Fordham University, B.S.
1935 Catholic University of America - Social Work
1936-37 New York City Welfare Department - Social Worker
1938 St. John's Law School, J.D.
1938 Research Institute of America - Editor of Federal Tax Coordinator
1939-40 In Washington working on pre-World War II industrial mobilization;
assisted Leo Cherne on book, Adjusting Your Business to War
1940 Research for Tom Dewey - Pre-convention Dewey for President
1940 Research, speechwriting - Wilkie campaign
1940-41 Research Institute of America - Chairman, Board of Editors
194142 Set up Washington Office for Research Institute, edited Business and
Defense Coordinator, War Research Report
1941 Army and Navy Munitions Board - Consultant
1942 Consultant, Board of Economic Warfare - Preemptive buying of
strategic materials
1943-45 Office of Strategic Services - First as Naval Lieutenant and later
as civilian
Special Assistant to General W. J. Donovan, Washington, DC
Aide to David Bruce, London
Chief, Secretariat, London - received Bronze Star for coordinating
support and operations of French Resistance in support of Normandy
landings and liberation of France
1944-45 Chief, OSS Intelligence, European Theatre
1946-51 Chairman, Board of Editors, Research Institute of America
1948 Founder, later Chairman, American Friends of Russian Freedom
1948 Research, Delegate Hunter, Dewey for President
1948 Associate General Counsel, European Headquarters, Marshall Plan
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1951-71 Founder, in collaboration with Prentice-(Hall, Editor and Chief
Executive of Institute of Business Planning, a publisher of
business, financial and legal information services and books -
created and earned royalties on seven or eight loose-leaf services
and some 30 books in this capacity
1951-71 Venture Capitalist - participated in founding ana developing some 25
enterprises (see disclosure to Senate Banking Committee at 1971
confirmation hearing)
1952 Research and speechwriting - Taft for Presidential Nomination
1952 Research and speechwriting - Eisenhower election campaign
1952-71 Partner, law firm of Hall, Casey, Dickler and Howley, and
predecessors
1953-54 Assistant to Leonard Hall, Chairman of the Republican National
Committee
1954-71 Co-Founder and Director, Capital Cities Communications
1956 Assistant to Leonard Hall, Campaign Manager - Eisenhower for
President
1958 Founding Director, National Strategy Information Center
1959-60 Assistant to Campaign Manager, pre-convention and election - Nixon
for President
1960 Founding Director, National Strategy Information Center - stimulated
course and chairs for national security studies on some 200 campuses
1964 Executor of the estate of the owner of Human Events, ran it for
close to a year, and worked out plans to turn it over to the writers
who are still the owners
1964 Worked with Leonard Hall and Fred Scribner on possible Romney and
Scranton candidacies and ran Nixon primary campaign in Oregon
1965 Founding Director, Center for the Study of the Presidency
1966 Primary candidate for Republican nomination for Congress on Long
Island
1966-71 Chairman, Executive Committee and then President, International
Rescue Committee
1968 Romney and Nixon Pre-convention, Nixon election campaign
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1968?-71 President and then Chairman, Long Island Association
1969 Presidential Task Force on International Development with David
Rockefeller, Cardinal Cooke, Earl Butz and Rudy Peterson
1970 General Advisory Committee on Arms Control with John McCloy, Dean
Rusk, Cy Vance, Harold Brown, and Doug Dillon
1971?-73 Chairman, Securities and Exchange Commission
1973--74 Under Secretary of State for Economic Affairs
1974?-76 Chairman and President, Export-Import Bank of the United States
1976 President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board
1976?-77 Chairman, Task Force on Capital for Small and Growing Businesses,
Ford Administration
1976?-80 Founder, Center for International Economic Policy Studies - now
Manhattan Institute
1976?-81 Counsel, Rogers and Wells
197E-81 Director, Capital Cities Communications
1977 Chairman, Blue Ribbon Panel on Governance of American Stock Exchange
1977-79 Co-chairman, Citizens Commission on Indo-Chinese Refugees
1977-81 Chairman of Executive Committee, Long Island Trust Company
1979-80 Vice Chairman and then Chairman, Reagan Presidential Kick-Off Drive
1980 Campaign Director, Reagan for President Primary and Election Campaign
1980-81 Chairman, Reagan Transition
1580-81 Chairman, Interim Foreign Policy Assessment Board
1981- Director of Central Intelligence
present
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Books
Numerous books on legal and financial subjects
American Tour of the American Revolution
Awards
William J. Donovan Award
St. John's Gold Medal
Honorary Degrees
Fordham University Adelphi University
St. John's University Polytechnic Institute of New York
Chung Any University Westminster College
New 'York Law School Bryant College
Molloy College Long Island University
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Estate Planning 1979
Real Estate Investment Tables 1977 6th ed.
Regulation of Securities Ideas 197-
Estate Planning Desk Book 1977
Accounting Desk Book the Accountant's
Everyday Instant Answer Book 1974 4th ed.
Closely-Held Corporations 1974
Lawyer's Desk Book; the Lawyer's
Everyday Instant Answer Book 1975 4th ed.
Lawyer's Desk Book 1978
teal Estate Desk Book 1978
:,uccessful Techniques that Multiply
Profits and Personal Payoff in the
Closely Held Corporation
Accounting Desk Book; the Accountant's
Everyday Instant Answer Book 1970 2d ed.
Accounting Desk Book; the Accountant's
Everyday Instant Answer Book 1972 3d ed.
Corporate Planning 1965-
Encyclopedia of Mutual Fund Invest-
ment Planning for Security and Porfit
1969-
Estate Planning 1965-
Estate Planning Ideas 1968-
Forms of Business Agreements and
Resolutions; Annotated, Tax Tested
Hidden Gold and Pitfalls in the New Tax
Law; New Opportunities and Techniques
for Increasing Personal and Company
Wealth in the 1970's. An IBP Special
report by William J. Casey and the Board
of editors and research staff of the
Institute for Business Planning, inc.
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Tax planning (formerly: Tax control) 1965
Tax planning ideas 1970-
Tax practice kit; a completely
worked out system for managing
taxes
Tax tested forms of agreements, resolutions
and plans 1962-
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Tax practice and procedure
Tax practice and procedure; a
completely worked out system
for managing taxes by
William J. Casey and the IBP
research and editorial staff
Tax practice ideas
Where and how the war was fought:
an armchair tour of the American
Revolution
Life insurance desk book
Life insurance planning-
Mutual fund investment planning
Mutual funds desk book
Pay planning forms, annotated, tax
tested
Realestate desk book
Real estate desk book
Real estate investment planning
Real estate investment ideas
Real estate investment tables
Real estate investment tables
Real estate investments and how to make them
Real estate investments and how to make them
Real estate investments and how to make them
Successful compensation techniques that
build executive fortunes; a complete
working kit for setting up today's most
profitable executive pay plans
Successful techniques that multiply profits
and personal payoff in the closely-held
corporation; a complete working kit
1976
19.65
1965-
1969-
1968, 1969
1966
1969, 1966
1971
1971-
1970-
1966
1971
1968
1971
1972
2d ed.
1967,1968-
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Corporate planning 1965
Estate planner's practice and
procedure guide; a completely
worked-out system for formulating an
estate plan from start to finish
Estate planning desk book 1972
Executor's and trustee's guide 1973
Forms of business agreements with
tax ideas, annotated/by William
J. Casey 1974 4th ed.
How to raise money to make money 1973
Life insurance desk book 1974 3d ed.
Life insurance ideas n.d.
Master index cross reference table to
the IBP business and financial planning
library 1972
Pay planning 1971-
Pay planning ideas n.d.
Real estate desk book 1974 4th ed., rev. by
IBP Research &
Editorial Staff
Real estate investment deals, ideas, forms 1970-
Real estate investment tables 1972 4th ed.
:Zeal estate investments and how to make
them.
4th ed. rev. by
the IBP research &
editorial staff
Successful techniques that multiply profits
and personal payoff in the close-held
corporation
Tax control 1964
Tax planning 1973-
Tax, planning tables 1957
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Real estate investment deals,
ideas, forms.
1959-
Real estate investment tables
1961
Real estate investments and how
to make them
1958
Tax control
1957-
Tax planning for foundations and charitable
giving
1953
Tax saver
1959
Tax shelter for the family
1953
Tax shelter for the family
1956
1955
Rev ed.
Tax shelter in accounting
1957
Tax shelter in business
1953
Tax shelter in real estate
1957
Tax shelter in real estate
1959
2d ed.
Tax sheltered investments
1951
Tax sheltered investments, revised
and expanded
1955
fax tested forms of agreements,
resolutions and plans: annotated
1956
Tax tested real estate forms
1959
Trust manual and guide
1961
What you can do not to cut taxes and save
cash this year; recommendations, check-
lists, worksheets...
19.59
What you can do not to cut taxes and
save cash this year, recommendations -
checklists - worksheets.,.
1961
Where and how to find real estate deals
19.60
19.60-19.61 ed..
Accounting desk book: the accountant's
everyday instant answer book/ adapted
from the first four editions by
William J. Casey and the IBP research
and editorial staff
1977
completely rey,
5th ed,
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'How Federal Tax Angles Multiply Real
Estate Profits 1968
.How to Buy and Sell Land 1967
How to Raise Money to Make
Money: The Executives Master
Guide to Financing a Business 1970 new ed.
How to use Tax-Free and Tax-
Sheltered Investments to Pyramid
Your Captial; the IBP encyclopedia
of Taxwise Profit-Making Investments
The IBP Business Forms Guide by
'William J. Casey and the IBP
Research and Editorial Staff
lawyer's Desk Book 1967
Lawyer's Desk Book: the Lawyer's
Everyday Instant Answer Book 1971 2d ed.
Lawyer's Desk Book: the Lawyer's
Everyday Instant Answer Book 1972 3d ed.
How to set up tax free insurance plans for
partners and sole owners 1959
How to use life insurance in business 1959
Lawyer's tax guide 1959
Life insurance and how to use it 1959
Life insurance plans 1956-
Mutual funds and how to use them 1958
Mutual funds and how to use them 1959
New estate planning ideas 1958
New estate planning ideas 1960
1954 pay almanac, by William J. Casey,
J.K. Lasser and Walter Lord 1954
100 new ideas to increase your income
and reduce your taxes 1959
Pay plans 1960-
Real estate desk book 1961
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T ILLIAMI J. CASEY - FIZECI'Ik%E BIBLIOGRAPHY
Executive Pay Plans, New York, 1951
flow To Handle Renegotiation, Roslyn, New York, 1952
Tax Sheltered Investments, Washington, 1952
Pay Contracts With Key Men; 188 Company Pay Plans, Agreements, Clauses, Roslyn, New Yore: 19'
Tax Planning For Foundations and Charitable Giving, Roslyn, New York, 1953
Tax Shelter For the Family, New York, 1953
Tax Shelter In Business, Roslyn, New York, 1953
flow To Use Life Insurance in Business, New York 1959
How To Run A Pension Or Profit Sharing Plan, New York, 1960
When And How To Find Real Estate Deals, New York, 1960
Tax Saver, New York, 1961
How To Buy And Sell Land, New York, 1962
How To Raise The Abney You Need To Start, Run or Expand a Business, New York, 1962
Mutual Lands and flow to Use Them, New Yorl~., ].5;62
Trust Manual and Guide, New York, 1961
Forms of Wills, Trusts, and Family Agreements, with Tax Ideas, New York, 1963
Health Insurance Desk Book, New York, 1963
Tax Control, New York 1964
Tax Planning D esk Book, New York, 1964
Tax Shelter in Real Estate, New York, 1964
lbw To Build and Preserve Executive Wealth; the Truth About Probate and Family Financial.
Planning, New York, 1967
Successful Compensation Techniques That Build Executive Fortunes, New York, 1967
The Truth About Probate and Family Financial Planning, New York, 1967
lbw F ederal Tax Angles '.Ultiply Real Estate Profits, New York, 1968
fbw To Use Tax-Free and Tax-Sheltered Investments to Pyramid Your Capital; The IBP
Encyclopedia of Taxwise Profitmaking, New York 1968
Mutual Funds Desk Book, New York, 1968
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Encyclopedia of Nlitual Fund Investment Planning for Security and Proiit, New York, 19o
Hidden Gold and Pitfalls in the New Tax Law, New York, 1970
The IBP Business Forms Guide, New York, 1970
Pay Planning, ;,cw York, 1971
Real Estate Desk Book, New York, 1971
Rent Estate Investment Ideas, New York, 1971
Tax Practice Kit; A Completely Worked Out System for Managing Taxes, New York, 1971
Estate Planning Desk Book, New York, 1972
Real Estate Investments and Fbw To Make Them, New York, 1972
Corporate Planning, New York, 1973
Energy; Cooperative World Action to Solve Shortages, Washington, 1973
Estate Planner's Practice and Procedure Guide, New York, 1973
Estate Planning, New York, 1973
Executor's and Trustee's Guide, New York, 1973
Forms of Business Agreements and Resolutions, New York, 1973
Tax Planning, New York, 1973
Tax Practice and Procedure, New York, 1973
Tax-Sheltered Investments, New York, 1973
Life Insurance Desk Book, New York, 1974
Mutual Fund Investment Ideas, New York, 1974
R eal Estate Investments and Fbw to Make Them, New York, 1974
Accounting Desk Book; The Accountant's Everyday Instant Answer Book, Engle%ood Cliffs,
New Jersey, 1975
Estate Planning Desk Book, New Jersey, 1975
Lawyer's Desk Book; the Lawyer's Everyday Instant Answer Book, New Jersey, 1975
Peal Estate Investment Planning, New Jersey, 1975
Real Estate Investment Tables, New York, 1975
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Successful Techniques that Multiply Profits and Personal Payoff in the Closely Held
Corporation, New Jersey, 1975
Life Insurance Desk Book, New Jersey, 1976
Where and hlow the War Was Fought; An Armchair Tour of the American Revolution, New Yor]
1976
flow To R aise Abney To Make Money, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, 1980
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WESTMINSTER COLLEGE
JOHN FINDLEY GREEN FOUNDATION LECTURE
BY
WILLIAM J. CASEY
Director of Central Intelligence
October 29, 1983
Champ Auditorium
Fulton, Missouri
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William J. Casey
William J. Casey assumed the position of Director of Central Intelligence on
January 28, 1981 and is the first DCI to be designated by the President as a
Cabinet officer. In this capacity, he heads the Intelligence Community and
directs the Central Intelligence Agency.
After growing up in Long Island, New York, Mr. Casey graduated from
Fordham University and St. John's University School of Law. He was then ad-
mitted to the New York Bar. Subsequently, he joined the Research Institute of
America, where he rose to become Chairman of the Institute's Board of Edi-
tors.
In 1943, he was commissioned in the U.S. Naval Reserve, joining the war-
time staff of William J. Donovan, founder of the Office of Strategic Services.
While assigned to the European Theater, Mr. Casey received the Bronze Star
for his work in coordinating French Resistance forces in support of the inva-
sion of Normandy and the liberation of France. Later, he became Chief of
American Secret Intelligence Operations in Europe.
In 1948, he served as Associate General Counsel at the European Headquar-
ters of the Marshall Plan. Then, from 1949 to 1971, he practiced law and
engaged in publishing and entrepreneurial activities in New York City.
Mr. Casey was designated Chairman of the Securities and Exchange Com-
mission in 1971 and served until February 1973. He later became Under Secre-
tary of State for Economic Affairs and President and Chairman of the Export-
Import Bank of the United States, after which he returned to private life and
became Counsel to the New York and Washington law firm of Rogers and
Wells.
Mr. Casey, who has authored a number of books on legal and financial sub-
jects, as well as a history of the American Revolution, holds honorary degrees
from Fordham University, New York Law School, Adelphi University, and the
Polytechnic Institute of New York. He and his wife have one daughter.
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44QHNc ld We G 1W F?UN2*M WGJ Ei-2
The John Findley Green Foundation was established in 1936 by the late Mrs. John Findley Green of St.
Louis. It is a memorial to John Findley Green, an attorney of St. Louis, Missouri, who was graduated from
Westminster in 1884. The deed of gift provides for annual lectures designed to promote understanding of
economic and social problems of international concern. It further provides that, in order that there may be
"the greatest benefit from this educational effort, it is desired that the speaker shall be a person of interna-
tional reputation, whose topic shall be within the aim of these lectures and who shall present it with regard
for Christian tolerance and practical benevolence." The following lecturers have appeared at Westminster
College under the auspices of the John Findley Green Foundation:
OSCAR D. SKELTON, Undersecretary for Foreign Affairs
for the Dominion of Canada, 1937; "Some Gains and
Losses of the Present Generation."
JOHN LANGDON-DAVIES of London, 1937; "Conflict
Between Democracy and Fascism in Europe."
FRANCES B. SAYRE, former High Commissioner to the
Philippines, 1939; "The Protection of American Export
Trade."
T. V. SMITH, Member of Congress and Professor of
Philosophy at the University of Chicago, 1940; "The
Legislative Way of Life."
COUNT CARLO SFORZA of Italy, former Ambassador to
China, to Turkey, and to France, and subsequently
Italian Minister of Foreign Affairs, 1941; "The
Totalitarian War and After."
SAMUEL GUY INMAN, Lecturer on Latin American Re-
lations at University of Pennsylvania and Yale Univer-
sity, 1942; "Pan American Postwar Program."
WINSTON CHURCHILL, former Prime Minister of Eng-
land, who was introduced by President Harry S. Tru-
man, and accompanied by high dignitaries of the United
States, 1946; "The Sinews of Peace."
REINHOLD NIEBUHR, Professor of Applied Christian
Ethics, Union Theological Seminary, N.Y., 1949; "This
Nation Under God."
J. C. PENNEY, Merchant, 1949; "The Spiritual Basis for
Improving Human Relations."
ROSCOE POUND, Dean Emeritus of Harvard Law School,
1950; "Justice According to Law."
CHARLES H. MALIK, Ambassador of Lebanon, 1953;
"The Crisis of Reason."
HARRY S. TRUMAN, former President of the United
States, 1954; "What Hysteria Does to Us" and "Presi-
dential Papers, Their Importance as Historical Docu-
ments."
GUY E. SNAVELY, former Executive Secretary of the As-
sociation of American Colleges, 1954; "College and
Church in America."
STANLEY N. BARNES, Circuit Judge, United States
Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit, 1956; "Government
and Big Business."
WILLIAM YANDELL ELLIOTT, Williams Professor of
Government at Harvard University, 1957; "The Uses
and Limits of the United Nations in Relation to Ameri-
can Foreign Policy" and "Meeting the Political Strategy
and Tactics of the Soviet and Chinese Communist Bloc
in the Post-Stalin Period."
DR. EDWARD McCRADY, Vice Chancellor and President
of the University of the South, 1958; "Freedom and
Causality."
THE RT. HON. THE VISCOUNT HAILSHAM, Q. C.,
Lord Privy Seal, London, England, 1960; "The Iron Cur-
tain, Fifteen Years After."
DR. LIN YUTANG, noted Chinese author, New York City,
1961
h'
C
FREDERICK R. KAPPEL, Chairman of Board of American
Telephone and Telegraph Company, New York City,
1982; "From the World of College to the World of
Work."
M. MAX KOHNSTAMM, Vice-President of Action Com-
mittee for the United States of Europe, Brussels,
Belgium, 1963; "The European Community and Its Role
in the World."
SIR GEORGE PAGET THOMSON, Nobel prize winning
physicist for work in electrons, Past President, British
Association for the Advancement of Science,
Cambridge, England, 1964; "Science: The Great Adven-
ture."
ANDRE PHILIP, former Minister of Finance in France
and leading International Trade Expert, St. Cloud,
France, 1965; "Counsel From an Ally."
JOSEPH C. WILSON, President of Xerox Corporation,
Rochester, New York, 1965; "The Conscience of Busi-
ness."
KIM JONG PIL, Chairman Democratic Republican Party
of Korea, Seoul, Korea, 1966; "Dawn Over Asia."
HUBERT HUMPHREY, Vice-President of the United
States, Washington, D.C., 1967; "The Iron Curtain and
The Open Door."
DR. FRANC L. McCLUER, former President of West-
minster College, President Emeritus of Lindenwood
College, 1968; "The Continuing Struggle for Freedom."
THE RT. HON. THE LORD SNOW, author, scientist,
teacher, London, England, 1968; "The State of Siege."
THE RT. HON. THE LORD HARLECH, former British
Ambassador to the United States and television execu-
tive in Great Britain, 1971; "The Great Marauders."
THE HON. ROBERT H. FINCH, Counselor to the Presi-
dent, former Lieutenant Governor of California and Sec-
retary of H.E.W., 1972; "Selecting the President: A Na-
tional Franchise."
GENERAL AVRAHAM YOFFE, Director Nature
Reserves Authority, General Israeli Army, 1972; "Will
We Succeed in Saving Ourselves?"
J. WILLIAM FULBRIGHT, Senator in the United States
Congress and Chairman of the Committee on Foreign
Relations, 1974; "The Clear and Present Danger."
CLARENCE M. KELLEY, Director of the Federal Bureau
of Investigation, 1976; "Perspectives of Power."
ARDESHIR ZAHEDI, Ambassador from Iran to the United
States, 1977; The Challenge Facing Iran and the World
Today."
GERALD R. FORD, former President of The United
States, 1977; "The Canopy of Tyranny."
GRIFFIN B. BELL, former Attorney General of the United
States, 1980; "The Sinews of Peace Revisited."
CLARE BOOTHE LUCE, former member of Congress and
Ambassador to Italy, 1980; "The Ghost at Westminster."
THE RT. HON. EDWARD HEATH, former Prime Minis-
,
mese Humanism and the Modern World and ter of England, 1982; "The Changing Face of Power."
"Some Good Uses bf Our Bad Instincts." p$(~~
HEN l 7PIlI1QEedit~1'orcR LeaseLZQO6iQ O3 : dKCM#~17 t" PYa t s , aYi~t' 1 d
York City, 1962; "The Title Deeds of Freedom." Enthusiast."
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PROGRAM
3:00 p.m., Saturday, October 29, 1983
INVOCATION The Rev. Dr. Harold L. Ogden
Trustee and Parent
OPENING REMARKS Dr. J. Harvey Saunders
President of the College
PRESENTATION OF THE CANDIDATE The Honorable Clare Boothe Luce
FOR THE HONORARY DEGREE 37th Green Lecturer
Doctor of Laws
William J. Casey
THE 40th GREEN LECTURE "What We Face"
ALMA MATER (Audience standing and singing)
BENEDICTION
RECESSIONAL
Jeff Reeves - Organist
On the hills of old Missouri
Tapestried in green.
Rise the walls of gray Westminster;
Hail, 0 Mother Queen!
Hail, Westminster, Alma Mater
On thy hilltop throne!
Sons and daughters pledge devotion.
Thine we are. Thine own.
Dr. Saunders
Dr. Richard E. Mattingly
Dean of the Faculty
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PUBLIC AFFAIRS
Phone: (703) 351.1676
BIOGRAPHY OF WILLIAM J. CASEY
William Joseph Casey was sworn in as Director of Central Intelligence
(DCI) on 28 January 1981. In this position he heads the Intelligence Commu-
nity (all foreign intelligence agencies of the United States) and directs the
Central Intelligence Agency. He is the first DCI to be designated by the Presi-
dent as a Cabinet officer.
Mr. Casey grew up in Long Island, New York, and graduated from Fordham
University and St. John's University School of Law. He was then admitted to
the New York Bar.
Following law school, he joined the Research Institute of America, rising
to become chairman of the Institute's board of editors. He was commissioned
in the U.S. Naval Reserve in 1943, joining the wartime staff of
William J. Donovan, founder of the Office of Strategic Services. Assigned
to the European Theater Mr. Casey received the Bronze Star for his work in
coordinating French Resistance forces in support of the invasion of Normandy
and liberation of France. Later, in 1944, he became Chief of American
Secret Intelligence operations in Europe.
In 1948 he served as Associate General Counsel at the European Head-
quarters of the Marshall Plan. Between 1949 and 1971 he practiced law and
engaged in various publishing and entrepreneurial activities in New York City.
In April 1971 Mr. Casey was designated Chairman of the Securities and
Exchange Commission where he served until February 1973. He subsequently be-
came Under Secretary of State for Economic Affairs and President and
Chairman of the Export-Import Bank of the United States. Returning to
private life, he became Counsel to the New York and Washington law firm of
Rogers and Wells.
During 1980 Mr. Casey managed the successful. primary and election campaigns
of President Ronald Reagan.
Mr. Casey has authored a number of books on legal and financial subjects,
as well as a history of the American Revolution.
He has received the William J. Donovan Award and honorary degrees from
Fordham University, St. John's Univers.i.ty, Chung Ang University, New York
Law School, Molloy College, Adelphi University and Polytechnic Institute of
New York.
Mr. Casey and his wife Sophia (nee Kurz) have one daughter, Bernadette.
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This Page Available for
PUBLIC AFFAIRS
Phone: (703) 351-7676
Immediate Release
Text of Attached Speech
Embargoed Until After 4:00 p.m.,
Saturday, October 29, 1983
DIRECTOR OF CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE WILLIAM CASEY
HONORED AT WESTMINSTER COLLEGE
William J. Casey, Director of Central Intelligence, will
receive an honorary Doctor of Laws Degree and give the 40th
John Findley Green Foundation Lecture on October 29, 1983, at
3:00 p.m. at Westminster College, Fulton, Missouri.
The 1980 Lecturer, the Honorable Clare Boothe Luce, will
present Mr. Casey for the honorary degree in Westminster's
Champ Auditorium and will cite Mr. Casey as "a man of multiple
talents and diverse interests" who "has contributed
significantly to the welfare of his nation and the free world
in a number of important assignments spanning the past four
decades."
Since 1936, the John Findley Green Foundation Lecture
Series has brought a distinguished roster of world leaders to
Westminster College to deliver lectures, which according to the
deed of trust are "designed to promote understanding of
economic and social issues of international concern." Sir
Winston Churchill gave his famous "Iron Curtain" speech at
Westminster in 1946. Previous lecturers also have included
former Presidents Harry S Truman and Gerald R. Ford, Vice
President Hubert H. Humphrey, Reinhold Niebuhr, Henry R. Luce
and Edward Heath. Last year Secretary of Defense Caspar
Weinberger spoke.
Mr. Casey's audience is expected to include Westminster's
President J. Harvey Saunders, Dean of the Faculty, Dr. Richard
E. Mattingly, the Board of Trustees, faculty, students, and
parents. Mr. Casey's speech, titled "What We Face," will
detail the Soviet worldwide challenge"to U.S. interests and
call. for a realistic U.S. counter-strategy, especially in the
Third World.
The text of Mr. Casey's speech is attached to this press
release.
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SECRET
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Presentation of Medal to DCI, by DDCI, 6 October 1983
It seems that in the past few years, DCI's or their Deputies, have
talked here maybe 30 or 35 times and I have never seen an occasion when
there has been so much speculation over what is today all about. It
did prove, Bill, that we have a very poor intelligence organization.
It started off that you were leaving, then I was leaving, then both of
us were leaving andI am pleased to say that it is really Bob Magee who
is leaving.
Director Casey, Mrs. Casey, we are delighted for this occasion
today. I sort of looked around to see what theme I might build today's
occasion on and for those of you who are current events buffs who
realize that this week is National Pasta Week, and while that might be
a good. theme for the Vice President of Shakey's, it doesn't hang
together for the DDCI to be talking about pasta. I asked Ed Sayles if
he knew anything about what was good about October 6th and he said,
sure enough. He said back in October 6th, 1778, General George
Washington wrote a letter to a gentleman by the name of Lord Sterling.
Now that is a real name and not an after shave lotion, and he told the
Lord about intelligence and something near and dear to our heart and he
urged Lord Sterling to use all assets available - even spies - to try
and garner information about the British that would be useful for
General Washington's decisions. He concluded his letter by saying,
every minutiae should have a place in our collection.' John Stein has
taken that to heart and the DDO has been collecting minutiae ever since.
A few days ago, Jim Taylor and I were reflecting upon the state of
the Agency. We do that every now and then. As the Inspector General,
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he has a unique insight into how this place ticks and we soon concluded
that we are in not only pretty good shape, but superb shape. The more
we began to cultivate that idea, the more we realized that there was
one principle theme that flowed through that and that theme was Bill
Casey.. So we thought that it would be appropriate for this Agency
somehow to express it's appreciation to.the individual that's made all
that possible, namely our Director, Bill Casey. Now Bill, as you well
know, it's very difficult for subordinates to do anything for superiors-
There's laws against that. Those of us who have been under the pay cap
for fifteen years and lived the austerity of government service also
realize that the only real favor you could do for us would be to fire
us so we could go out and make some money. But if you look at what
has happened since the 28th of January 1981 when Bill Casey came on
board, it's rather remarkable. Now granted, Bill, you face an audience
that's quite unique; you have faced many people, many distinguished
groups in your life, but probably nowhere have you faced people who are
universally so competent and so dedicated as the folks before you.
These are the people that we could spare - the real workers are at
their desks. But if you look at the fiscal years that have accumulated
since Bill Casey's reign and see just what has happened physically
within the Agency, you have to be very proud to have served in that and
experienced that. We have about 2500 more people than we did before he
came; our budget is close to 80 per cent greater and we started off in
a capitalization and investment process so that the Agency will remain
healthy in the out years long after we are all gone. FBIS enjoys a 150
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million dollar modernization program. Communications is in an upgrade
to the tune of 503 million dollars. We have a new building that
hopefully will start breaking ground in March or April next to the tune
of 191 million dollars. NPIC, with some ancillary efforts, totals an
investment of over a billion dollars in the next four fiscal years.
That's just to accommodate the miracle machines that Evan Hineman and
the DDS&T are able to put up in our skies to give us the visibility
that we need. The production within the DDO was up 29 per cent. Of
coure, we well appreciate what has happened in the DDI with the quality
.of intelligence that we are able to put forth to our policymakers -
quality that is quite unique and never before experienced. And the
best part of it is, it's being used. It's a delight to sit in'the
highest councils of our government with Bill Casey and watch the
President, the Vice President, the Secretary of State and Defense pick
his brain and out regurgitated comes the fruits of your labors and it's
pretty nice to know that CIA is very much a part of those decisions
that are taking place in this Capital. You have before you an
individual who since coming on board as Director of CIA has met with 47
Heads of State - some of them many times. Nowhere before has CIA
enjoyed the prestige and leverage that that can bring. More
importantly, however, it permits a personal input into what these world
leaders think, fear, and feel - all of which is integrated into that
final product which is laid before the-President.
So, Bill Casey, we are all very pleased to have shared.this
wond.erful.time with you. As Bob Magee said, "it gives the troops some
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way of expressing their thanks to you." Today we want to award you the
Agency's highest award, the Distinguished intelligence Medal. ,Now we
have done that with a few Directors in the past, usually on their way
out. We are not trying to give you a hint, but it is some visible way
for us to say thank you for what you have done - not only for this
Agency but for the United States at large.
I would like now if you would stand with me while Mr. Magee reads
Bob Magee: "William J. Casey is hereby awarded the Distinguished
Intelligence Medal in recognition of his outstanding leadership of the
Central Intelligence Agency since January 1981. Under izis guidance and
direction, the Agency has been strengthened and its health restored.
His unique insight into the needs of our policymakers has brought
imagination to our operations and relevance to our analyses. His
experience and deep appreciation of world affairs add immeasurably to
the creditability of our product and fulfillment of our mission. Mr.
Casey's performance is in the highest tradition of federal service."
Mr. Casey: "This is my first experience on the receiving end.
John is so good on the awarding end that I think he can present all the
medals from now on, John. I was afraid that I would have to make it
clear that I am not leaving, but John took care of that and Bob I think
you. ought to hang around awhile too. I really am very touched in your
giving me this recognition before my work is finished. I really get
ample reward every day in the satisfaction of working with ynu and
getting things done together, things which our country needs. I like
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to think that the resources in the budget and the other things that
John mentioned that have come our way are important but not as
imiFortant, and perhaps, not as meaningful, as the initiatives we have
taken to get and the things we have accomplished, the things we have
done, the uncovered ground that we have managed to move into, with
whatever the resources that are available. And I am so proud of the
dedication and the spirit and the quality of the people and what they
are able to achieve here and so grateful for the warmth and the vigor
of the support that you have given me and to what we are all trying to
accomplish together. I have been involved in a great many endeavors
and many fine organizations, both in government and in the private
sector, but I count this by far the richest experience of all and for
that I thank all of you from the bottom of my heart."
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5
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WILLIAM J. CASEY
Bill Casey, the newly named London SI chiefl responsible for or-
ganizing the German operations, was a thirty-two year old New York
attorney who had made a fortune before the war writing "how-to" hand-
books for other lawyers. He was a large man whose casual manner dis-
guised boundless energy and confidence. His machine-gun speech accur-
ately reflected the speed of Casey's mind...
In Casey, OSS had a man with an analytical mind, tenacious will,
and a capacity to generate high morale among his staff. He delegated
authority easily to trusted subordinates and set a simple standard-
results. He had no patience with the well-born2effete who had flocked
to OSS, people he dubbed the "white shoe" boys.
-Joseph E. Persico in
Piercing the Reich
lSecret Intelligence, i.e. the collection of intelligence by clandestine
means Other major OSS components were SO, i.e. Secret Operations be-
hind enemy lines to assist and nourish resistance movements; R&A, Research
and Analysis; MO, i.e. Morale Operations or "black propaganda", and X-2,
or counterintelligence.
2Casey was responsible for placing 102 intelligence collection missions
into the Third Reich while serving as Chief of Special Intelligence, Lon-
don.
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I CTS i,~~t::ii D CONGRESSIONAL QUARTERLY
p pAGa WEEnY RZFORT
20 DEER 1980
c17
William J. Casey:
Central Intelligence Director
President-elect Reagan apparently is getting oft' on
he right fcsn with the American intelligence establishment
by naming 67-.',ear-old lawyer and self-made millionaire
\Villiam Joseph Casey as director of centraUntelligence.
Indeed, some prominent former intelligence officials
;in- i'lotp rl by the ( hoice ot. t'nsev, who they soy may he
ust the tonic to t'ortify anemic morale at the Central In-
tY11il-ence, Agency and in the intelligence community at
%%'illiarn E. Colby, a former CIA director who practices
law in Washington, said Reagan's choice was "a very good
one" because Casey "has
it unique background and
,uae very appropriate for
t he ,b,'?
('tisey's background
in Ivies:
? World War 11 service
n the Office of Strategic
Ser.ices LOSS), the CIA's
wart i me pred ece.ssor.
working to infiltrate U.S.
aeon::? into Europe.
? successful careers as
a tax lawyer, teacher,
Writer and businessman
that have earned him a
Cori urge.
? Long and close associations with establishment Re-
puhlicans that led him to terms in the early 1970s as
chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, un-
der secretary of state for economic affairs and president
of the Export-Import Bank.
?An ardent interest in intelligence matters, demon-
strated by active participation in groups such as Veterans
of the d'-)S and the Association of Former Intelligence
Officers, plus service on President Ford's Foreign Intel-
1.4ience Advisory Board.
? A brief hut successful stint as Reagan's presidential
campaign manager that earned him Reagan's respect and
his ear, and got Casey the job he has coveted for years.
Such experience, concludes John Bross, a former OSS
and ('[A officer who know: Casey, makes the director-
designate an "ideal choice for this job."
Mixed Reception
While he is known and generally admired among his
intelligence community contemporaries, one active CIA of-
ficer said Casey was a stranger to younger officers.
"I can tell you honestly, the reception's going to be
mixed [at the CIAI," this officer said. "Nobody knows
anything about him. It's really a 'wait and see' attitude."
But Casey has his doubters, including those who won-
der whether a man who has done na intelligence work
since World War II can run a modern spy agency. Another
question is whether Casey. whose rumpled. relaxed manner
and wispy white hair rrpake him Icwk every bit his 67
years, has the energy to oversee the CIA and some 10
-1?aw?rence Houston, an OSS veteran and former CIA
general counsel, is one skeptic. "People that worked with
him seemed to think pretty highly of him." Houston said.
"i've sal~,n~s frankly been a little puzzled by Bill. He knows
rill the right names to call. I've never been particularly
impres.-ed by him otherwise."
According to author .Joseph Persicu, Casey's appear-
ance alwavs has been deceiving. In !'iercing the Reich,
a bswk about the OSS operation Casey worked in. Persico
wrote:
"In f asev, OSS had a man with an analytical mind.
tenacious Ail! and a ' capacity Lo generate high nuarale
among his staff. r-ie delegated authority easily to trusted
subordinates and set a simple standard - results. He
had no potionce with the well-born effete who had flecked
to OSS. people he dubbed the.'whi.te-shoe boys.' "
The criticism that Casey may be "out of touch" with
modern intelligence operations resembles doubts expressed
when he became Reagan's campaign manager Feb. 26.
Campaign insiders said Casey did not understand
modern media campaigns, the heart of modern political
contests. Casey responded at the time: "I'm not supposed
to know everything. I'm bringing into the campaign guys
who have been there before, who know all these mysterious
things I'm not supposed to know."
But a lack of recent intelligence agency experience
could prove a political virtue. Casey is untainted by the
CIA abuses of the 1960s - such as attempts to overthrow
or assassinate foreign leaders - that smudged the agency's
image when they were exposed in the 1970s.
Consequently. even an unforgiving CIA critic such as
Louis Wolf. editor of a magazine dedicated to exposing
CIA operations and publicly identifying U.S. agents, had
difficulty criticizing the appointment. "I'm still in the pro-
cess of looking into his background," Wolf said.
Morton H. Halperin. an equally vigilant but less stri-
dent intelligence community critic who is active in the
Arerican Civil Liberties Union, said he would "wait and
see" about Casey. "I really don't have an opinion,"
Halperin said. "I don't know enough about his record."
Background, Personality
Born on March 13,. 1913, and raised in Elmhurst,
Queens, in New York City. Casey was such an energetic
child that, by one account, his peers called him "Cyclone."
Casey earned a B.A. degree from Fordham University
in 1934 and a law degree from St. John's University Law
School in 1937. He began practicing law the following year
when he was admitted to the New York State Bar.
He was commissioned a lieutenant in the U.S. Navy
when the war began, in 1941 but poor eyesight confined
him to a desk job in ashington. Through friends in legal
circles. Casey connected with Maj. Gen. William J. "Wild
Bill" Donovan, the Wall Street lawyer President Franklin
D. Roosevelt tapped to form and run the OSS. This led
Casey into the OSS.
Casey left the OSS with a reputation as a forceful.
manager who could make tough decisions with speed and
see that they were carried out. He remains supremely con-
fident. When Reagan named some new campaign aides
in July. Casey announced with authority: "Everyone re-
ports to me. Every campaign has to have a final arbiter,
and that's me."
oiher.intelligence community components, _ f
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'['hose who followed the Reagan campaign said Casey
.~ nr,t in fact the tinai arbiter on political decisions.
Hsi: he won praise for taking tough steps that rescued
the-c:ampai,n. He fired 100 campaign aides and refused
pay others for awhile. His tourniquet stopped the fi-
r:;:ncial hem.orrhaging.
Ca-ev has hen in and out of government ever since
~1 r rici War 11. In 1947-48 he was special counsel to the
-rate mail Business Committee and later associate gen-
er:rl c' inset for the Marshall Plan.
Ht? taught tax law at New York
i",.i a;~d 1962. In this period he wrote
:11) rnanrtals for lawyers and executives. Among the titles
were Tax Planning art h'xrrss Profits and Tax Sheltered
lrtr.,r?..tmrnt.. I.att-r? he also wrote Nr,ue to Raise Nfoavy
to :tfr,a .v and /lom Federal 7'rtx Angles Multiply
Ron; Est'-t'. l'rr,fits.
Casey has practiced law throughout his career, and
amrmg his partner` was Leonard W. Hall, a legend in
GOP circles in New York. Casey was active in GOP polirics
himself. He worked tier Thomas Dewey's 1940 and 1948
presicienlial bids. He ran a foreign policy group in Vice
}'resident Richard M. Nixon's 1960 presidential campaign.
In 1t166, Casey ran unsuccessfully for the U.S. House.
He worked again in 1968 for Nixon who tit hi t -
University between
and published some
ow.
ever, when Henry A. Kissinger became secretary of state,
Casey was moved into the presidency of the government's
Export-Import Bank.
Controversy
Casey's publishing ventures led to one dispute that
caused him difficulty when he was nominated to the SEC.
The Senate Banki g Committee. approved Casey's
nomination by a 9-3 vote soon after Nixon made it but
reopened its hearings aftei news stories disclosed that
Casey had been a defendant in three civil suits between
1962 and 196-5.
One suit involved a plagiarism charge against one of
Casey's publishing ventures. Another charged that a firm
in which Casey was a director and principal stockholder
had sold unregistered stock, a violation of securities laws.
The suits were settled out of court, and Casey con-
tended before the Senate committee that he was unaware
of the action: of his subordinates, The Banking Committee
ultimately reconfirmed Casey to the SEC on March 9.
While he was SEC chairman, some congressional
Democrats also charged that Casey had attempted to con-
ceal information about the relationship of the Nixon ad-
ministration to the International Telephone and Telegraph
Corp. (ITT).
A special House subcommittee was investigating re-
ports that I'CT had offered to trade a $400,000 campaign
contribution to Nixon for settlement of an antitrust suit,
and Casey shipped 34 cartons of SEC documents to the
Justice Department before the panel could subpoena them.
Justice said it would refuse. to turn over the documents
because they were being used in a criminal investigation.
It was later revealed that some of the documents con-
tainet information about conversations between ITT of-
ficials and Attorney General John N. Mitchell, Secretary
of the Treasury John B. Connally, Vice President Spiro
T. Agnew and John D. Erhlichman of the White House
staff.
In another case, Casey met in 1972 with a lawyer
for Robert L, Vesco about a pending SEC investigation
of the financier. The meeting was on the day Vesco secretly
gave $200,000 to the Nixon campaign, but Casey has main-
tained he learned of the donation only later.-from news"
accounts.
There was conflicting testimony in each case, and
Casey was never charged or penalized for his role in either.
-By Richard Whittle
Advisory Committee on Arms Control and Disarmament
in 1961.
President Nixon named Casey to the Securities Ex-
change Commission (SEC) on Feb. 2, 1971. After a some-
th-nes stormy tenure as SEC chairman, Casey was named
under secretary of state for economic affairs in 1973 H
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I e is lin ton star
CLOSE-UP
the ,_,4,.N ase , 'T'ake- here Boss
By dames R. Dickenson
Wa tAni,tonStarStaff Writer
When he announded the appoint-
ment last %vef k of several. top aides
in Ronald Reeagan's presidential
campaign, William J. Casey, the
campaign director, made it clear
who would be in charge.
"He'll report to me," he said when
asked about William Timmons,
whose acceptance of the job as head
of campaign operations was one of
those announced. "Everyone re-
ports to me."
Casey then was asked if Edwin
Meese, the campaign chief of staff
and a longtime Reagan associate.
wasn't a co-equal in the campaign
hierarchy.
"That's a misapprehension,"
Casey replied. firmly. "Every cam-
paign has to have a final arbiter and
that's me."
It remains to be seen whether
Casey can exercise such authority
over people like Meese and com-
munications director Franklyn Nof-
ziger, who may be closer to Reagan
than anyone else in the campaign,
but the episode tells a good deal
about Casey.
He is a forceful, take-charge man.
lie has quickly won Reagan's confi-
dence and has skillfu:ily exploited it
to strengthen his position in the
organization, which like any other
,presidential campaign, has its share
of competing factions He also is
knack for cutting through to the
heart of a problem.
He also is a sharp infighter who is
bringing his own people into the
campaign and constantly builds
bridges and elicits information
from others. Not only has he won
Reagan's respect ("Gee, Casey
really did a great job here didn't
he?" Reagan marveled to an aide
after a primary victory that was pri-
marily the result of his own cam-
paigning skills.) He gets rave re-
views from Reagar's top advisers.
These include Meese and others of
the "California Mafia" whose associ-
ation goes back to Reagan's eight
years as governor of California.
He was the unanimous recom-
mendation of Meese, Sen. Paul Lax-
alt of Nevada, Reagan's national
chairman, Richard Wirthlin, his
pollster and strategist, and M;ke
Deaver, another longtime Califor-
nia intimate and adviser. .
"I discovered Casey," Meese says.
"He's a rare blend of Irish humor,
experience, and sagacity. He's inde-
pendent and strong-willed and an
amazingly hard worker. He keeps a
little satchel in his office with clean
shirts and shaving gear so he can go
anywhere'- Detroit, Houston,
wherever - at a moment's notice.
When the governor asked him to
come up to Andover (Mass.) to take
over the campaign, he came im-
mediately and then spent the next
10 days on the road."
determined to recruit top,quality, "One of Bill's strengths is that
experienced men like Timmons re- they asked him, begged him, to take
gardless of ideology and back- the job," says political consultant F.
ghround, and count on them to offset Clifton White, a longtime friend
is own shortcomings and lack of and colleague.
experience. "He represents no faction," says
Like anyone else of his back- another political professional who
round ike Casey brings a long list of recently joined the campaign.. "He's
loth strengths and weaknesses to a cohesive force between the old
ifs job, which he assumed the day hands and the new."
tf the New Hampshire primary. Casey is particularly credited
That also was the day Reagan fired with reorganizing a campaign that,
1ohn Sears as his campaign man= was on the verge of bankruptcy -
,per and named Casey to replace ? Reagan spent less than1-15,000 on
rim, television after the Illinois primary
By all accounts Casey is intelli- on March 25 - and helping keep it
ent, capable, decisive; self-confi- on track until the end of the pri
ent, and experienced both in gov- man es.
nment and past presidential and On the other hand, Casey is
>cal campaigns. He is a brilliant faulted for not understanding the
,wyer, an entrepreneur who is a . new politics of television, direct
1f-made multimillionaire, and the mail, and the use of polls, for not
ifthor of a number of books on tax knowing the names of the players
iw and one on the American Revo- today, for not transcending the poli-
ction. tics of the 1940s and 1950s.
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"~ ~ WiIram . asey, chief of t )e Reagan campaign.
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William Casey, the Campaign Boss Who's in CM
;'rm not supposed to .now evgrything," Casey '
In addition, charges of improper actions have h?.responded, sitting in his officeat the new na-
pursued him, during his business life and his gov- ' tional headquarters in Arlington;last week- 'Tm
Some critics believe that Casey's desire for a '.thingsrmnotaupposedtoknow.'n'. ;
ably Secretary of State - keeps him from taking 'slow in developing detailed positions on the
any stand that might antagonize the most influen- issues to counter President Carter's. expected at-
tial people around Reagan. The recent unsuccess- tack that Reagan is an ill-informed ideologue.
ful attempt, which Casey opposed, to replace Bill This includes an economic program that will
Brock as chairman of the Republican National enable him to reach out to minorities -Reagan's
Committee is an example...:, decision not to address the NAACP convention is
"When you're looking for a job in the new'' a case in point -m blue collar workers, and other
admdinistration you don't want to take on anyone potential Democratic and Independent groups.
been slow to enlist governors and other' arty
-leaders for what promises to be a hard
lose
,
fight.-=:+ ~.?...a:.
,He is also criticized for. being a. poor in-house
man with an Irish moanface. He handles news- : ! really feel a part of things," says one key lieuteh
,men at his infrequent press conferences with a
combination of assurance, sly humor, and a terse
.ness 'that recalls the Boston Irish political f edge-~'
'ment; "He wouldn't tell you. if your coat was on.
fire."'` ,'
Casey, who earned a7
reported $300,000 Iasfyear,y
is accustomed to associating with the rich ands.
powerful He has worked in the presidentiarcam
paigns,of nearly every major Republican candi-';.
date since 1940.
From his OSS days he became friends with'..
David K.E. Bruce, former ambassador to Great
Britain, Germany, and France, former CIA chief -
Allen Dulles, and John J. McCloy, former High
Commissioner of Germany and chairman of the
Chase Manhattan Bank.
He is a law partner of former Secretary of State.
William Rogers and for years was law partner,
personal friend, and right-hand man in Eisen-
hower's presidential campaigns to the-late Len
Hall, former Republican national chairman.: -
'`He doesn't have areal political sense so he.
doesn't understand the nuances and fragile egos
involved," says one, campaign staffer. "One of his
strong points is that he goes directly to the prob-
? lem and names someone to do a job because he
wants results.-.But a'.politician would spend a day
devising three face-saving titles to keep everyone
happy and on board." ..
A top adviser disagrees.
"He confronted the problem of who's going to
run the campaign in Texas, which is a crucial
state. He went down there, met with Governor
(William) Clements and Ernie Angelo, who ran
our primary campaign. They worked it out. Cle-
ments is chairman, Ernie is deputy chairman and
campaign director and everyone is happy." -
Casey shrugs off these criticisms as nonsense.
"I get a little annoyed by reports that the cam-
paign's in disarray," he said last week. "We're a
month`or six weeks ahead of where.Jerry Ford
ing on backroom assignments while Hall was out,._ F was four years ago. I've made some mistakes but
front," says a campaign staffer. He loves being in.- You always do better the second time around." ,
the spotlight now calling governors and.talking,- hefted two thick loose-leaf notebooks.tliat
t-; , were on his desk and held up an organization
to the press .'z
Casey is running Reagan's campaign partly be- I chart showing the coordination of the Reagan
cause he was in the right place at the right time. ,; campaign with those of the Republican Senate..,
He was co-chairman; of Reagan's' formal-an_`-,tl and Congressional Campaign Committees and the
nouncement'dinner last November and late; last Republican National Committee.
year was named to Reagan's executive advisory >- The state plans and .organizations and the
committee. A.':T,, .* t voter groups," he said of the notebooks. "We're
About a month before the.New Hampshire. pri ready to go.
wary he volunteered'to `work- with Meese on ? Casey's admirers, who are legion in the cam-
issues research. and development and impressed paign organization, think the criticisms are ill-in-
everyone with his incisiveness. There apparently. formed.
was little debate eve- who would succeed Sears. .7--,1' "How can anyone say he's failed when he didn't
"Casey had national experience, was Eastern, have any money to. do any of-these things?" says
was decisive and could afford to take a year off one. He was the first to find out how much
for the campaign, 'says one of Reagan's top aides. - money had been spent and how much was left He
"He acts and operates like the chairman of the . appointed a controller and stopped the practice of
board. He's not a staffer, the way Sears was. He's a . -letting anyone and everyone authorize expendi.
senior statesman and has clout and prestige al. tures. He made the hard decisions to cut the staff,
most on the level of Laxalt", which was about 300, in half.and get some to take
This should please Casey enormously. If there's pay cuts." -;; -
one thing guaranteed; to drive him into a init, it's; In shutting down one headquarters as part of
to be compared unfavorably with Seals, his briV--_-_ the economy move, a lawyer told Casey.that there
lian't, youthful (40) predecessor:,yj_,: might be legal problems in breaking the lease.
"Bill doesn't understand the new politics, tv, "Don't give me that legal crap,. he reportedly
rect mail, polls and whit theyneed to accomplisli replied. "Just: tell. them we're out of money.
because he's still in the -Dewey, Eisenhower age,", They'Il find another tenant"
says one campaign adviser,,."He's enormously:,;: . Casey grew up In Queens and Long Island and
proud of this citizens-group grogram he had de-, _ went to undergraduate school at Fordham. He
veloped, but it's a monstrosity modeled after the went to St. John's University School of Law at
Eisenhower citizens organizations.--q ';' `? ..;.:} 4 night while working as a New York City home re-
He tells the guys out in-the.field that what,- lief investigator.
they need to do is identify,Reagan's voters and:?, He was commissioned in the Navy in World
turn them out but in some'critical states we'll lose War II and when his eyes proved too weak for sea
even if we get every single;Reagan voter out to duty he wangled an assignment with the OSS. He
the polls. In many areas all a lot of people know, ? i becme chief of secret intelligence for Europe
about Reagan is that he used to be amovie actor land coordinated the placement of intelligence.
and governor of California and that a lot of peo- and sabotage teams on the continent - .
ple think he's a right-wing ideologue. We need to
move Reagan several points to the center, and
you need television to change these perceptions.
Fortunately, Timmons understands this."
knew the move on Brock shouldn't have been at-,
tempted but if you think he was going to tell
Nancy and Laxalt and Nofziger and Meese that,,
forget it.".
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He has remained active in the Veterans of the
OSS organization, has been president--of the
.group, and joined Eisenhower. Allen Dulles,
McCloy and Sen.- Everett M. Dirksen as recipient
of the Donovan medal for distinguished service
to the United States."He's-been very loyal to'his
former colleagues," says James Keliis an execu-'.
tine with United Technology `wh:o.was part of a
sabotage team 'in Greece during the war-!Ile got
one admitted to a Veterans' Administration hospi-
tal on. the West Coast and as 'undersecretary of
state he helped a man from my.village'iri Greece
.get his wife admitted to the US." t
Since World War H, Casey has lived in Long W.,
land although he and his wife are taking an apart,-,,
ment in Washington during the campaign: He has-
a daughter who is in her 30's and is active in the:
arts in New York City
volumes of history andbiography.,:
He is active in community affairs and local poli-
Politically Casey is,described as a conservative
who believes in a strong national defense and the
free enterprise system. He helped incorporate
William Buckley's conservative magazine, Na-
tional Review, and was executor of the late Jim
Wick's desire that his estate be arranged to en-
sure the continued publication of Human Events.
During the Nixon years he was president of the
Export-Import Bank, chairman of the Securities
Exchange Commission, and undersecretary of
State for economic affairs.. _
He purchased the Washington home of the
widow of Robert McCormick, the famous pub-
lisher of the Chicago Tribune, by outbidding the
Japanese Embassy. When Mrs. McCormick asked
him how she should explain it to the Japanese,
Casey responded: "Tell them to remember Pearl -
TI
As chairman of .the SEC.. Casey got generally,.
-Times and the thndop Economist: He restored the
his predecessor, and pushed through _a number of
But in that job, and in some others, Casey faced'
_ charges' of improper actions that have pursued'
.;Among those that have come to light were a
suit for plagiarism that was brought against his
knowledge of the actions of subordinates. He was
leged violation of the securities laws and misrep-
also settled. -
. The' Senate Banking Committee delayed his
. Exchange Commission while it examined these
cases, but ultimately did recommend his confir-
As chairman of the SEC, he was touched by twd
of the major scandals of the Nixon_administra-
One was the ITT case which involved, among
other things, a charge that Casey lied to the other
members of the SEG.-
The House commerce subcommittee that was
investigating reports that ITT offered to trade a
.$400,000 campaign contribution for settlement of
an antitrust suit, was about to subpoena 34'car-
ITT officials and Attorney General John N. Mitch-
ell, Secretary of the Treasury John B. Connally,
Vice President Spiro T. Agnew and John D. Erh-
lichman of the White House staff.
involving financier Robert L. Vesco, who made a
secret $200,000 contribution, in S100 bills, to the
Nixon re-election campaign while he was under
fund complex..The key Nixon administration offi-
cials allegedly, Involvedin the matter, Mitchell
and -Secretary of Commerce Maurice H. Stans,
were later acquitted of charges of obstruction of
justice in the case. But Casey admitted having
-been asked by Mitchell to see Vesco's lawyer on
the very day,-in April, 1972, that the lawyer, Harry
Sears,-delivered the contribution. Casey saw Sears
immediately but said he didn't learn about the
contribution until he.read about it later in the
newspapers. ' -
At the trial of Mitchell and Stans, the SEC's
director of. enforcement, Stanley Sporkin, a
greatly respected civil servant, testified that
Casey had asked him to postpone certain aspects
of the Vesco investigation until after the election.
Sporkin said he refused. Casey testified that -he
had been asked for such a postponement by White
House Counsel John W. Dean 3rd, but that he was
the one who refused
Casey contends that the breadth of his business,
..interests,-- he testified that has been involved in'
about 25'different new enterprises"concerned
with development- and change in our-society" --
explains thecontroveries that have involved
him.
He also has an explanation for his decision to
take a year away from. his business to run Rea-
gan's campaign.."I worry about the direction -our
country is taking," he said last week. .1 care about
'
who
s going to be President." -
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The Clandestine War in Europe
(1942-1945)
Remarks of William J. Casey
on receipt of the William J. Donovan award
at Dinner of Veterans of O.S.S., December 5, 1974
Presentation Ceremony, left to right. William P. Rogers, Mrs.
William J. Donovan, William J. Casey.
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Donovan Award Citation
The Donovan Award must go to an individual "...with the spirit. ..and
the features which characterized General Donovan's career." William
J. Casey amply fits these specifications, as soldier, lawyer, author, diplo-
mat, and banker.
It was in World War II that the O.S.S. first knew him in action. He be-
came Chief of Secret Intelligence for the European Theatre of Opera-
tions where his great drive and judgment made their mark. One of his
many dramatic hours was his lightning organization of the radio teams
he parachuted into Germany to send back intelligence on enemy posi-
tions there, from the Battle of the Bulge to Hitler's last redoubt. His
many operations gained military objectives, helped to shorten the war,
and saved an untold number of lives.
As a public servant, he well fills the mold of William J. Donovan. Like
Donovan he has been a consistent student and activist of the strategic
position and problems of the United States and of the role of its intelli-
gence and operating agencies as vital tools in foreign policy. On this
plane he helped design the Central Intelligence Agency, served on the
General Advisory Committee on Arms Control, on the Presidential Task
Force on International Development, and is currently a member of the
Commission on the Organization of the Government for the Conduct of
Foreign Policy.
Recently he has served with distinction as Chairman of the Securities
and Exchange Commission, and with notable success as Under Secre-
tary of State for Economic Affairs. Now, as Chairman and President of
the Export-Import Bank, 'he is serving his government with great wis-
dom.
As a person, he is full of the courage that General Donovan exempli-
fied and loved in others, and that Hemingway called grace under pres-
sure. He has consistently shown his humanity in his work for Catholic
Charities, as a Trustee of Fordham, as a Director of the International
Rescue Committee, as a distinguished attorney, and as a friend to count-
less others.
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The Clandestine War in Europe
(1942-1945)
How can I adequately express my appreciation for the William
J. Donovan Award. This medal has very special meaning for me. There
is the great affection and admiration which General Donovan holds in
my memory. There is the example and inspiration he provided during
the 15 years I was privileged to regard him as leader and friend.
So many of my most cherished friendships were formed in the
OSS and for all these years I have been proud of what we were able to
do together.
This sentiment extends in a special way to those who have come
across the Atlantic for this occasion tonight and to so many others
who worked with us throughout Europe. At the time, we may have
known them only as numbers or code names, like Caesar for Jean-Pierre
Roselli, but strong friendships and bonds have formed and flourished
across the Atlantic over these 30 years.
We have visited back and forth and attended each other's re-
unions. We've even overcome the barriers of language, notably when
the French invited us back for the 20th anniversary of their liberation.
They took us all over France and everywhere we'd go, there would be
an occasion and a speech. I had to respond in my fractured French and I
would begin: "Nous sommes tres heureux d'etre ici." This was intended
to mean, "We are very happy to be here." After a few such per-
formances, Barbara Shaheen, who had studied French in school, came
to me and said: "Bill, you are saying, 'Nous sommes tous heros,' " which
means, "We are all heroes." I hope you won't think that's what I'm
saying tonight, as I tell you for the first time the full story of OSS.
For us, in the United States, it all began with a New York lawyer
who saw his country facing a deadly menace and knew that it was un-
prepared and uninformed. It's hard for us to realize today that there
was a time in 1940 and 1941 when William J. Donovan was a one man
CIA for President Roosevelt.
I remember General Donovan bouncing into London, with little
or no notice, brimful of new ideas, ready to approve any operation that
had half a chance. He'd come tearing in from New Guinea, or wherever
the last invasion had been, and go charging off to Anzio, or wherever
the next landing was to be.
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He really loved the smell of battle but he'd look at you with his
cherubic smile and twinkling blue eyes and explain that he had to be at
these landings to see, first-hand, the conditions his men had to face.
Donovan's manner was deceptively mild. A few years earlier,
running for Governor, he had campaigned through upstate New York.
The local politicians, expecting this legendary World War I infantry
hero to come roaring and thumping into town, were disappointed by
his soft voice and his gentle manner. The saying was: "Donovan came
into town as Wild Bill and left as Sweet William"
What was the OSS and what was it all about? It was probably
the most diverse aggregation ever assembled of scholars, scientists,
bankers and foreign correspondents, tycoons, psychologists and football
stars, circus managers and circus freaks, safe-crackers, lock pickers
and pickpockets-some of them in this room tonight. You name them,
Donovan collected them. What did he do with them? Well, he unleashed
them-John Shaheen was unleashed to capture the Italian Fleet or at
least an Italian Admiral, HenPy Hyde to build an intelligence network in
France, Mike Burke to liberate the Vosges-and these and many others
delivered magnificently.
Now, General Donovan unleashed this talent in a very intelligent
and perceptive way. He knew he had a bunch of rank amateurs going
into a very professional game. He knew the British had run an intelli-
gence service for five centuries and had been working for three years
to carry out Winston Churchill's dramatic order "to set Europe ablaze."
So, Donovan either set up joint operations with the British as he did in
sabotage and resistance support and in counter-intelligence or he set
up parallel but closely related organizations and arranged for an appro-
priate degree of British tutelage as he did in intelligence and propa-
ganda work.
Donovan grasped the value of the clandestine side of war as no
other American of his time. But, its potential was realized not by his
OSS but by the combined effort of British and American clandestine
services, of the Allied Governments in exile and the resistance, intelli-
gence and escape organization which sprang up spontaneously all over
Europe. OSS, coming into the European war three years late, would
not have been able to do very much at all if the British had not taken us
in as junior partners and so generously taught us all they knew. For this
we are ever grateful to our colleagues in the Special Forces Club which
Geoffrey Walford has so graciously come here to represent tonight.
Mrs. Tronstad was close to the first and perhaps the most vital
blow inside Europe. Her husband, Lief Tronstad had produced nuclear
terror in England in 1942 before we ever heard of the atom bomb. Escap-
ing from Norway, this Norwegian scientist brought intelligence which
led the Combined Chiefs of Staff to believe that the secret weapon brand-
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ished in Hitler's speeches was an atom bomb based on heavy water. He
had learned the Germans had ordered a tripling of production from a
plant in central Norway which was the only source of heavy water in
Europe. The Combined Chiefs set the highest priority on destroying
this plant. Professor Tronstad knew that plant so intimately that he was
able to design plastic explosives in a pattern which exactly fitted its
critical distilling tubes and pipes. Nine tough Norwegians parachuted
in, succeeded in entering the plant, applying the plastic designed by
Lief Tronstad and escaping before the plastic explosive destroyed the
plant. But several months later, the Germans had the plant back in
operation. The Combined Chiefs then sent 155 American flying for-
tresses over to bomb the plant. This massive air raid killed 21 Nor-
wegian civilians and 22 Allied airmen but did only slight damage to the
plant. But this was enough for the Germans to decide to move the plant
and its inventory to Germany.
This intelligence got back to England promptly and the Combined
Chiefs ordered an air attack=on the ship bringing the plant from the
seaport in southern Norway across the Baltic Sea to Germany. But the
plant never got that far. It had to be taken by rail to a ferryboat which
would take it down Lake Tinnjo towards the Baltic seaport. Knute
Haukelid, who was here with us when David Bruce received the
Donovan Award, was one of the original heavy water sabotage team
and had stayed behind in Norway. Singlehandedly, he entered the ferry-
boat, applied plastic explosive to its hull and got off before it sailed.
Halfway across, the innards of the heavy water plant and some 15000
litres of heavy water went to the bottom of the lake and it's still there.
This operation may have deprived Hitler of the atom bomb with all that
would have meant for our civilization.
General Guerisse, who was to come here from Belgium tonight
but couldn't make it because of illness, organized escape lines which
ultimately brought Ralph Patten and 4500 American, British and Cana-
dian airmen, shot down over Europe, back to England where they could
fly again. Every airman as he set out on his bombing mission knew that
if he had to parachute out and could find his way to a church, a school,
a convent or a farmhouse, he would probably be sheltered until a guide
from one of the escape lines called for him. These guides, many of them
teenage girls would take 4 or 5 men speaking only in southern drawls,
mid-western twangs or London cockney, move them by night on bicycles
or trains, hide them by day in one of thousands of homes between the
Rhine and the Pyrenees and, in a few weeks, deliver them to Gibraltar
or Lisbon. Thousands of Frenchmen, Dutchmen and Belgians made their
homes available knowing that if they were caught their whole family
would be tortured and shot or sent to a concentration camp. General
Guerisse, who was known in those days as Pat O'Leary, was himself
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captured and dragged through several concentration camps finally
winding up in Dachau. Even Dachau couldn't keep Pat down and he
wound up organizing the prisoners and having taken over the camp
when the American forces arrived there.
Jean-Pierre Roselli is here tonight to represent the Amicale
Action made up of a thousand local chapters of resistance veterans all
over France. France was where we were to land and I recall the flood
of information that came over some 200' radio sets and in pouches full
of maps and drawings and reports picked up inside France by small
planes or small boats.
These Frenchmen put g0 factories out of production with less
plastic explosive than could be carried by a single light bomber. I be-
lieve the record shows that this kind of a job, when it could be accom-
plished on the ground by sabotage, was done more effectively and with
less cost that it could be done from the air where the cost in planes and
the lives of airmen and civilians could run very, very high.
The French resistance made 950 cuts in French rail lines on
June 5th, the day before D-Day, and destroyed 600 locomotives in ten
weeks during June, July and August of 1944. Our greatest debt to them is
for the delays of two weeks or more which they imposed on one panzer
division moving north from Toulouse, two from Poland and two from the
Russian front as they crossed France to reinforce the Normandy beach-
head. We'll never know how many Allied soldiers owe their lives to
these brave Frenchmen.
When General Eisenhower failed to destroy the Germans in
France, his armies found themselves moving into Germany without the
behind-the-lines intelligence which the French had provided so pro-
fusely. General Donovan brought in Milton Katz from Italy, Henry Hyde
and his team which had worked on France from Algiers, Dick Helms
from Washington, Mike Burke from the Vosges, Hans Tofte from the
Danish desk, and Bill Grell from the Belgian desk. George Pratt and his
Labor desk, including Lazar Teper and his small group of experts on
controls and documentation within Germany, were enlisted. New com-
munications, cover and air drop talent were brought in from Washing-
ton. Between October 1944 and April 1945, this combination sent some
150 men, mostly Belgians, Dutchmen, Frenchmen and Poles into Ger-
many with identification as foreign workers. They were sent to trans-
portation centers with radio sets or new equipment which enabled them
to hold a conversation with an airplane sent out for that purpose. These
brave men went into Germany blind and it was remarkable that over
900/0 of them came out alive. I recall parachuting a young Belgian, Emil
Van Dyke, near Munich. He and his partner got jobs in the Gestapo's
motor pool in Munich, driving German officers around southern Ger-
many. After our 7th Army took Munich, Van Dyke and his partner
turned up and brought me to their sleeping quarters, a cubicle in the
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Gestapo garage in Munich. They showed me how they had sawed out
a piece of the floor under the bed to create a hiding place for their radio
set. When they returned from a trip they would take out the radio and
send detailed messages to London on German troop units and their
movements. His war over, Van Dyke had only one request. He wanted
to meet the girl who handled his radio messages to London. They had
gotten to exchange a few extra words every time he radioed in. He must
have fallen for her over the air because every extra word sent out of
that garage increased the chance that German direction finding equip-
ment would close in and locate him and his radio. As it turned out, she
was a corporal in the WACs, we had a fine wedding in London and they
settled down in Los Angeles to raise a family.
Fleming Juncker, who is with us tonight, organized the resistance
on the Jutland Peninsula in western Denmark. You'll recall that in
December of 1944 Hitler gambled everything he had left in the Ardennes
offensive aimed at depriving the Allies of the Port of Antwerp. Twelve
German divisions in Norway wei a ordered to go by ship to north Jutland
and then by train to join in this last desperate German counter-attack.
Three hundred Danes in Jutland, Fleming Juncker's men, supported by
the whole population, undertook to bottle up this force of over 200,000
Germans in Denmark. They brought the railway system in Jutland to
practically a complete breakdown and it took weeks for some of these
German divisions to make a journey that normally takes 12 hours. By the
time they arrived at the front the battle of the Bulge had been won.
The Port of Antwerp was a great prize. When Belgium was liber-
ated in September, the Belgian secret army had prevented the Germans
from carrying out orders to destroy it. The war would have lasted a good
deal longer if we had not been able to use those port facilities in the fall
of 1944. Even then, the Germans put it under constant bombardment
with V-2 rockets from sites near The Hague. The Dutch resistance,
represented here tonight by Dick Groenewald, attacked trains carrying
these rockets across Holland from Germany and destroyed a lot of
rockets which otherwise would have exploded on Antwerp or London.
All this had a heavy price. As you drive through central France
near Limoges, you come to Ordour sur Glane. There, a monument to the
cruelties of war, stands a small village still burned to a crisp, as the
Germans left it over 30 years ago, its 250 male citizens herded into a
barn to be shot, its 400 women and children herded into the church to
be burned. Was it worth the life of this community to keep a single
German tank division away from the Normandy beachhead for two
weeks? I don't know. But I do know that whether those GIs we sent to
Normandy were to be swept back into the English Channel was a very,
very close thing.
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Even that's not the point. The truly important thing is that those
Frenchmen and Belgians and Danes and Dutchmen and Norwegians
rose to fight and wanted to fight and had to fight because they loved
their country and what it meant to them.
Returning to General Donovan, while he loved all this action and
the courage it evoked, his real genius and greatness to me was the atten-
tion he gave to the more subtle war of the mind. His organization was
the only one which embraced all aspects of clandestine and intelligence
activity, psychological warfare, deception and research as well as
espionage, sabotage, and support of resistance. And he collected play-
wrights, journalists, novelists, professors of literature, advertising and
broadcasting talent to dream up scenarios to manipulate the mind of the
enemy through deception and psychological warfare programs.
Donovan created an outfit that was so secret it didn't have a
name. We called it X-2. He put Jim Murphy, one of his closest legal
associates, in charge and he integrated it with Section 5 of MI-6. the
British counter-intelligence unit. They had the closest thing to a decisive
clandestine impact on the war in Europe. It came not from the hun-
dreds of men and the thousands of tons of weapons parachuted into
Europe but from a handful of real German spies captured and turned
around in England and a couple of dozen imaginary spies in an imagin-
ary network carrying out imaginary operations within England. The fact
is that our side operated the entire German intelligence network in
England, writing their reports in London and sending them to the Ger-
mans by radio or with letters to Madrid or Lisbon in secret ink or micro-
dot. These fictitious reports convinced the German generals and finally
Adolf Hitler himself that the Allied landings would come not in Nor-
mandy but near Calais, 100 odd miles to the north.
This deception program consisted of radio traffic from a huge
imaginary army located on the east coast of England opposite Calais,
wooden tanks and rubber boats for the cameras carried by German
reconnaissance planes, as well as false reports from non-existent spy
networks. It had the Germans believing the Allies had over 80 combat
divisions in England on D-Day. Actually there were less than 50 of which
less than 40 were combat ready. Eight of them were to land in Normandy
on D-Day, 5 more on D + 1, 4 more by D + 3 and 4 more, 21 in all by D + 12.
Stiff resistance could back up the arrival of these divisions which had to
come in over beaches, without a port. The Germans had about 16 divi-
sions sitting in Normandy, a few more in reserve around Paris and by
D+2 or so had ordered 5 tank divisions from southern France, Poland
and the Russian front.
Yet, for seven decisive weeks. Hitler and his generals kept 19
of the best German divisions 100 miles away from our hard pressed
forces on the beachhead, waiting for an army that did not exist to make
an assault that was never intended.
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The British had broken the German code used in wireless mes-
sages between Hitler and his generals. General Eisenhower and his
top generals were able to actually read the orders and intelligence
appreciations which passed between Hitler and his generals by wire-
less. Thus, it was possible for Allied strategists not only to know what
kind of facts to feed the Germans but to watch them take the bait.
For example, German messages showed that Von Runsted, in
command in western France, believed the landings would be launched
on the shortest line, across the Straits of Dover from eastern England
to the Calais area, while Hitler and Rommel, commanding in Normandy,
believed it would come from the south of England to Normandy. As
imaginary facts were fed out to support the Von Runsted view, the
intercepted messages showed Hitler wavering and hedging. The Allied
comand knew the deception program had worked when Hitler refused
Rommel's request for four tank divisions to back up the beaches in Nor-
mady, but insisted on keeping-them under his own control around Paris
so they could go either way. Then, on June 8, two days after the landing,
Hitler actually ordered five infantry and two tank divisions to move
100 miles south to reinforce the Normandy beachhead. On June 9, the
Germans got a long message from London reporting that three fictitious
spies believed the Normandy invasion was diversionary and intended to
cause the Germans to throw in their reserves so that the massive forces
in east England could land in the Calais area. The Germans swallowed
this bait immediately. The next day, June 10, the orders sending the seven
divisions to Normandy were countermanded and all divisions in north-
ern France and Belgium were put on alert. One has to shudder to think
of what could have happened if that force had been thrown into Nor-
mandy a few days after the landings.
The deception was so good that when the Normandy invasion'
plans were stolen by the Germans from the British Ambassador in
Turkey and General Eisenhower had to consider changing the whole
invasion plan, the decision was to intensify the signals that the invasion
would be at Calais and make the Germans think that the plans for Nor-
mandy stolen in Turkey had been deliberately leaked to cover up the
real landings on the Calais coast.
Later on, on the continent, Hubert Will and other X-2 officers
used half a dozen German agents captured in France to feed German
headquarters with tactical deception on the plans and movements of
General Bradley's forces. Three of these agents were so convincing that
the Germans awarded them the Iron Cross.
So you see, intelligence is a very uncertain, fragile and complex
commodity:
First, you have to get a report.
Then you have to decide whether it's real or fake.
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Then, whether it's true or false as you find out what other intelli-
gence supports or contradicts it.
Then, you fit it into a broad mosaic.
Then, you figure out what it all means.
Then, you have to get the attention of someone who can make a
decision, and.
Then you have to get him to act.
Because General Donovan understood all this, he scoured our
campuses and mobilized thousands of the finest scholars in America
to put together, assess and evaluate, and then analyze the intelligence
that came in from all sources. This unprecedented collection of scholars
gave Donovan enormous influence. For example, in 1944 there was a
fierce struggle between the RAF and the U.S. Air Forces over bombing
strategy. Donovan was able to produce a team of outstanding econom-
ists: Ed Mason, Walt Rostow, Charlie Hitch, Charlie Kindleberger, Chan
Morse, Emile Despres to dissect the German economy and make the
case that, by concentrating on oil depots and transportation lines, Allied
air power could most effectively prepare the way for the invading
armies.
Donovan's grasp of this elusive, multiple and yet crucial nature
of intelligence led to the CIA, over which Bill Colby presides so grace-
fully, becoming not merely a spy outfit but one of the world's great cen-
ters of learning and scholarship and having more PhDs and advanced
scientific degrees than you're likely to find anywhere else.
Well, we've gone around the room and fought Donovan's war in
Europe all over again. I haven't touched the men and ideas Donovan
unleashed in Yugoslavia where John Blatnik spent many months organiz-
ing resistance forces in Slovenia, or Thailand to which Nick Deak has
referred, or Italy where Milton Katz and Mim Doddario were leaders,
or Greece where Jim Kellis and Chris Fragos performed nobly, or China
and Burma where General Peers- distinguished himself or Indo-China,
or North Africa. I have neither the time nor the knowledge to do so. It
only remains for me to again thank, from the bottom of my heart, the
Veterans of the Office of Strategic Services and all of you here tonight
for your generosity.
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cJ/d a _AAoacza #ccz/
THE HONORABLE ALLEN W. DULLES
THE HONORABLE JOHN J. McCLOY
LIEUTENANT GENERAL WILLIAM W. QUINN
GENERAL OF THE ARMY DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER
THE EARL MOUNTBATTEN OF BURMA
THE HONORABLE EVERETT MCKINLEY DIRKSEN
J. RUSSELL FORGAN
THE ASTRONAUTS OF APOLLO 11
THE HONORABLE DAVID K. E. BRUCE
WILLIAM J. CASEY
The Veterans of the Office of Strategic Services will award the William J.
Donovan medal to an individual who has rendered distinguished service in the
interests of the United States and the cause of freedom anywhere.
The purpose of this award is to foster a tradition and spirit of the kind of
service to country and the cause of freedom which William J. Donovan ren-
dered in both his private and public capacities. He was the exemplar of the
citizen-soldier-diplomat who valiantly served his country and the cause of free-
dom throughout the world. This award, as a perpetual parallel, will be made
to an individual who, in his activities, exemplifies the spirit, the tradition and
the distinguishing features which characterized General Donovan's career. These
include a continuing concern for the world's security and safety, for the role
which the United States must play in the world, and for the rights, freedoms
and welfare of individuals in our society. Perhaps the most unique feature of
General Donovan's life was the continuing expression of these concerns in his
private life and activities as well as in public service.
Specifically, in General Donovan's career these features were expressed, as one
of America's leading citizen-soldiers, as, ambassador, as intelligence chief, as
assistant Attorney General, as lawyer in the courtroom and in the office, as pri-
vate traveler seeing what he could learn for the benefit of his country.
The recipient of the Donovan medal will be an individual who has, in his own
career, outstandingly exemplified these features of Donovan's career. He will
be selected by a committee appointed by the President of the Veterans of the
O.S.S.
The award will take the form of a medal, carrying a likeness of General
Donovan.
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1 Casey, Nilliam J. Accounting desk book : the accountant's everyday
'i-stant answer book / Englewood Cliffs, N.J. : 1979 r)LC
2 Casey, William J. Accounting desk book : the account,ant's everyday
i. rlstant answer hook. Englewood Cliffs, N.J. : 1983 DEC
3 Casey, NVilliam J. Address to Agency employees / [Washington 1981
[Manuscript]
4 Casey, William J. Corporate planning Englewood Cliffs, N.J. : 1979
D Casey, NVil.liam J. Estate planning / Englewood Cliffs, N.J. : 1979
DEC
6 Casey, Ailliam J. How to raise money to make money / Englewood
Cliffs, 4.J. : 1981 DLC
7 Casey, Nilliam J. Lawyer's desk book / Englewood Cliffs, N.J. :
19 78 DEC
8 Casey, lilliam J. Real estate desk book : with tax law revisions : the
1`ax reform act of 1976, fax reduction and simplification act of 1917 /
1=nglewooi Cliffs, N. J. : 1978 DLC
screen 2 of 2
9 Casey, Vgilliam J. Real estate investment planning / Englewood Cliffs,
It .~. J. : 1979 DLC
10 Casey, r'Villiam J Real estate investment tables / Englewood Cliffs. N.
J. : 1979
11 Casey, filliam J. Real estate investment tables / Englewood Cliffs,
14.J. : 1981
12 Casey, Nilliam J Real estate investment tables / Englewood Cliffs. N.
J. : 1981
13 Casey, Gilliam J. Tax-sheltered investments / Englewood Cliffs, N.J.
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Estate Planning 1979
`Real Estate Investment Tables 1977 6th ed.
'Regulation of Securities Ideas 197-
'Estate Planning Desk Book 1977
'Accounting Desk Book the Accountant's
Everyday Instant Answer Book 1974 4th ed.
'Closely-Held Corporations 1974
'Lawyer's Desk Book; the Lawyer's
Everyday Instant Answer Book. 1975 4th ed.
`Lawyer's Desk Book 1978
"Real Estate Desk Book 1978
'Successful Techniques that Multiply
Profits and Personal Payoff in the
Closely Held Corporation.
1977
'Accounting Desk Book; the Accountant's
Everyday Instant Answer Book 1970 2d ed.
Accounting Desk Book; the Accountant's
Everyday Instant Answer Book 1972 3d ed.
'Corporate Planning 1965-
A-Encyclopedia of Mutual Fund Invest-
ment Planning for Security and Porfit 1969-
'Estate Planning 1965-
'Estate Planning Ideas 1968-
\Forms of Business Agreements and
Resolutions; Annotated, Tax Tested 1962-
`Hidden Gold and Pitfalls in the New Tax
Law; New Opportunities and Techniques
for Increasing. Personal and Company
Wealth in the 1970's. An IBP Special
report by William J. Casey and the Board
of editors and research staff of the
Institute for Business Planning, inc. 1970
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Tax planning (formerly: Tax control) 1965
Tax planning ideas 1970-
Tax practice kit; a completely
worked out system for managing
taxes 1971
.Tax tested forms of agreements, resolutions
and plans 1962
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Tax practice and procedure 1973
'Tax practice and procedure; a
completely worked out system
for managing.taxes by
William J. Casey and the IBP
research and editorial staff
",Tax practice ideas
1 Where and how the war was fought:
an armchair tour of the American
Revolution
Life insurance desk book
Life insurance planning.
Mutual fund investment planning
Mutual funds desk book
Pay planning forms, annotated, tax
tested
Realestate desk book
Real-estate desk book
Real estate investment planning
Real estate investment ideas
Real estate investment tables
Real estate investment tables
Real estate investments and how to make them
Real estate investments and how to make them
Real estate investments and how to make them
1976
19.65
1g65-
1969-
1968, 1969
1966
1969, 1966
1971
1971-
1970-
1966
1971
1968.
1971
1972
2d ed.
Successful compensation techniques that
build executive fortunes; a complete
working kit for setting up today's most
profitable executive pay plans 1967,1968-
Successful techniques that multiply profits
and personal payoff in the closely-held
corporation; a complete working kit . 1970
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'Corporate. planning 1965
Estate planner's practice and
procedure guide; a completely
worked-out system for formulating an
estate plan from start to finish
Estate planning,desk book
\Executor's and trustee's guide
1973
Forms of business agreements with
tax ideas, annotated/by William
J. Casey
1974
\How to raise money to make money
t
1973
'Life insurance desk book
1974
3d ed.
\Life insurance ideas
\Master index cross reference table to
the IBP business and financial planning
library
n.d.
1972
Pay planning
1971-
t Pay planning ideas
\ Real estate desk book
n.d.
1974
4th ed., rev. by
Real estate investment deals, ideas, forms
1970-
IBP Research &
Editorial Staff
"Real estate investment tables
Real estate investments and how to make
them.
1973
4th ed. rev. by
Successful techniques that multiply profits
and personal payoff in the close-held
corporation
1975
the IBP research &
editorial staff
\Tax control
1964
\ Tax planning
1973-
\Tax planning tables
1957
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"Real estate investment deals,
ideas, forms. 1959-
'Real estate investment tables 1961
\Real estate investments and how
to make them 1958
Tax control 1957-
"Tax planning for foundations and charitable
giving 1953
'Tax saver 1959
Tax shelter for the family 1953
\Tax shelter for the family 1956 1955 Rev ed.
\ Tax shelter in accounting 1957
\Tax shelter in business 1953
\Tax shelter in real estate 1957
.\Tax shelter in real estate 1959 2d ed.
'-Tax sheltered investments 1951
NTax sheltered investments, revised
and expanded 1955
",Tax tested forms of agreements,
resolutions and plans: annotated 1956
\ Tax tested real estate forms 1959
N Trust manual and guide 1961-
What you can do not to cut taxes and save
cash this year; recommendations, check-
lists, worksheets...
What you can do not to cut taxes and
save cash this year, recommendations
checklists - worksheets...
19.59
" Where and how to find real estate deals 19.60
19.60-19.6.1 ed.
Accounting desk book: the accountant's
everyday instant answer book/ adapted
from the first four editions by
William J. Casey and the IBP research
and editorial staff 1977 completely rey,
5th ed.
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How Federal Tax Angles Multiply Real
Estate Profits
.How to Buy and Sell Land
1968
1967
'Flow to Raise Money to Make
Money: The Executives Master
Guide to Financing a Business 1970 new ed.
`How to use Tax-Free and Tax-
Sheltered Investments to Pyramid
Your Captial; the. IBP encyclopedia
of Taxwise Profit-Making Investments
The IBP Business Forms Guide by
William J. Casey and the IBP
Research and Editorial Staff
-..Lawyer's Desk Book
1968-
1970
1967
'.Lawyer's Desk Book: the Lawyer's
Everyday Instant Answer Book 1971 2d ed.
\ Lawyer's Desk Book: the Lawyer's
Everyday Instant Answer Book 1972 3d ed.
How to set up tax free insurance plans for
partners and sole owners
How.to use life insurance.in business 1959
% Lawyer's tax guide 1959
' Life insurance and how to use it 1959
Life insurance plans 1956-
'Mutual funds and how to use them 1958
"'Mutual funds and how to use them 1959
"New estate planning ideas 1958
% New estate planning ideas 1960
1954 pay almanac, by William J. Casey,
J.K. Lasser and Walter Lord 1954
100 new ideas to increase your income
and reduce your taxes
.Pay plans.
`Real estate desk book
1959
1960-
1961
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WILLIAM J. CASEY - SELECTIVE BIBLIOGRAPHY
Executive Pay Plans, New York, 1951
How To Handle Renegotiation, Roslyn, New York, 1952
Tax Sheltered Investments, Washington, 1952
Pay Contracts With Key Men; 188 Company Pay Plans, Agreements,-Clauses, Roslyn, New York 195.
Tax Planning For Foundations and Charitable Giving, Roslyn, New York, 1953
Tax Shelter For the Family, New York, 1953
Tax Shelter In Business, Roslyn, New York, 1953
How To Use Life Insurance in Business, New York 1959
Pow To Run A. Pension Or Profit Sharing Plan, New York, 1960
NhereAnd How To Find Real Estate Deals, New York, 1960
Tax Saver, New York, 1961
Mow To Buy And Sell Land, New York, 1962
How To Raise The Abney You Need To Start, Run or Expand a Business, New York, 1962
341tual Lands and How to Use Then, I1ci Yor; , 3.962
Trust Manual and Guide, New York, 1961
Forms of Wills, Trusts, and Family Agreements, with Tax Ideas, New York, 1963
Health Insurance Desk Book, New York, 1963
Tax. Control, New York 1964
Tax Planning D esk Book,. New York, 1964
Tax Shelter in Real Estate, New York, 1964
IJa To Build. and Preserve Executive Wealth; the Truth About Probate and Family Financial
Planning, New York, 1967
Successful Compensation Techniques That Build Executive Fortunes, New York, 1967
The Truth About Probate and Family Financial Planning, New York, 1967
flow F ederal Tax Angles Multiply Real Estate Profits, New York, 1968
How To Use Tax-Free and Tax-Sheltered Investments to Pyramid Your Capital; The IBP
Encyclopedia of Taxwise Profitmaking, New York 1968
Okitual Funds Desk Book, New York, 1968
Encyclopedia of Actual Fund Investment Planning for Security and Profit, New York, 1969
Hidden Gold and Pitfalls in the New Tax Law, New York, 1970
The IBP Business Forms Guide, New York, 1970
Pay Planning, New York, 1971
Real Estate Desk Book, New York, 1971
Real Estate Investment Ideas, New York, 1971
Tax Practice Kit; A Completely Worked Out System for Managing Taxes, New York, 1971
Estate Planning Desk Book, New York, 1972
Real Estate Investments and How To Make Them, New York, 1972
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Energy; Cooperative World Action to Solve Shortages, Washington, 1973
Estate Planner's Practice and Procedure Guide, New York, 1973
Estate Planning, New York, 1973
Executor's and Trustee's Guide, New York, 1973
Forms of Business Agreements and Resolutions, New York, 1973
Tax Planning, New York, 1973
Tax Practice and Procedure, New York, 1973
Tx-Sheltered Investments, New York, 1973
Life Insurance Desk Book, New York, 1974
P?tutual Fund Investment Ideas, New York, 1974
R eal Estate Investments and Haw to Make Them, New York, 1974
Accounting Desk Book; The Accountant's Everyday Instant Answer Book, Englewood Cliffs,
New Jersey, 1975
Estate Planning Desk Book, New Jersey, 1975
Lavyer's Des];, Book; the Lawyer's Everyday Instant Answer Book, New Jersey, 1975
Peal Estate Investment Planning, New Jersey, 1975
Real Estate Investment Tables, New York, 1975
Successful Techniques that Multiply Profits and Personal Payoff in the Closely Held
Corporation, New Jersey, 1975
Life Insurance Desk Book, New Jersey, 1976
Where and Haw the War Was Fought; An Armchair Tour of the American Revolution, New York
1976
Clow To R aise Abney To Make Money, Englevood Cliffs, New Jersey, 1980
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William Casey's
first 200 days
40
s seen in the
4 kto ei* I9
issue o
Institutional investor
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William Casey's
first 200 days
by Myron Kandel
With the burst of contro-
versy that surrounded William
Casey's nomination as chair-
man of the SEC, the beginning
could hardly have been less
auspicious. Yet now, as he
rounds out his first 200 days in
office this month, Casey is be-
ing hailed for his leadership
and his grasp of the issues,
and from all signs he could
turn out to be one of the strong-
est chairmen the SEC has ever
had.
In this month's cover story,
Myron ]Kandel profiles Bill
Casey and examines what it
is about the Man and the way
he approaches his task that
caused this apparently drama-
tic turnabout. Kandel, who is
Editor of The Wall Street Let-
ter, an Institutional Investor
publication, provides a fascina-
ting picture of a man who long
dwelt quietly :in the halls of
power but now will play a lead-
ing role in what happens to
the investment business at this
critical moment in its history.
19 anging in the office of the chairman of the
Securities and Exchange Commission is a
photograph of seventeen solemn-faced men
sitting around a large conference table. At first
glance, it appears undistinguished, without even
the florid signatures that so often decorate Wash-
ington-office photographs. But closer examina-
tion finds the setting to be the Cabinet Room of
the White House and the men in the group to in-
clude Richard Nixon, William, Rogers, Henry
Kissinger, Dean Rusk, Douglas Dillon, John Mc-
Cloy, William Scranton, I.W. Abel, Lauris Nor-
stad and other members of the nation's private
and governmental power structure.
At the President's right hand in this august
group sits a round-faced man, bespectacled and
Approved
He tells how Casey's long and
intimate ties with the Presi-
dent should stand him, and
the industry he is charged
with regulating, in good stead
during the difficult period
ahead. And he describes what
has been done so far - and
what is likely to be done - by
the man Ted Kennedy de-
scribed as the most outrageous
appointment since his own
father, Joseph Kennedy,
headed the commission in its
early days.
rather pleasant-looking, with sparse gray hair
and slightly stooped shoulders, who looks su-
premely at ease in the presence of the mighty.
He is William Joseph. Casey, New York lawyer,
publisher, editor, venture capitalist, wartime
intelligence officer and sometime politician, who
soon was to become chairman of the SEC - and
the man on whom a battered securities industry
would come to depend to lead it out of the wilder-
ness of conflicting interests, weakened market
structure and sagging investor confidence.
The seating arrangement in the picture,
which depicted a meeting of the General Ad-
visory Committee on Arms Control and Disarma-
ment, might have been accidental. But Casey's
presence in such an important group decidedly
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was not. Over the last quarter-century he has
worked quietly and effectively behind the scenes
in. a surprising; variety of government, business
and political projects that, while they may not,
have exposed him to much public notice, brought
him into close contact with men in power., en-
abled him to amass a personal fortune and -.
most significantly at this point for the future of
the securities business - won him the personal
trust of the President of the United States.
Last January, after months of searching for
a successor to Hamer Budge as SEC chairman,
and with the industry in what might delicately
be described as disarray, Mr. Nixon turned to
his old political friend Bill Casey. An assortment
of aspirants had been put forward by various in-
dustry or party interests, but none of those inter-
ested had been found suitable. Casey was
sounded out, and the President invited him to
the White Hou..,e and asked him personally to
take the job, stressing the importance of a sound
capital market to the nation's economy. Casey,
who is noted[ for making quick decisions,
accepted on the spot. "I'm a team player," he ex-
plains. "Besides, I saw a great turning point for
the industry."
Off and running
In. nearly 200 days in office, Casey has engen-
dered surprisingly widespread admiration -
more for his approach to the, job than for any con-
crete achievements - from both hard-nosed in-
dustry leaders and cynical commission staffers.
He has, as we shall see, taken some encouraging
first steps and, indeed, shows signs of becoming
one of the most effective chairmen in the agency's
37-year history.
Most Wall Streeters who have trekked to
Washhngton to meet with Casey (he maintains
an open-door policy and will listen politely to
virtually anyone who wants to see him) have
come away impressed by his quick intelligence,
his no-nonsense directness and his understand-
ing of how most of the complex issues facing the
industry are intimately interrelated. To many
of them, however,Approveld`i-or'I elea a a uu iu1/03
Casey as an investor
The natureof Willi M Casey's investments be-
came a matter of widespread r ubllc interest
during the controversy over his confirmation.
What are they and how has he done?
In a letter to the Senate Banking Committee
Casey noted `that his securities portfolio-had
been managed for the last eleven years by a
professional investment adviser` with full discre-
tionary powers, He said he owned a #o#al of 65
securities, seventeen of Which resulted from his
venture capital activities. Over tfe last quarter-
century, Casey added, h?tparticipated "actively
in varying degrees" in5 ventures. This activity
was not:haphaard, rather it focused on the fields
of inform anon and'co tm +nieations and on tech-
nologioal and financial innovation, Ail of them
texc t one ventur'e:ha made into scientific far -
77, in iti which hs ingested $70,OGcl) are viable busi-
nesses today
Had I limited my investments over this
,span of time to being a stc ckholder in large, estab-
lished corporations, this activity`t ould not have
involve f me in any` litigation,' he said, referring
to the oases that aroused headlines during the-
hearings," "and 1-m ywash have profited more,
but t would not have had the interest, satisfaction
or experience that comes from investment and
active participation in new enterprises concerned
with development and change in bur society.
Casey also said he hadfour rules in making
venture capital investments:
it Confine your investment to a minority
position and your activity to the role of director.
it Put up as much money as anyone else.
sit Never invest more than you can afford to lose.
it Stand ready to play a leading role in
refinancing or reorganizing a venture which runs
into difficulties when you need to protect your
stake and when you still believe the technology
has merit. it
not yet in, and they are waiting to see how he
deals with such fundamental problems of the
business as fixed vs. nelrotiated commissions,
the separation of money management and bro-
kerage, institutional access, pressures for and
against a strong central marketplace, and the
antitrust specter that has long hovered over the
exchange community. Powerful industry and
political interests are arrayed on both sides of
all these issues. (For a sampling of Casey's views
on these and other key matters confronting the
industry, see page 30.)
That picture on Casey s wall, then, provides
a good many clues about the man who was
plucked from supposed obscurity to head the
SEC during this critical period. It suggests that
: H- Lii1 6bg F bb6b466LJ T e, when he
Casey as a Republican
candidate (19613) and at
a reunion of OSS veterans
in Paris (below).
wants it, unlike others who have held the post in
the past -- a point that could become particular-
ly important when and if new securities legisla-
tion is drafted. More subtle, but perhaps more
significant, is the fact that that line to the White
blouse might not have to be used - either way.
"I can tell you," confides a man in close touch
with both the SEC and the Administration, "that
the President has complete confidence-in Casey
and wants him to call the shots as he sees them."
The picture indicates, too, that Casey -- ob-
scure lawyer though he originally was thought
to be - is far from a neophyte in dealing with
the political pressures and bureaucratic inertia
that often overwhelm even the most energetic
Wash'.ington newcomer. Although Casey seldom
shared the spotlight, he has long worked inti-
iaately with men who made the headlines. His
former bosses and associates, in addition to
,-resident Nixon (the relationship started with
the 1960 campaign), include: William J. Donovan,
who ran the Office of Strategic Services during
World War II; David Bruce, another former OSS
official who became one of the nation's top dip-
lomat:s; Averell Harriman, while he was running
the Marshall Plan; Allen Dulles, one-time direc-
tor of the Central Intelligence Agency; Leonard
I[all, Republican National Chairman and head of
Eisenhower's 1956 campaign; John McCloy,
Former U.S. High Commissioner for Germany
and ex-chairman of the Chase Manhattan Bank,
who headed the arms control advisory commit-
When Casey ran int, Congressional flak on his
nomination, people of such lofty stature came
to his support. And the massive record of his con-
firmation hearings -- totaling 1,176 pages in two
volumes -- contains dozens of letters and tele-
grams from friends, ssociates and clients attest-
ing to his character a- ad ability (as well as others
from strangers wiio were bitterly critical as a
result of press reports of the lawsuits in which
he had been involved i.
Considering the t:i,ct that his nomination was
enveloped in so mush controversy and that so
much of Wall Street seemed disposed to resent
him from the start, r fie favorable impact Casey
has made so rapidly is all the more remarkable.
At this point industry insiders can't recall any-
one who has gained such rapid acceptance, par-
ticularly after such a in inauspicious arrival. De-
scriptions of him seerua almost repetitious in their
praise; he is alternately called "an action guy,"
"a quick study," "aa, tough, no-nonsense fellow,"
someone who sees the big picture" and "the best
thing to happen to th, ' industry.-
Some skeptics. however, even though they
may echo some of these phrases. suggest that
thus far Casey has strown more style than sub-
stance. The commision's early actions under
his direction, they c, Fntend, have dealt with i,s-?
sues such as greater disclosure, more readable
prospectuses, clarify! ng letter stock regulations.,
immobilizing the stc,,:k certificate, studying off-
shore funds and strengthening brokerage house
capital resources --- all of' which, like mother-
hood, are important but relatively noncontro-
versial. Meanwhile, the more cosmic matters
that will shake and shape the industry remain
to be tackled.
"Has he been play: ng for the headlines?" asks
a former SEC staffer who is now a top securities
lawyer. "I don't see evidence of much getting
done beyond the hoold.a. I'm wondering whether
he'll turn out to be a t% pical Republican business-
man-chairman who relieves in a minimum of
regulation and a max mum of enforcement. And
this would be a disaster right now. The financial
community needs strong leadership from outside
the industry. Casey r:ould fill the bill, but it's
much too early to tell vet whether he will."
"We moved fast osa the things that were pret-
ty obvious," Casey r,::sponds, "but we have to
proceed cautiously on longer-term matters." He
toe, and a host of others. feels a particular serape of urgency right now in
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the area of market structure, including institu-
tional access and the role of regional exchanges,
where he believes "far-reaching implications are
getting resolved by accident, litigation and in-
action."
Translating this concern into concrete action,
he has scheduled a public "investigatory" hear-
ing starting this month to examine a wide range
of industry questions, including a national sys-
tem of securities exchanges, institutional mem-
bership, nonmember access, standard regula-
tion for various markets, the possibility of a "uni-
versal" ta=pe and competition among exchanges
and between exchanges and other markets.
By temperament and training, Bill Casey is the
kind of man who can say abruptly: "I don't want
to sit around talking about these things.: I'm
short on patience." At the same time, though,
he expresses concern about the risk of making
far-reaching decisions without having collected
all the facts. "We have to evaluate the total con-
text and the long-term effect," he says, "and I'm
inclined to go slowly." In point of fact, however,
what appears slowness to some might look like
great speed to others. (His nickname as a boy
was "Cyclone.")
Some kind of whirlwind may be needed to
deal with all the problems that now face the com-
mission. A recent visitor to Casey's office found
him working at a huge, impressively cluttered,
glass-topped walnut desk (SEC No. 14419) that
had been used by his predecessor and other com-
missioners before him. Filling the far left side of
the desk was a long file of legal-size, well-stuffed
yellow folders, which silently told the story of
the massive issues which confront him. Among
subject headings:
Accounting Matters
Back Office and Certificate Problems
Chicago Board of Trade Option Exchange
Commission Rate Proposals
Fund Portfolio Brokerage
Gun-Jumping
Institutional Study Material
Lockheed
Martin Report
Net Capital
October Hearings
Segregation of Securities
SIPC Task Force
Study of Unsafe and Unsound Practices
After the Congressional
furor over his nomination
(Casey testifying, left), the
new SEC chairman has
joined the Administration's
power structure (with Fed
Chairman Burns and Trea-
sury Secretary Connally,
below).
One of the first thing,,; Casey has done is to
start developing a strong personal staff. To get
the commission functioiing more efficiently
from a management standpoint, he created the
post of executive director and filled it with A.
Jones Yorke III, formerly a vice president at
Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette. He also reached
into four of Wall Street's best-known law firms
to pick his executive assiss,ant (Charles Whitman
III of Davis Polk & Wardwell) and three special
counsels (John Liftin of Sullivan & Cromwell,
Leon Picard of Mudge, ltu,se, Guthrie & Alexan-
der and Howard Kristol if Cravath, Swaine &
Moore). The last three posts, restoring to the
Chairman's office some of the legal manpower it
had had under Manuel C ohen, are designed to
provide in-depth research and policy work for
Casey and to help coordinate matters that cut
across staff divisional lines.
In general, Casey seems to be gently molding
the commission more alo:ig the lines of a mod-
ern corporation, including giving the four other
commissioners more sharply defined executive
responsibilities in specific areas of the agency's
operations. His support of the appointment of
general counsel Philip Loomis as a commissioner
was heartening to the staff, and it also gave the
e~nd experi
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