. i '1 - Mr. 11?1" is" 1.1 Mr. Rampton . 51c, Los Angeles (100-15732) say 16,? 1961 Director, FBI (1004138754) INFILTRATION OF THE. ??mrmu PICTURE INDUSTRY INTERNAL SECURITY - The Bureau is in receipt of a UPI release dated 5- 8-61 at ?hicago indicating that actor Ronald Reagan made statements on that date to the effect that communists are "crawling out of the rocks" in Hollywood. Reagan, who is President . of the Screen Actors Guild, said the Communist Part ''has ordered once again? a massive infi tration of the motion picture and television industries. Reagan said communists are attempting to consolidate motion picture industry trade unions "under the umbrella of Harry Bridges' Maritime Union." Bufiles contain numerous references to Ronald Rem gun, chiefly in with his anticommunist activities in different Hollywood organizations. He has been contacted on several occasions by Agents of the Los Angeles Office and ?in every instance has been cooperative and he] ful. Tolson Parsons Mohr Belmont Collohan Conrad . DeLouch . 1 Evans Malone Rosen 'Tovel Trotter . W. C. Sullivan I Tele. Floors 2?31:ng g?am? TELETYPEI UNIT Cl this communication. meah??v lb if - Unless your files indicate otherwise, you shou interview Mr. Reagan concerning his remarks made in Chicago and the basis for same. The Bureau should be advised concerning the results of .your interview and any leads which are developed as a result should he set forth under the appropriate case captions making reference to the caption of This matter should be handled 17 18 1931 4, 1 RonaklReagan?3094 g??jjff ?1.V?i . a . 7 HEREIN 1s museums as_ - Rig-1E} Mai-'3? (72 1 0-20 (Rev. 2-13-61) I UPI-199 (COHNUNI STS) Malonem Rosen Tavel Sull e. Room IngrahI Gandy CHICAGO--ACTOR RONALD REAGAN SAID TODAY THAT COMMUNISTS ARE OUT OF THE IN HOLLYWOOD. THE PRESIDENTOF THE SCREEN ACTORS GUILD SAID THE COMUNIST PARTY ORDERED ONCE AMASSIVE INFILTRATION OF THE MOTION PICTURE AND TELEVISION INDUSTRIES- REAGAN SAID CONHUNISTS ARE ATTENPTING TO CONSOLIDATE WTION- PICTURE INDUSTRY TRADE UNIONS THELIMBRELLA HARRY MRITINE p;lr ALL msuamanogcoremmw ?mm as 763?) MW. (M WASHINGTON CAPITAL NE SERVICE Ronald Reagan-3095 I10. - at MeCormiclc- Place. . . . - controlfis guild?and other Hy:- lywoo . unions, and orgar; them into one union ?under the- umbrella of Harry Bridges? mariu time 11111011? About 15,000 food executives are expected to attend. the four; fday meeting and trade show; - 'Ti 1 Richard Waxetlberg, .president of the institute. and president of Eagle Fohd Centers, said that supermarket operators have .1 little margin for error ,these days. Those who make mistakes quickly find, themselves bank-i Actor Reagan .7 Bares New Actor; Ronial iiMond'ay (has 0 (1 once again the 1 infiltratiou? the movie and ;e1evisi011i11dus'-'I rupt, he said, because ?the ?chips. '?jy are bigger and the risks greater?, 15. They me than in the past. "mane crawling 0111- from under the hacks, he said. - "We in HOI- ood 1' 5111? WAXENBERG spoke at thei 1 annual president?s dinne?r Sun-4} day in McCormick Place. .3. believe We have heen f! inisstating. the reasons for i 01111111111111 to achieve high- 1 er volume? 111 bigger stores, ?he said. - RONALD REAGAN their power once,- 'but it was only an isolated battle. i i' ?Memories being as short as they are, there are plenty of well-meaning but misguided peo- 'ple wiling to give. them a hand 1 agan,-for113er-- presides" Of 111 . creen Actors Guild poke s_u p?ct intensive resea, 11 will eal there are. fund if tally different techniqn? Mr. -. ?Mr. 3 Mr T013011 Parsons 1?11 0 . Belmont r? Mr. Mr. Mr. Del..oach Mr. Mr. Mr. 12113911--.- Mr. Tavel 2111. Tz'wntter Mi. W. Sullivan 'i?t-la. Miss Sandy-..? Mr. u. an?. .. op ating a $25, 000- week food executives at 011111115113; RED STREAK Edition Date Chicago, Illinois Page 601. Part: Editor JOHN 31111111011 CHICAGO OFFICE ?inual Super Market nshtute store and. a $125,000 store ALL immense CON 111.1111: 115111111 15 01151413311350 salt. 1.1.1. 51.612.11.11qu 3?13I?Nph 2,77959 051,-; 3 (jg-75? MM 3/in z? VDLO Ci 3? if}? 77: Ronald Reagan-3096 eon SAC, LOS ANGEIBS (loo?15732) i ALL ENFORMATION CONTAINED COMPLC, NEREQN is UNULASSMED Bureau (AIR MAIL) {fad /Q?f 24/ NO. to . sow-m4 STATES 0, 4 Memorandum '2 y' TO DIRECTOR, FBI (loo?138751;) DATE: 5/31/61 IS 0 egg, site Rebuiet dated 5/16/b 1 in regard to the newspaper reports of statements attributed to actor RONALD recently. 1 MRIWRONA AGAN has interviewed at his home, 1669 San 'fre,_Pa01fic Pallisades, California, on May 27, 1961 by SAs JOHN M. CASHEL and MARCU M. BRIGHT. Both he and his wife, the former actress NANC VIS, .ere completely friendly and cooperative. I -, REAGAN said he quite understood the Bureau's interest in the statements attributed to him by the Chicago press regarding the alleged Communist drive on the Holly- wood motion picture industry because they were rather sensational, however, they also quite exaggerated if con- sidered with reference to current Conditions. REAGAN said that actually the reporter who wrote the account of his speech at Chicago had done a very poor Job; that in REAGAN's opinion, the reporter must have drafted his account strictly from the introductory part of Speech which deals with the Communist situation in Hollywood during the 1945-1947 period. REAGAN recalled that he was very actiVe himself in combatting and exposing the Communist?led strike situation in the film industry during that period; and that as of that time, all of the statements were probably very true, i e. that Communists "were crawling out of the rocks" in Hollywood, that the Communist Party had "ordered a massive infiltration of the film industry" and that the Communists Were attempting to consolidate Hollywood guilds and unions "under the umbrella/fi of HARRY BRIDGES Maritime Union" . At any rate, those state- ments referred to the 1945-19?7 period. Los Angeles a? ff.? V, Ronald Reagan-3097 ?62 JUN 1 21961? as 1130* . .. 0' . 0 LA 100-15732 REAGAN said he has never intentionally stated publicly or otherwise that these conditions prevail today in Hollywood, although he believes the Communist Party will always regard the film industry as a prime target. In answer to specific questions, Mr. REAGAN said the Communist Party has no influence whatever,.insofar as he is aware, in the Screen Actors Guild the International Alliance of Theatrical and Stage Employees Screen Directors Guild or the Motion Picture Producers Association thinks there may be some pro-Commu~ nist sentiment in the_Writers Guild of America (formerly the Screen Writers Guild), which now includes all radio and television writers. rHowever, he said he has no information nor does he believe that WGA is in any controlled by Communist elements at this time. Mr. REAGAN said he feels that the producers may be getting away from the so-called Waldorf Agreement not to hire Communists which was entered into by the major film producers following the 1947 House Committee on Un-American Activities hearings on Communist_infiltration of the film industry. REAGAN points out that there_are hundreds of independent producers who are not bound by the agreement; and that many of these shut their eyes to a writer's or actor's politics if there is a good chance "to make a fast buck". He also believes it is not popular to be an active or outSpoken anti-Communist; that those who are or have been just do not seem to get the picture assignments they once did. REAGAN said he himself has felt this, although it is something difficult to prove or put one?s finger on. He com- mented that it is comparatively much easier to get an anti? Fascist story accepted for film or television than it is to get one accepted which is anti?Communist. In regard to the current extent of Communist infiltration or_ influence in the Hollywood film and television industry, Mr. REAGAN said he had no specific confidential sources or any first-hand information. However, he feels that one who has been actively following and combatting the Communist movement in Hollywood over the years, such as himself, can acquire a nose for these matters; that one can "smelln a situation when it starts to develop.. He said.that he has no way of knowing who is a Communist to the ectent of being able to prove it, although, based on his past active participation in the fight against the Party during the RonaklReagan-3098 -2- 0? I 1) LA 100?15732 1940's and the exposures by the various House Committee on UnaAmerican Activities hearings, he has a good knowledge of how the Communists elements work. - Mr. REAGAN said he has in the past and will continue to furnish the Bureau with any information which he regards as pertinent regarding these matters. RonaklReagan-3099 - '1 . L. . STANDARD FORM noO?ice . TO thinnest WUBJECT: <9 ?1 5111 1111111111 (12W DIRECTOR, FBI SAC, LOS ANGELES yq?m15?gy?5QM\ \0 5110960 0 HOLLYWOOD INDEPENDENT CITIZENS COMITTEE nsmm?tlfr?m 1g 11?: 3 (game s?scIeNcss AND PROFESSW IONS INTERNAL 1; 1111 snag-jig, :53ng Bureau file loo-340527 hE?g?i {pa in biuUiJluu} 3% Remylet July 11,1946 advising registere to 3?]?15y and RONAL4 i?EhegN, 9137 Cordell Drive, had been observed% near the home of JAMES OQSEVELT, 625 North Bedford Drive, Beverly? Hills, on July ?,1946f/ This 1 advise that on April 10,1947 Special Agents RICHARD D. ADERBAGK and FRED G. DUPUIS interviewed RONALD REAGAN and :?(zifj his wife JANE EMMAN as to their knowledge of Communist activity with- in the Screen Actors Guild of which they are members. During the course of the interview; the meeting described in reference letter was discussed and REAGAN stated he was present and that this meeting was precipitated by the fact he and nine other members of HIGOASP had attempted to create an issue to justify their resignations. REAGAN and this group of nine individuals advocated the ad0ption of a reselution by HICOASP to the effect that the organi- zation was opposed to Communism as well as Facism. The meeting re- ferred to was called to discuss such a resolution and was opened by JAMES ROOSEVELT, who, according to REAGAN, very timidly made the state? ment, "we all know our organization is not dominated by Communists but to pacify some of our more timid.memhers, pen aps we should adopt some Kind of resolution against it." REAGAN adv ed considerable discussion pro and con ensued and finalLy JOHN HOWARDZ WSON took the floor and stated positively and somewhat prolongedly, "Regardless of how much discussion occurs here, I can tell you this much for certain, HICOASP will never pass any resolution condoning Communism or condoning capi- talimn." LAWSON then offered a compromise resolution? which, acOOrd- ing to REAGAN, hardly touched on the question of Communism and was unacceptable to group, which then insisted upon the adoption of their resolution which condemned both.Commnnism and Facism in definite terms. At a subsequent meeting, a vote was taken on the resolution and group lost by a count of sixty to ten whereupon REAGAN resigned from HIGCASP the same evening by telegraph. 00-18355 ?cc - LA. 0?21198 7 . 1 1 1 - . a i I 4- May 23, 1951 ?f but he referred to Communism as being a very small group in the organization. He said that he abhors Communist philosophy but as a citizen he never wanted to see our country submit to fear to the extent that we would compromise with any of our democratic principles. (100-138754- 362) ASSOCIATES A Los Angeles Q?fice report describes a cocktail party held in Beverly Hills during.November 1943 at which time Ronald Reagan almost came to blows with a man who made anti- Semitic remarks. He also had an argument with Edward G. Robinson at the party, no details given. (100-146517-33) A confidential source of the Los Angeles Q?fice re- ported that in march 1948 reportedl a member af b6 :ff:ffmrunist Party in Hollywood) was asked b7C to try and raise campaign.funds for.Mr. Boroug ongressional candidate, by cont?262mg Ronald Reagan, Thomas mean, 1 Olivia me Bacilland, and others. 00?343468-39) MDBILIZATION.FOR concealer The Los Angeles foice obtained from a Los Angeles police officer a copy of a radio script broadcast on September 9, 1946, in Los Angeles under the title "Operation Terror"-which was presented by mobilisation for Remocracy, an alleged communist front organisation. This organization was reported to be under the direction of Robert R2 Kenny, Attorney General af the State of California. Its Executive Secretary was William R. Bidner, described as a Communist Party?functionary. The radio broadcast Ewas narrated by Ronald Reagan and purported to list a number af - Elna Klan acts qf terrorism in the Los Angeles area. A plea swas made for cooperation to bring about better understanding among Idi?ferent elements af society,regardless af race, creed or color. I(100-343748-s) CONTACTS WITH FBI In September 1941, Special Agent Charles C. Browning, Jr. submitted a memorandum to Mr. Clegg pointing out that as Assistant Executive Secretary of the college fraternity Tau Kappa Epsilon he was in a position to make contacts with a number of persons including Ronald Reagan. In a letter from the Director 9-26?41, Special Agent Browning was thanked and was asked to contact Ronald?' Reagan and the other individuals named, furnishing them the names of our various Special Agents in Charge. (66- -2542-7560) 7 - RonaklReagan-303 fb6 b7C fHon'orable Frank .mch :1 ?i'l . nonclenrances, express opinions regarding the suitability of persons "asides-z for Government employment or make recommendations with respect 7 to hiring, ~firing or retaining applicants and employees of other . Federal agencies. The purpose of these inquiries is to determine Hindu. facts about an individual on which appropriate officials can make a sound judgment as to whether or not that person warrants the trust placed in him as a public servant. In the domestic intelligence field, the primary aim of the FBI is to keep appropriate Government of?cials constantly informed with respect to the activities and plans of the enemies of democracy within the United tatesS so that effective 1 countermeasures and preventative means c'1 be devised. The FBI, as in the past, will endeavor to carry out these investigative responsibilities- to the utmost. Enclosed are several items settmg forth my views on these and other matters relating to communism which you may find of interest. - I Sincerely yours, In, Edges Bonnet: 1" Enclosures (5) The Communist Party Line Annual Report For 1961 -April 17,1961 Statement of J. Edgar Hoover Poster on Communism LEB Introduction of April 1, 1961 A .. NOTE: Bufiles reveal limited correspondence with Senator Church. His wife, . son and friends were taken on a special tour on 6-21-61. Senator Church had lunch at the Soviet Embassy on 8?25-60 and according to Allen Dulles, he argued on various matters withl ,[ljjle accepted another luncheon invitation at the Soviet Embassy on 2-16-Bu7lionald Reagan has Ronald Reagan-322' been very active in anticommunist'activities in several Hollywood Organizations. He has been contacted on several occasions by Agents of the Los Angeles Office and has been cooperative and helpful. Last contact with him was in September, 1960, at which time he endeavored to have the Director appear on his television program in connection with a show he desired to do which would be based on the Bureau' 3 pamphlet, "Communist TargeteYouth. This, of course, was declined. Editorial ticklers re?ect limited but cordial correspondence with the ?Twin Falls Times - News, last outgoing 1943. Jones to DeLoach I Ronald Reagan-328 Re: RONALD REAGAN Although he has been extremely anticommunist since about the mid- 1940's, he was reportedly a sponsor of the Committee for a Democratic Far Eastern 1/ Policy, which has been designated by the Depamm?f' to Executive Order 10450. In testimony before the House Committee on Un?American Activities in October, 1947, he said that he had received some literature from this organization, and that he was duped through a telephone call to lend his name as sponsor of a recital which he later learned was under the auspicies of the Joint Anti-Fascist Refugee Committee. It is noted in his testimony that he said he abhorlbd the communist [philos0phy. In the 1940's Reagan was reportedly a member of Americans for Democratic Action and the American Veterans Committee. In 1950 Dore Schary, prominent Hollywood personality, indicated he and Reagan, as well as others, had been active in the Hollywood Independentw Citizens Committee of the Arts Sciences and Professions in 1945, but got out that year when communists took over. Reagan became President of the Screen Actors Guild in 1947 and was subsequently re- e-lected. He was extremely active in the Guild in opposing the communists. Reagan has visited our Los Angeles Office and relations with him have been cordial. In 1960 he contacted the Bureau regarding his desires to do a television show for the "General Electric Theater, which he narrated, on the Director's ?Communist Target??Youth. This was declined. On his "General Electric Theater" series, Reagan has. produced a two-part program concerning the activities of Marion Miller, a former security informant of our Los Angeles Office. 106 In March, 1960, we cooperated with Reagan by making inquiries here in regarding Maureen Reagan, the daughter of Jane Wyman and was living with a married Metrogolitgn Pol". ce officer here in Washington Our inquiries appeared to confirm this situation and information was furnished on a confidential basis to now Senator George Murphy, who originally contacted our Los Angeles Office in the matter. Maureen had, in 1959, been the subject of a favorable Departmental applicant-type investigation in connection with Immigration and Naturalization Service employment; however, the investigation was discontinued. .- It is noted that in December, 1964, we received word that the San Diego Patriotic Society (SDPS) intended to make an "American Patriot Award" to the Director for his outstanding services to the United States of America. If there?was nothing in the files to prevent doing so, the SAC, San Diego, was instructed he could accept the award on behalf .of the Director. The award is connected with the American Patriot Hall of Fame which is sponsored by the SDPS, a conservative group, and several other local conservative organizations. Some time in April the presentation Will be made at a formal meeting attended by Ronald Reagan, John Wayne and perhaps former Senator Barry Goldwater, who has been given such an award. -2- See Recommendation page 3. 15" 4 NM 1?0 NO ?0 sow?mo a .4- 11350 I962 Kol'lvN a as. one no. no. :7 Tolscm UNITED STA rEs 1 Mr. DeLoach ix/Iemomndum 1. Mr, Mom I Conrad Mr. Rosen ET V. 00 SUIlivaW_ DATE: 11/18/66 uIlivcn 1. Ml?. SUllivan ifgtiler 1 i, Tele. Room FROM -. D. J. Brennan Jr? 1 ML Gale 1 1 1 - Liaison 24? 1 - D. Putnam 6 6103 INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE (IRS) ALL 11110111111119? :2 2 USC ,1 11511111111 us NC 111? . 0m legp?sgg W?m i - The following items of int?g ing 0 ?qu 1 activities at IRS were furnished bv Liaison contacts aV that Service: i 1 133?jad-l ?f'x 1 1 J1 - 314'? Z. 1-9111?ng 1 . 1 CONTINUED - OVER 1311;? . m' Ronald Reagan- -370 r? . - 0' v?t? 70 USC 6103 Memorandum J. Brennan to my, (2., Sullivan RE: INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE (ms) The foregoing individuals ;1rnished the above informa- tion on a strictly confidential basis and requested that it not be disseminated outside the ?urcauo ACTION: For information, Ronald Reagan-371 2? - 1 s. ornomn ronM N41. Io sow?loo MAY 1962 EDITION GSA GEN. use. No. 27 Tolson STATES GOVERNMENT Dehoach Memorandum T0 MR. TOLSON DATE: 10/27/67 ?$an . - . Tovel cc Mr. DeLoach FROM 2 . D. DeLoac?f?g . . SUWECP GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN 37;; (Homosexuals on staff) . 7 f7 7. . Jack Anderson, of Dr?E?Rgirson's staff, called me A on 10/27/67, and stated that Pea son had called him from the West Coast to ascertain if any information could be picked up to confirm a rumor Pearson had received while on the Coast. Anderson told me that.Governor Reagan had on his b6 Staffl I b7c Irecently complained that her l?uyear-old son had been the subject of a homosexual attack by a member of the staff of Governor Reagan The vernor assigned an, a investigator b! the name ofI Ito look into this tter. n1 i us in cabin wned b6 Anderson stated that Pearson had learned that~ b7C Imicrophone reflected homosexual at the above-mentioned cabin on the art of another staff member whose na individual whose last having is erson was unable to state whether this is [or not). While at the cabin one of the visitors reportedly \3 - was a young FBI Agent who did not knfmauma three abovle- b6 is 3:5 5 named individuals were homosexuals. made a pass b7C at the FBI Agent. The FBI Agent allegedly turned him down .a and left the place. Anderson wondered if the FBI had any A statement to make concerning this matter. I stated we 3 E23 ?mag did not. bk (E??rfk?i Anderson stated it could be that Pearson had garbled? gwaLoves Mary," ?The Girl From Jones Beach," and ight Unto Might.? (In 1948 he made the picture ?The Hastnyeart" in England mane of group 0f Hollywood actors ems-7399 ?Eb/mg ?39x nd was were? goon? forfthe Roy%% ifg?y, . a, 0RD 0.112555-,?29% mg f?anmm WYR314 MM 79 1963 - I .i - .. . i :11. - . i' Memo to Mr. Nichols May 2ii 1951 In 1949 Reagan was cast for a starring role opposite Ida Lupino in ?Fugitive From Terror" but retired from the cast in June 1949 after breaking a leg playing in a charity baseball game. In that year, Reagan signed a five year contract for one picture a year with Universal-International. Reagan is under exclusive con- tract to Varner Brothers First National Studios. Reagan became active in the Screen Actors Guild in 1941 and became a member of the Board of Directors in 1946. In 194? he was elected to serve the unexpired term of Robert Montgomery as President of the Screen Actors Guild. In a subsequent campaign for that office Reagan was opposed by ?Left?wing Members," but won the .office in November 1947, was elected for a second term in 1948, and 1was re-elected in 1949 as President of the Guild. Writing as a vacation substitute for Victor Riesel, New York Post labor columnist, on 6?24?47, Reagan, speaking for himself and past presidents of the Guild, Ceorge.Murphy, Edward Arnold, and Robert.Montgomery, declared that they were violently opposed to ?indiscriminate Red~baiting" but urged that every union realize the menace of Communism seeking to infiltrate trade unions. Victor Riesel was quoted as commanding the ability of Reagan which he said would be useful to the AII. Reagan testified before the Heuse UnaAmerican Activities Committee in October 1947 at which time he claimed that Communists in the Guild constituted only one percent of its members. Reagan in 1949 was named Chairman of the.Motion Picture Industry Council which in that year passed a resolution promising cooperation with law enforcement agencies in ?ridding the community" of criminal elements, and recommended that young newcomers to the movie studios be thoroughly schooled in personal behavior and responsibilities. During the 1948 Presidential election the actor, who serves on the board of the Hollywood chapter of the American Veterans Committee, organized the Labor League of Hollywood Voters, backed by twenty?one AFL unions, in support of President Truman's candidacy. Reagan is a member of the Friars Club and attends the 1 Christian Church. In January 1940 the actor married Jane Wyman and they have two children. They were divorced in July 1949.' Reagan is described as 6? 1" tall, weight 175 lbs., blue eyes, and brown hair. His address is 0/0 Warner Brothers, c/o The Screen Actors Build in Hollywood, and his home is at 360 North Camden Drive, Beverley Hills, California. Reagan?298 I Ronald Memorandum to Mr. Nichols CW May 23, 1951 American Veterans Committee (AVG) ORGANIZATTONS . A report of the Los Angeles Q?fioe dated June 17, 1946, contained information that Ronald Reagan attended a conference luncheon of the AVG in Los Angeles. At that time he introduced a speaker at the luncheon. In the report appears the statement that the conference adopted a program'Vin complete conformity-with that of the communist.Party line," and there was stated that affew Communists were active in the AVG. The report, however, contained %no information regarding Communist activity on the part of Reagan ior his own associates. (100-339008-31) The Paso Robles Press on 8?20?46 carried an article regarding an AVG meeting and mentioned Reagan as active in the national organization, along with F. D. Roosevelt, Jr., Harold Stassen, Tyrone Power, Sterling Hayden, et al. (lOOu339008?49) A confidential source reported plans for an AVG dinner to be held at the Plaza Hotel in New York Gity in November, 1946. Ronald Reagan was listed as a member of the National Finance Gom- mittee of the AVG, whose chairman was Newbold.Morris. (100-339008-109) Committee Fer A Democratic Far Eastern Policy A Los Angeles Q?fice report of 4?11-46 mentions the Los Angeles Committee For A Democratic Tar Eastern Policy, described by a confidential informant as being a Communist front pressure group-set up to support Soviet Union foreign policy in the Orient. The report contains the statement "the Communist nature of the e?fort is located (in Holly- location is continuously used by Communists as a propaganda center." The report then lists Ronald Reagan as one of 'the "sponsors and directors, all of whom have records of Gommunist activity or sympathies." No?further details along this line are contained in the report with respect to Reagan. (100-138754-124) In Jane, 1946, the letterhead of the Committee For A Demo- cratic Far Eastern Policy carried the name of Ronald Reagan as one of the sponsors who included Irving Potash, Dowey Wilkerson, Louise R. Bransten, Paul Robeson, and others. (100-64700-488) According to the Communist newspaper "Peoples World" for 2-26?48, this Committee urged President Truman to recall troops?from China and declared support of Indonesian A confidential source furnished a copy of a form letter and other literature of the GDFEP announcing that in April, 1945, Ronald Reagan-299 'r .7 Memorandum to ur. Nichols May 23, 1951 a "Spotlight on the Far East" dinner was held in_New YOrh City, attended by Senator Tobey, Agnes smedley, Richard watts, Jr., 0.8. Congressman Hugh DeLacy and others, at which time there was played a recorded message from Madam Sun Yat-Sen. The printed program listed Ronald Reagan as one of the sponsors on this occasion, along with Lee Pressman, Paul Draper, Paul Robeson, and others. (100-64700-684) - Americans For Democratic Action (ARA) In a Los Angeles report dated 4-16-48 it was pointed out that the ADA in Hollywood is "left, and that the majority of its members had at one time or other been members of Communist front groups over a period of years. As being typical of such indipiduals, according to a confidential infOrmant, there was listed the name of Ronald Reagan. Also listed were Leo Rosten, walter wanger, Reloyn Douglas, and others, "who are affiliated with AIM but who have helped the Communist movement." (100?138754-461) International Rescue And Relief Committee ff The handbill ?Alert," self-styled confidential weekly report on un-American activities in California, announced the Los Angeles appearance on 4~6-48 of Arthur Koestler, described as an expert in Marxism who was hated and feared by the Communists. The appearance was sponsored by the International Rescue and Relief Committee, and among members of the Southern California Committee was Ronald Reagan. (100-1852-24) ANTI- COMMUNIST ACTIVITIES Labor League Qf Hollywood Voters The "Hollywood Reporter"?for November ll, 1948,-reported the farmation of the last mentioned organization for the purpose of blocking Communist penetration of motion pictures. Ronald Reagan was reported to be the chairman. (100-138754-513) Hollywood Independent Citizens Committee 0f Arts, Sciences and Professions On December 12, 1950, Mr. Bore Schary, second in com- mand at MGM Studios, had a conference with the SAC in Los Angeles.- He stated that in 1945 he, as well as ?such other well-known anti- Communists as Ronald Reagan" had been active in the HICCASP. The 'informant said that in 1945 the CommunistStooh over this organiza- \tion at an open meeting and that he and others dropped out of the organization and had nothing more to do with it. The Director noted would view with some reservations Schary' prafession of anti- Ronald Reagan-300 -4 kA/ifITigd??r3 3 . Gm??w?t 1. 1 Memorandum to ur. Nichols May 23, 1951 Communism now. It is, of course, not popular nor profitable to be known as fellow travelers now, but these Johnnies?come-lately raise in me a question as to their basic sincerity." (100-138754-695) ,Motion Picture Industry Council a A confidential informant of the Los Angeles Q?fice reported in 1948 that in an e?fort to ?whitewash" charges of Com- munism in the movie industry, there had been organized the.Motion Picture Industry Council under Mr. Dore Schary, to cover up and play down all public information relating to Communist activities. Among the members of this group was Ronald Reagan, and also named was Cecil B. DeMille and others. (100-138754-481) At a meeting during June, 1949, Y. Eh freeman, an execu- tive of Paramount Studios, referred to Ronald Reagan as being exem- plary in avoiding unintentional listing of his name by Communist front groups. (100?138754?525) In January, 1951, a confidential army source reJErredfun.&Eggu to this or aniaation as being headed by Ronald Reagan, and as bei "allegedlngommunis-t Party infiltrated. -138754-699) you A confidential informant of our Los Angeles Office, however, reported in 1950 that the organization was free from any COmmunist taint or penetration. (100-138754-66?) Ronald Reagan-301 May 23, 1951 Screen Actors Cuild The washington Evening Star for carried a story regarding the election of Ronald Reagan as President of the Guild which adopted a resolution calling for officers to sign non?Communist affidavits. ,1 In September 1949, Ronald Reagan was nominated for re-election as head of the Guild. (100-138754-545) A confidential informant of the Los Angeles Q?fice in November 1950 reported that the Guild was controlled by a group of actors who were actively opposed to Communism. Ronald Reagan had been reuelected as President in November 1950 and was out- 3 oken in his oppoSition to Communist activities in 100-138754-691) A confidential informant of the Los Angeles Q?fice had reported in September 1950 that Ronald Reagan was definitely an anti-Communist Guild leader. American Activities on 4-10-51, reported by highly confidential source) the confessed Communist Sterling Hayden referred to his. Hollywood cell activities in the movie industry during 1946. He said his group made no progress because of the Board qf Directors of the Guild and referred to Reagan "who was.a one-man battalion against this thing? (presumably against Communism.) (1 00-138754-793) . During his testimony b?fore House Committee on un- TESTIMONY BEFORE COMMITTEE Ronald Reagan was one of a number of {friendly witnesses" called to testify before the House Committee on_un-American - Activities during October 1947. ,He said that he had been a member of the Screen Actors Guild since June 193?; that he had received literature from the Committee for a Far Eastern Democratic Policy which he could not identify as being Communist or_not and with whose views he disagreed; that he was duped through a telephone call to lend his name as sponsor of a recital which he later learned was actually under auspices of the Jaint anti-Fascist Refugee Committee;~and that he recognized the Communist strategy of using the names of prominent people to raise money and gain support. - um. Reagan recognised the Communist Party as being a political party and said he hesitated to see any political party? 3 outlawed on the basis of its political ideologies. If an organi- I nation proved to be an agent of a.foreign power, that is another matter. He referred to disruptive Communist a?forts in the Guild - 6 - RonakIReagan-302 1-- . i; s: 4- May 23, 1951 ?f but he referred to Communism as being a very small group in the organization. He said that he abhors Communist philosophy but as a citizen he never wanted to see our country submit to fear to the extent that we would compromise with any of our democratic principles. (100-138754- 362) ASSOCIATES A Los Angeles Q?fice report describes a cocktail party held in Beverly Hills during.November 1943 at which time Ronald Reagan almost came to blows with a man who made anti- Semitic remarks. He also had an argument with Edward G. Robinson at the party, no details given. (100-146517-33) . A confidential source of the Los Angeles Q?fice re- ported that in march 1943 (reportedl a member af b6 the Communist Party in Hallywood) was asked b7C to try and raise campaign.funds for.Mr. Borough, Congressional candidate, by cont ting Ronald Reagan, Thomas Bonn, Olivia De Havilland, and DEMOCRACY The Los Angeles foice obtained from a Los Angeles police officer a copy of a radio script broadcast on September 9, 1946, in Los Angeles under the title "Operation Terror"-which was presented by Mobilization for memocracy, an alleged communist front organization. This organization was reported to be under the direction of Robert R2 Kenny, Attorney General sf the State of California. Its Executive Secretary was William R. Bidner, described as a Communist Party?functionary. The radio broadcast Ewas narrated by Ronald Reagan and purported to list a number cf - Elna Klan acts qf terrorism in the Los Angeles area. A plea swas made for cooperation to bring about better understanding among Idi?ferent elements cf society,regardless af race, creed or color. CONTACTS WITH FBI In September 1941, Special Agent Charles C. Browning, Jr. submitted a memorandum to Mr. Clegg pointing out that as Assistant Executive Secretary of the college fraternity Tau Kappa Epsilon he was in a position to make contacts with a number of persons including Ronald Reagan. In a letter from the Director 9-26?41, Special Agent Browning was thanked and was asked to contact Ronald?' Reagan and the other individuals named, furnishing them the names of our various Special Agents in Charge. (66- -2542-7560) 7 - RonaklReagan-303 may 23, 1951 On April 10, 1947, Special Agents Richard B. Auerbach and Fred G. anuis interviewed Ronald Reagan and his wife, Jane Wyman, as to their knowledge of Communist activity within the Screen Actors Guild. Reagan described a meeting at the home of James Roosevelt in Beverly Hills, California, of July 5, 1946. This was a meeting of the Hollywood Independent Citizens Committee cf the Arts, Sciences and Prqfessions. Reagan and.his group advocated a resolution opposing Communism as well as Fascism. John Howard Lawson was present and declared that no resolution would ever be passed condemning Communism. The resolution proposed by Reagan was voted down whereupon he resigned from the organi- zation that same evening by telegraph. (100:33892-l24) - ?Jgighl? In a letter dated October 24, 1947, to the Director, Mr. Quentin Reynolds made reference to a dinner which they had attended and at which Ronald Reagan had made a passing remark that or. Reynolds was said to be a Communist. (This is mentioned in this memorandum because the letter from.Mr. Reynolds indicates that the Director and Ronald Reagan were both present at the . dinner in question) (94-34419-9) - ?On December 19, 1947, the Los Angeles foice reported information concerning Communist activities in the motion picture industry. The investigative report sets forth the in- formation received by Special Agent Fred C. Dupuis from (Ronald Reagan, President of the Screen Actors Guild.) .Reagan said that he had been made a member of a committee headed by L. B. mayor for the purpose of purging the motion picture industry -af Cammunists. Reagan referred to the House un-American Activities iCommittee hearings conducted by Chairman Thomas in Washington, D. C. as being regrettable. Reagan thought that the "unfriendlvaitnesses" should have been allowed to make the prepared statements they had Eready, and they would have condemned themselves in the eyes of the {public more efficiently than the Committee was able to do. He (criticized the attitude of the Committee Investigator, Stribling. :Reagan said that the group to which he, himself; belonged did not' {have a sound program for eliminating Communism, because it was jimpossible to identify Communist Party members, some of whom he iwas convinced were members of the Guild. Reagan was convinced that Congress should outlaw the Communist Party and that Congress should -define organizations which are Communist controlled. (100-138754-3679 Los Angeles report dated 2-10-48 was submitted concerning Lloyd Cough, a reported.Communist Party me . The investigative report sets out information obtained from T-6 Ronald Reagan, LL. - a - RonaklReagan-307 Ii I 4 . i paw. . 5 ?rt. if -- May 23, 1951 f?15_ . 1/ President of the Screen Actors Guild) who said that meetings of the Guild were attended by a clique of individuals headed by Ann Revere, and included Lloyd Gough, Larry Parks and Karen Morley, who invariably followed the Communist Party line at Guild meetings. (100-351325-5) . Ronald Reagan-305 A, i Ronald Reagan-306 - p?iwt?comt FORM No.10 . . Tyelson CL. a" mom? QPED STATES GOV MENT Parsons Memorandum Malone McGuire Hosen T0 1 Mr. Mohr DATE: August 26, 1960 Term Trotter W.C. Sullivan . Tele.Room FROM C. . D. DeLoach Ingmm . iv SUBJECT. NOMMUNIST FROM RONALD REAGAN M., 8- 26- 60 POSSIBLE TELEVISION snow By reference from the Director/s Office, I talked with Ronald Reagag, the movie star, at 1: 20 p. m. 26- 60. Mr. Reagan had just finished reading the Director 8 pamphlet, "Communist Target-?Youth. He was very enthusiastic. He stated he has a Sinday night television show which has a viewing audience of 30 million people. It is the eneral Electric Theater. He mentioned that this was a very high type show and the programs usually are of the. type that will render a public service. Mr. Reagan felt that the Director's pamphlet should receive considerable publicity throughout the United States. He expressed the thought that the entire population should be made aware of the communist danger. He would like to base a future Sunday night program upon the pamphlet if the Director has no objections. He stated that the locality in which the youth riots occurred (San Francisco) would naturally be changed and that all names would be fictionalized in view of legal problems involved. He pointed out that the show would reflect innocent appearing students on a college campus and how these students could be duped by the communists into carrying on subversive activities. Mr. Reagan also brought up the possibility of the Director appearing on 4, his television show at the conclusion of the program. He stated if the Director could not come to California he would be happy to have a camera crew film the Director in his office. He stated this would lend great authenticity and dignity to his program. fig..- He would request the Director to give approximately 2 to 3 minutes of remarks concerning the danger of communism and particularly communist infiltration of youth. I I told Mr. Reagan that the Director would be very pleased at his interest inthis matter and would, of course, correspond with him in the very near future. He was told of the Director?s travel status at the present time. He was additionally advised that the Director? 5 very tight schedule usually precludes him from appearing on television or radio and that such would undoubtedly be the case in. this instance; however, the matter would be checked. :23. 94" .- e. REG.- 63 Enclosure 333 AU. CONTAINED TESEQ (5 see I 1 Morrell HEREIN iS museum 1 - Mr. Jones 0.17.5171: 811%ng :4 NE ((133) IV: :1 . Ronald Reagan-307 DeLo?ach to Mohr 8-26-60 Re: Call from Ronald Reagan 8-26?60 Possible TV Show Ronald Reagan-is, of course, well known to the Director as an anti? communist. He has paid several visits to the Los Angeles Office and we have had cordial relations with him. ACTION: Inasmuch as Reagan's program would undoubtedly do a great deal of good, it is suggested that we offer no objections to the program. This should serve as a great public service, if produced prope and should additionally furnish considerable desirable publicity for the Director' 5 amphlet,"Commun1s Target--Youth.? Mr. Reagan specifically indicated he would appreciate very much our - informally reviewing his script whenever. it was written concerning the program. 1? Mr. Reagan did not ask for any teChnical or consultant advice in connection with this program. He merely desires permission from the Director to use the pamphlet and to have the Director on his program. There is attached a suggested letter to Reagan. Theletter additionally informs Mr. Reagan that the Director, because of his heavy schedule of commitments, cannot appear'on the program although? the invitation is deeply appreciated. 41 7 1 Ronald Reagan-308? 195E NAME March 20, 1959 OFFDGE OP HAVAL IITBLLIGEICE IAHE CHECK REQUESTS ?0 Reference is and. to your nau- ohack request: FA. concerning the individual. liotod below, requesting only copies of report. or any security-typo investigation. conducted by this Bureau. In.rolpanoo. on are adviaod that no ouch investigations of no person: have been conducted by the FBI. 0 maggagaam February 6. 1911 Illinoi- Jonos E. Daugherty Employment: Univerlity or Foreign Policy Research Institute Philadelphia, The foregoing information is furnished to you as a result or your request: for an RBI r11: check and is not to be construed as a clearance or a non- clolronoe or the individual: involved. This information in loaned for your use and it not to be outside or your agency. Orig and one to ONI Req. rec'd 3/9/5? Ao Lo lottman/aal hief Yeoman W. Carroll, ORI, requested a search for main subversive files only. He advised that only copies of investigative reports of the results of investigation were requested. Reason: Global Strategy Conference to be held at Naval War College early 19,9. -mequwemom th Tolson - . I. Brilliant?? 7 "T?C?rf?dai?gi?i; quakes?? I I re Hohr .. - ., ~71" 3 E: I . Noon 7 . a, NOT RECORD i 3 . .. AUSSAQKQS 4 1959 . Roson 5 MAR 2 .. . f? Tomm 405? as 14 7V, 5 Trotter I if} Sullivan 3911919 4 Tole. Room a Holloman . P3X m1 ?3 Candy?~49 3i UNIT i m? a? i . August I31, 1960 . . -- 2 Rhine 13 homestriEB 22": . i 2 - Enii BY 5 Mr Ronald Ream - ?71 Mina; Mag?je - 1669 San Onofro Read . . 4451/93 Pacific ?Rolland?, Caliternia I . . . V?Dear _Mr. Reagan: Upon may return to Washington I was 1mmedtatoly advised of your telephone conversation with Assistant Director C. D. Deloaoh I?on August 26, 1969. . . I are pleased to learn of your interest in the 'sional pamphlet whieh I mote entitled "Communiot Target- ~Yonth. Your desire to use this pamphlet as a but: for producing a television show and your most thongh?nl Invitation for the to appear on each a program are the several! or deep personal eausfaotion for me; however, I regretfully decline. - . . - The producuon of an inspiring program of the magnitudo you propose would necessarily require our technioal aeslot'anoe regarding 3 the thany rami?cations involved in aeourately portraying the meridians . methods the comma to infiltrate our youth.? I regret that we - 2 to cooperate? in ouch a meditation. '7 -- . .. Stnoemly My. . '2 ?-EdgenHWY?er - .. . . 31;: - Los Angeles - g- .. 1 _.Mr DeLoach 2 - . 1 - Mr. Jones (Sent Direct252:. 1 Mr. MorIrell (sent Direct) - . . Tolson . .. See DeLoach to Mom memo dated 8/26/60 captmned ?Commrira?-t TargetH-Yputh :22 Call from Renald Reagan: 20 13- ?122 8/26/60 Television ShoWl oak. I I DeLooch MAIL. Ronald PReagan _309 Malone . A McGuire . Rose-n ofnm 1 rotter .C. Sullivan .T?le. Room '?nqrom . 2}ndy I . . OFFICE DIRECTOR . ,ft I BUREAU OF Mr. Belmont I 7 UN-ITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE AuguSt 26,1960 thani" a 00?6 eLeac Mr. Malone Mr. RONALD REAGAN telephoned W. McGuire through Operator from West Los Mn Angeles, California, for the Director. Mr- Tarnm He was advised of the Director's Trotter absence from the city and referred Jones to Mr. DeLoach. SUN wan_ Tele. Room Mr. Ingram Mr. DeLoach advised that Mr. Reagan Miss Holmes had. just read thepamphlet "CommunistMiss Gandy Target-~Youth, and Mr. Reagan thought that this pamphlet should be brought to the attention of as many of the public as possible. M?i?e/agan has a Sunday night television show called and he would like to do a tel vi ion show based on the pamphlet showing how college youths could be duped by the Communist Party. Mr. Reagan stated he would change the location and fictionalize the identities of the public service. people involved. He thought this would be a yea; Mr. Reagan said he would like to have the Director appear at the end of the program and express the 3 danger of communism. :27 22 ng? Mr. De oac advised Mr. Reagan that he doubted seriously that the Director would be able to do this, A but that this very kind invitation to the Director's attention for consideration. Mr eagan asked about making a show basedm?t?e? let, and he was told that this would also be considereggw he would be advised. Mr. DeLoachLi 'ng amemorandum. machete? 9 71968 ALL Wi?iltt? HEREIN 35 UNCLASSIFIED switj/g??davg; ?12 .Mohr OPTIONAL FORM no. 10 A, . Tolson . .. 7 ?7 UNITED STATES . - pagans Belmont Ma lone McGuire dun? Ronald Reagan?311 $11132: i, 32:? TO 2 Mr. DeLoach DATE: 9'8?60 gm? W.C. Sullivo .. Tele. Room FROM ALL 01?: ?011.11: 111111: 33:12? HEREIN it; 91?? GM) 11120 0111 134 521M Hewett SUBJECT: RONALD REAGAN 8,405 (4'3 MASTER OF CEREMONIES GENERAL ELECTRIC THEATER BACKGROUND: You will recall that the captioned individual telephoned the Director's Office on 26?60, and upon referral, you talked to him. Reagan was interested in producing a television show for the "General Electric Theater" shown on a national network on Sunday evenings on the subject of Mr. Hoover's pamphlet, "Communist Target- -Youth. He was very enthusiastic about the pamphlet and stated that he would like the Director to appear on the show at the conclusion of the program and give approximately two or three minutes of remarks concerning the danger of communism and particularly communist infiltration of youth. You told Mr. Reagan that the Director would be pleased at his interest and that you would bring the request to his attention and that Mr. Hoover would write him in the near future concerning this matter. Reagan did not ask for technical advice in connection with the program but particularly wanted permission from Mr. Hoover to use the pamphlet as the basis for the script (79 and to have the Director appear on his program. Mr. Tolson commented that he doubted the wisdom of permitting the program with our consent as any misunderstanding would be attributable to us. The Director concurred in this observa?, i0 ,9 REG- 33 '7 31/ 9am if; The Director wrote Reagan on 84,) 31- 60 thanking him for his interest I, in producing the television show but declining to appear on the program. The Director's letter also stated that such a program would necessarily require our technical assistance to accurately portray the communist methods in infiltrating youthful groups but that we were not in a positionto c00perate in such roductionReagan again telepho?edgg?e Director on 9 8 60 and declined to speak to an assistant when Mr. Hoover's absence was explained. He said perhaps he would try to contact the Director tomorrow morning, Friday, September 9, and while he did not explain his reason for callingthe Director's pamphlet as the basis for a telev ion production. i9? - 1. - 5-f- Ingram 52f (6) (continued next page)? Jones to DeLoach Memorandum Re: Ronald Reagan BIOGRAPHICAL DATA: Ronald Reagan was born in Tampico, Illinois, on 2-6-11 and was graduated from Eureka, Illinois, College with an A. B. degree in 19 32. He began his career as a newspaperman but switched to sports announcing on station WHO in Des Moines, Iowa, where he was employed from 1932 to 1937. He has been a prominent motion picture actor since 1937 and is one of Hollywood? most active political figures and considered very conservative by Hollywood standards. He served as a Captain in the Air Force in World War II, was married?and divorced from actress Jane-Wyman and is presently married to Nancy Davis. He was President of the Screen Actors Guild, 1949?19 51; breeds thoroughbred horses and trains hunters and jumpers. INFORMATION IN BUFILES: The Bureau has not investigated Ronald Reagan. Our files do contain numerous references to him chiefly in connection with his anti- communist activities in different Hollywood organizations. Informants have advised us that he is definitely anticommunist and he so indicated when he appeared before the House Committee on UnmAmerican Activities as a friendly witness in October, 194.7. He has been contacted on several occasions by Agents of our Los Ang?eles Office and in every instance has been cooperative and helpful; he in turn has visited our Los Angeles Office, and our relations with him have been cordial. (100-38219 6) RECOMMENDATION: For the Director's information in the event Ronald Reagan calls him on Friday, September 9, 1960. Ronald Reagan-312 RonaldReagan313 . 12in?? ?*5?va ?B??sztg '9 3.35 4'1; ?i ?'oTLson OFFICE OF DIRECTOR FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE ye . 2:35 PM September 9 1960 anahan Mr. DeLoach . Mr. Malone Mr. Ronald eagan, aster of Mr. McGuire Ceremonies of the General Electric m. Rosen Theatre, telephoned through Mr. Tarnm Operator from West Los Angeles, Mr- Trotter?7?3: California, for the Director. He ??er was advised of the Director's :gemi'oom absence from the office and offered Mn 'mgram the services of Assistant Director M58 Holmes DeLoach, which he accepted. iss Gan - - . 51%! 31g ?me Mr. DeLoach advised theft Mr. Reagan indicated he appreciated very much Ehe consideration given on his call to Mr. DeLoach on August 26 and also the letter which he received from the Director dated August 31. He said he was somewhat disappointed inasmuch as the Director had indicated it would be impossible to c00perate regarding this matter, which was to permit him to do a television program regarding the Director's pamphlet ?Communist Target - Youth" and for the Director to appear at the end of this program. Mr. Reagan pointed out that he knew of the grave importance of communist infiltration of our youth and he thought it highly desirable to produce a TV program based on the San Francisco riots, which, however, would not mention the Director's pamphlet or involve the FBI in any manner. He stated he wanted an alarmist?type program to awake the American public to the fact that ?it; can happen here. He intends f1 continued Ronald Reagan-314 35 332.. 415 [as Dag? r- . to show how college students can be duped into carrying out the work of the communists. Reagan said that he would be the narrator of the program. He said he had recently seen the TV portrayal of the Sacco - Vanzetti case and he thought this was distorted to favor/the "sob sisters? viewpoint and he thought it? was high time somebody reflected the true facts as to what the communists are trying to do. He said he sincerely hoped the Director would not think he was trying to plagiarize the magnificent pamphlet which the Director wrote concerning the San Francisco riots. He reiterated he would not involve the FBI or the Director in this program. Mr. De Loach emphasized the fact that the FBI could not offer any service to him regarding the program in view of our heavy responsibilities. He said he fully understood this but after the script has been written, he is h0peful that we will take a look at it. Mr. DeLoach told Mr. Reagan, while the Director could not interpose any objection to a public service program which did not mention the name of the FBI or the Director's pamphlet "Communist Target - Youth, he should be very careful not to infer that this program is FBI sponsored. Mr. Reagan stated this would certainly be done. ceh Ronald Reagan-315 QTald Reagan-316 00?6 0 Mr. Tolson OFFICE OF DIRECTOR Mr' MOM - Mr. Parsons - FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION I Mr. Belmont . UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE r? . I Callahan - I 2-08PM September 3 1960 3 DeLeach . 5 Mr. Malone Mr. RONALIQREAGAN telephoned Mr. McGuire through Opel-mos Angeles, Mr- California, for the Director. He Tam . was advised of the Director's absence ?Otter 4 from the of?ce and was offered. the $21353me services of an assistant which he declined. He asked when he could Mn Ingram expect to speak with the Director Miss Holmes and was told that the Director is Miss Candy presently out of the office attending a conference and that it was not possible to say just when the Director would return. .. a Mr. Reagan Said that perhaps he would try to contact the Director tomorrow morning. It is noted that Mr. Reagan telephoned for the Director on August 26, was advised of the Director' 5 absence from the city and was referred to Mr. DeLoach. Mr. Reagan cal-led in regard to his desire to do a television show based on the Bureau's pamphlet "Communist Target--Youth" and his desire to have the Director appear at the end of the program express the danger of communism. LO .. anti/3133 Mr. DeLoach's memorandum (copy?s attached . Mr. DeLoach's office advised that the attached copy of the letter to Mr. Reagan dated August 29, had been rewritten. Revised letter is on special locate and will be submitted to the i or immediately -. V7 upon receipt in this office. die:?ifwf5~ I Background memorandum has been requested. . \m ??aIi??V i 5 ceh ALL INFORMATIONC HEPEIN IS @31th AEP 2 QQW I (p.55 F: It. ?an 70-19 (Rev. A Mayor Namediimmy for 12-14-64i . "Days LOS Vis- itor to California 'quickly gets the idea that virtually has a ?past. Ronald Rea~ gan, the H01- lywood broad- casting star who made by far the best speech of the whole 1964 campaign for Barry Gold- . water, used Chamberlain to be a Dem- - ocrat, and once, so it is now charged by some of his ene- mies, unknowingly consorted with Lefties in an innocent front. (The answer to this might be, ?Who didn?t??) Sen. George Murphy, long a Republican, also began his political life as a Democrat. Mayor Sam Yorty of Los Angeles has always re- mained a Democrat, but he supported Dick Nixon against John F. Kennedy. This is a chameleon State, politically speaking, and evi- dently it doesn't matter so much what you were as when you changed. A far. more basic trouble, 1 is that some . .- ALL ?it 63;} every local political figure people don't change at all. There?s Congressman Jim- my Roosevelt, for example, who wants to. take the-L05 Angeles mayor?s job for himself in the coming April primary, which will see him running against incumbent Yorty and a Republican named Pat McGee. Jimmy stands right Where he was, the darling of the Left. YEAR AFTER YEAR he has been in the forefront of the fight in Washington to ;abolish the House Un-Amer- ?ican Activities Committee. iNobody accuses Jimmy Roosevelt of any sinister mo- tives in this, but at this juncture in California af- fairs, un-American activities are an important issue. This is the state that has 'witnessed the quickest growth of the new W.E.B. DuBois clubs, which take .their?name from the Negro ischolar whoso, turned his back on a lifetime of constructive activity to become a Com- munist. The recent campus riots at Berkeley were a mixed- bag affair, with Mao- ists, DuBois clubbers and even right-wing Goldwater- gites making a united front 7.1 eious free speech issue. i? One question in Los An- - geles is why Jimmy Roose- velt cares about protecting DuBois clubbers and Mao?- ists from the possible prob- ings of congressional .inves- tigators. Mayor Sam Yorty has not always pleased con- servatives, but people in both political parties who :take the safety [Wriously recall that .. ston, the State Comptrol er, By John C?avm?be?rlain Yorty, as a State legislator, once played a prominent part in starting an investiga- tion of Communist manipula? . tion of the State relief ad- I ministration. The memory of I this is bound to get Sam Yorty some Re _;ub1ican votes come April. - THE LEFT-RIGHT split in i the .Los Angeles mayoralty 1 race picture shades off into other splits, which are ex- acerbated by the feuds in both parties. In Yorty?s cor- ner, if only unofficially, there is Jesse, or Big Daddy, Unruh, the Democratic speaker of the State Assem- bly. This means that Jimmy Roosevelt can claim the sup- port of partisans of Gov. Pat Brown, who feuds with Unruh. The left wing of the Dem- ocratic Party, the council of . Democratic Clubs, consti- I tutes itself a chowder and marching club for Jimmy Roosevelt. This means that Jimmy has the support of many labor groups, and he is claiming the ethnic group vote. But the CDC'couldn?t keep Pierre Salinger from snatching the senatorial nomination from under the nose of popular Alan Cr Ga; last year, so it can hardly be said to be all-powerful. And Yorty has been wooing the big Los. Angeles Mexican bloc. An outside-r would think that with two Democrats fighting one Republican in the ?nonpartisan? mayoralty primary, the Republican might sneak in as a result of the division between his enemies. But the outsider is ?uid that Republicans will . flock to Yorty? 8 banner just to keep Jimmy Roosevelt out. The hope of the conserv? ative Democrats and the Re- putblicans is that Yorty will ge 51 per cent of. the ri- mary (vote, thus? wielding a rufFthest. IE Mom; Callahan ?(is red Trotter Tele Room Holmes Gondy we . at against Yorty ?bickers? with the City Council. But the city charter gives negative power to the Council, and every mayor since 1935 has had to be a bickere?r in order to make . himself heard. Jimmy Roose- Velt, who has dallied With the idea of putting a review board over the Los Angeles Police Department, would hardly decrease the sum to- tal of local yakking. And it would be a yakking in which the leftist decibel count would be high. co Weatu?mte, Inc. ENOT ??7193. 7 fit 7 MAR 29 1965 igi?ff?? TWington 4mg Times Herald The Washington Daily News The Evening Star New York Herald Tribune New York Journal-American New York Daily News New York Post The New York Times The Baltimore Sun The Worker The New Leader The Wall Street Journal The National Observer People's World Date w&R 1 Ronald Reagan-317 "gum; 3] . 1C l-?Amer .. r?nu r?iiore ?Sun .?New T. r; 74?? .3, 3.329add 13:5; gAc?ait LIE $261 0am w: IN if; irh?, 1.5? 1? mg? 1'3 A 1313* n. .3 le? 14,15 Charm. . en L??t alto J. i gt .0 J. . :31? "521 .2. - 1.x; . . 2131: 1:112115.151 terat'l . . 1:31. -- - . v.4 . oniy 41 wax mm ?OthT?ihs-hi. 1;.isce11a 2- cm 12' is enmzm :V?Jas (53311125 .92 11-1113! ha ?Ti 1:311? 27: 'exo? 1:112.- :2 3. the SW1, in? F1755. .132: slogaznw-Qs-Fr. ?Vote fo; the: nd-idai?a .11; .1 your c1196-} 31211?32200. ?re Drew Pemso-n mm {apart how Digging. affects Christmas- Mississ??pi r. 0P :11?1'3: trig? 2?01? ?ght.- in of 555 333:? gm. 'pt igge? 1111.135: hurt .iu-mhe (" St??ml Teachers'? Tries, Fails4o Muffle Ron Reagan's Spiel To Students St. Paul, Jan. 31. Fearing a political talk, the St. Paul Federa- tion, of Teachers didn?t want, gen; alas'itea ,an, to be allowed to "ma 8 an address to students at this city?s largest high school. The body protested to the local school board against the schedul- ing of the talk, but in vain. Board refused to call it off. Brought to St. Paul by its area Chamber of Commerce to speak at that body?s annual membership meeting and to participate in the local Winter Carnival celebra- ti n, Reagan was persona non *ata to the teachers? organiza- ti n. That?s because he?s generally sidered to be a Spokesman for extreme conservative point of view. In its protest letters to the schools? superintendent and school board members, the Teachers? Federation asked for the establish- ment of ?a policy dealing with the presence of controversial issues in the forum of the school assembly.? Chamber of Commerce of?cials said that the ?schOOl administra? tion? itself requested that Reagan be made available for the high school talk. It was stated that neither the Chamber nor anyone else had advance information'as to t' 8 nature of the actor?s talk, but . at there was no reason to believ i would be political. What Reagan did talk abou mostly to the students was th danger of communism, especiall to youth. He Spoke in several areas of political dispute, expressing the viewpoint that compulsory health insurance is not the answer to the problem of illness among old people and that the income tax is unfair. Upon his arrival from Holly? wood at a press conference, when apprised of the Teachers Federa- tion protest, Reagan said that ?in fairness, they should wait and hear what somebody says before attack- mg. ?It?s a sad day if you can?t dis- cuss issues without being attacked in advance,? he told the reporters. ?Who is defending- the extreme right?? asked Reagan, who men- tioned that he?s not a John Birch- Society member. ?It seems that people determine what is extreme right by looking at you from the far left. The same people who were labeled pinks and other Such terms, and who retested, see nothing: wrong- in taking on the ?neo fascists? an the ?lunatic fringe?.? While in the Turin Cities, Re gan also addressed the Minn apolis Conservative Citizens Club. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mohr. 77%: :1?ahan i Tele. Room llr. l? Miss Gandy ALL INFORMATION HEREIN 35 RATE 5 MM ?4'3 9? {it A/af 615555555? ?3 FEB 15 l962 Daily Variety Hollywood 28, California February 1, 1962 Pa ge 8 (M FEB 161952 Ronald Reagan-320 aROhald?Reag?ar'i?szl E. . 3 . . ?Jorge . - - tW? crunrars?? I Um. .. ED Kisser wars" ?one mannersMei/Lia Honorable Frank Church United States Senate ?3,5ch 1 - . 7 - Washington 25. D. c. crossesON: Miami - es - Mydear Senator: 465,123 - - is. . Your letter enclosing a cepy of a news item iroimtl? ??iE "Twin Falls Times - News,? Twin Falls, Idaho, was received onQ 3 3E November and I Welcome the opportunity to respond to your ?1est??ns - $4 . about the communist menace. . . . 05- In View of your concern, may I point out that the 1 communists have tried to infiltrate every part of our society, but they - . havednot achieved substantial success because of our internal security 4programs; the investigation, arrest, and prosecution of a number of . l? f? Party functionaries; and the rising tide oi public opposition to the - :3 .Ecommunist movement. All this has been accomplished inorderly ,7 ii- in" ?constitutional fashion and is something of which every American should be proud. must continue to be alert to these infiltration efforts. I.. -~'wishto emphasise most strongly that communism is a grave threat to?: existence of the United States. Because of this, it is 11.2 rational, and thoroughly accurate; - doubly imperative that we be calm, in What we say and do in opposing communism. This is no time . rumors, unfounded suspicion, gossip and the hurling of false - Vt; accusationsaccordance with Presidential directives, instructions iron: the Attorney General and various Federal laws, the FBI is charged 25 With conducting specific types oi investigations concerning applicants, 0/ at i? app}. iratees and employees of agencies of the Executive Branch of the 1333.21. wiggpur'se, the FBIdoes not issue clearances or .?i?cf ., :13 I I . Mohr Callahan . Conrad [t'uli?i? 332:3?hw. gich'AED-owtcmu E?(See?p?tep I . . 1'10313?? 195; 1 Us Tele. Room ,ifgi? 1, Ingram . .- Gondy umonoou Trotter . Federal agencies. The purpose of these inquiries is to determine A I. son and friends were taken on a special tour on 6-21-61. .f fHon'orable Frank .mch 1: I nonclearances, express opinions regarding the suitability of persons Go" 5; 1tar: for Government employment or make recommendations with respect 5} ,3 1? to hiring, tiring or retaining applicants and employees of other facts about an individual on which appropriate officials can make a sound judgment as to whether or not that person warrants the trust placed in him as a public servant. In the domestic intelligence field, the primary aim of the FBI is to keep appropriate Government officials constantly informed with respect to the activities and plans of the enemies of democracy within the United tatesif so that effective countermeasures and preventative means an be devised The FBI, as in the past, will endeavor to carry out these investigative responsibilities- to the utmost. Enclosed are several items estimg forth my views on these and other matters relating to communism which you may find of interest. - I Sincerely yours, In, Edges scores: 1" Enclosures (5) The Communist Party Line Annual Report For 1961 7 - - -April 17,1961 Statement of J. Edgar Hoover - - v.51 . Poster on Communism - 5 LEE Introduction of April 1, 1961 NOTE: Bufiles reveal limited correspondence with Senator; Church. His wife, I 4? Ronald Reagan has been very active in anticommunist'activities in several Hollywood Organizations. He has been contacted on several occasions by Agents of the Los Angeles Office and has been cooperative and helpful. Last contact with him was in September, 1960, at which time he endeavored to have the Director appear on his television program in connection with a show he desired to do which would be based on the Bureau' 3 pamphlet, "Communist TargeteYouth. This, of course, was declined. Editorial ticklers re?ect limited but cordial correspondence with the ?Twin Falls Times - News, last outgoing 1943. Ronald Reagan- -322 law. PULIRIGHT. swam/um. ALA. ALEXANDERW .wIs. T0150 1 NUBERT H. HUMPHREY. mun. BOURKE a. HICK ,.msn. IOWA Mr. *Br?lm: . MIKE MANSFIELD, MONT- GEDHGE D. AIKEN. VT- mismanALBERT cons. TENN. JOHN J. WILLIAMS. I wratfeb giafeg ?enafe Mr. Cm?? FRANK J. LAUSCHE, OHIO CHURCH. IDAHO s'rumn' smmam. Mo. COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN RELATIONS I MT- 17"! I mom? 1. noon. cancan HaneyDARRELL If. cums. cum: 0 tObe 26 961 Mr. II Mr. fave} Mr. k' Tale. Room. Mr. Ingram Cg? . . Miss Gang}? gxy/ I?fgaxg 11f Wish-2:: m?aat .J as. new . I I Sign; J. Edgar Hoover, Director . . Federal Bureau of Investigation Washington 25, D. C. Dear Mr. Hoover: Attached to this letter is a copy y?3f of a newspaper clipping from the Twin Falls, 73: Idaho Times-News of October 17, 1961, report- ing on a meeting at which a tape recording of a speech by Ronald Reganm was heard by the ?g group . Do you have any information that would support Mr. Regan's charges as made in this article that the Communists are inn NOV ?7 1961 filtrating all phases cf the governmentposition to tell me what I steps are being taken to remove these persons 8 from any government positions that they may be holding? 3 ALL UPI MAT ??qu 5 IS UN ICLASSIHEU 22:: 4} ELSP Sin/derel as I, swag ??ldae/ Mil/l /Frank Church (f $33! II It' 53' If NOT RECORDED I: I 145 Nov 10 mm N0\_l 1961?kg?c ?15130131 ?079, . \Ajw?I. is ":wa . Ronald Reagan-323 r-n- - FORM NO IO 5010-!06 MAY 1962 EDITION 05L REG. NO. 27 . . UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT if: Tolson DeLo och Ronald Reagan-324 Memorandum 232:2? Gale Rosen To DATE: 1/10/66 31111.22 Wick FROM $2121.30? . Gondy "Au; mmaamoa SUBJECT: RONALD REAGAN HEREIN l3 APPEARANCE ON TV SHOW 31:291.? FL THE - 55.7sz 1:00 P. M. 1/9/66 7% Ronald Reagan, the well-known actor who announced his candidacy for California's Republican gubernatorial nomination on 1/4/66, appeared on 'v . "Meet The Press" TV show on Channel 4 (NBC) at 1:00 p. m. 1/9/66. W) Reagan was queried considerably concerning the John Birch Society 3? and specifically as to why he had condemned the communists and the Ku Klux Klanvx but had not made the same denunciations of the John Birch Society. In reply, he 5 answered that the Communist Party and the Ku Klux Klan had been listed as . subversive by the Department of Justice and that the FBI had not found anything subversive in the Birch Society. He also commented that the State of California hag investigated the Birch Society but found nothing subversive. He called for a Congressional investigation to ?clear the air. . 2 LU Reagan was also asked why he decided to run for Governor and he ?g replied that the people in California have been living under a dictatorial fiat long 8 enough. He was also questioned concerning a statement allegedly attributed to him that he did not support the Civil Rights Bill. He stated this was erroneous and if?: that this comment was attributed to him after a long explanation pointing out certain weaknesses which he felt existed in the Bill as passed. He indicated that this statement certainly should not be interpreted as being an indication of his being anti- civil rights. Overwall, Reagan made a good appearance and was quite quick and witty in answering the numerous questions put to him which could have been - A considerably embarrassing to his future political ambitions. 9 RE OMME NDAT ION: ml}. 17 AN 177955 Claoagg??or information. . j? 033Miss Holmes {it ?t3; Miss Gandy ?1792;: - 7:4 :Tg)ggag32g2 2maea 0-19 (Rev. 11-3045) . w" Tfeega?uggeSts Probe Of John Bi BURBANK, Calif. Ronald Reagan, in answer to suggestions he is right-wing politically, declares ?my views haven?t changed an awful lot since I was a Democra Reagan, actor-turned-politi? clan, is out for the Republican nomination for governor of California. He was the guest Sunday on .?Meet the Press.? Reagan has been a Republi- ican since 1960, when helhelped 'Richard M. Nixon in his unsuc- cessful bid against the late President John F. Kennedy. The veteran of movies and television was questioned much on the John Birch Society whether he would or would not den-ounce it in his campaign. think that in order to clear the air, Washington should investigate" the John? Birch ?You can?t kick an organiza- tion out, of your party that is not in it. SurVeys have shown that the JohnBirdh Society has as many Democrats as ?Republi- cans.? Reagan, vociferous in his condemnation of Communists and- the Ku Klux Klan, was asked why he hadn?t made the same denunciations of the John Birch Society. Reagan replied: ?There is a vast difference. I?ll take second to no one in my denunciation of the Communists and the Ku Klux Klan, but they are listed Las subversive. organizations. The FBI says it found nothing subversive about the John Birch Society.? He stressed: -'am not?a member of the John Birch Seciety"? Reagan said. Society, nor am I mm.? ALL newsman HEREM is a ale 0. 550935? 45, :73 . 9814.. I5. Tolson DeLoach Mohr Casper Callahan Conrad Felt Gale Rosen Sullivan Tavel Trotter Wick Tele". Room Holmes Gandy The Washington Post and Times Herald The Washington Daily News The Evening Star New York Herald Tribune New York carnal-American New York Daily News New York Post The New York Times rl?he Baltimore Sun The Worker The New Leader The Wall Street Journal The National dbserver People's World Date 0-19 (Rev?) 1-30-6 5) - ,1 )f s. Mo?sks 5 ?Air-Cl?aritng? Birch Probe BURBANK, Calif., Jan. 9 (UPI) Republican Ronald .Reagan today suggested a con- gressional investigation of the \?IJ?ohn Birch Society to ?clear the air? on whether the anti- . . . organizatlon IS Communist subversive. Reagan, 54, who announced last Tuesday that he is a can-?l didate for California?s Repub-; lican gubernatorial nomina-i tion, made the suggestion on the television program ?Meet the Press? (NBC, WRC). The GOP hopeful was asked why he hesitated to express the ?general conclusion? on; the Birch Society when he was willing to condemn the Com- munist Party and the Ku Klux Klan. He answered that the Com- munist Party and the had been listed'as subversive by the Justice Department. On the other hand, he said, I ?neither the FBI nor investiga~ tions by the California Senate had uncovered anything of a subversive nature in the Birch Society. ?Maybe the air could be cleared if Washington would investigate the Birch Society anminEether it isor is notl subVerswe;? he sait:?? . an momma?: comma) HEREIN is Mia} 405', (?13 Ronald Reagan-326 415% 55m air/5kg. Tolson DeLoach Mohr Casper Callahan Conrad Felt Gale Rosen Sullivan Tavel Trotter Wick Tele. Room Holmes Gandy ?3 a The Washington Post and Times Herald The Washington Daily NewS The Evening Star New York Herald Tribune New York carnal-American New York Daily News New York Post The New York Times The Baltimore Sun The Worker The New Leader The Wall Street Journal The National Ubserver People's World Date Ronald Reagan-327 QHIONAL roam uo. 1_0 sow?loo A . 15:12 Eggfonhb. 27 89:30? UNITED STATES RNMENT Mob De Casper Memorandum mun Felt ng?f Mr. DeLoach DATE 3-17-65 ?my vel Trotter . a ?lm? Tele.Hoom FROM 2 M. A. a - Holmes 0 Pierre tamarind Gum? See?s Serial - RONALD REAGAN F0 . ?33174} .542 5 HOLLYWOOD ACTOR am mania IS The Director has asked for a summary on Ronald Reagan, the Holly- wood actor. The 3-16?65 issue of ?The Washington Post and Times Herald" contained a column by?John Chamberlain which discusses California politics in general but specifically?refers to Ronald Reagan, who Chamberlain claims made far the best speech of the 1964 campaign for Barry Goldwater. Chamberlain states that Reagan usedto be a'Democrat, "and once so it is now charged by some of his enemies, unknowingly ?consorted with Lefties in an innocent front. (The answer to this might be, ?Who It is noted that recent news articles indicate Reaganiriay run against Pat Brown for California Governorship. BIOGRAPHICAL DATA: dwwamwa . gt/ Ron ,AReagan was born 2-6-11 at Tampico, Illinois?, and received his A.B. degree Wirbzf?zfureka, Illinois; ?cottage." He "became a newspaper'man? but switched to sports announcing, being employed from 1932 to 1937 on Radio Station WHO in Des Moines, Iowa, Since 1937 he has been a motion picture actor and ?as become prominent. He served as a Captain in the Air Force in World War II, and for some years was married to Jane Wyman, whom he subsequently divorced, and married Nancy Davis. Reagan breeds thoroughbred horses and trains hunters and jumpers. INFORMATION IN BUFILE S: it. The Bureau has not investigated Reagan; however, our files do contain umerous references to him, primarily concerning his anticommunist? activities in ario?us Hollywood organizations. He has been considered one of Hollywood's most active conservative political figures. In the recent political election he campaigned for Barry Goldwater. He has spoken in various parts of the country on the evils of communism and was a friendly witness before" the House Committee on Un?American Activities in October, 1947. One source in 1960 advised that he understood that Ronald Reagan, along with several other prominent Hollywood personaliti?es?irra?iding Adolph Menjou, were members of the Beverly Hills.~Chapter ofut?e' ?oh?n Birch Society, but in Reagan incidentally mentioned that he Was not a member oi th?? 2:lo ~brr336 Tolson eLooch . Mohr- I ?c I awe?? Casper Callahan Conrad Felt Gale Hosen Sullivan Tovel Trotter 1 Tele. Room Holmes Candy ?zneh -- n?gjgions- regs-s 966 ell-McClure Syndicate. Inc. We 0 al?h?ui? he Washington Post and '1 5 Times Herald he Washington Daily News The Washington Evening Star New York Daily News New York Herald Tribune New York Post The New York Times New York World Journal New York World Journal Tribune The Baltimore Sun The Worker The New. Leader The Wall Street Journal The National Observer People;s World Date All intonation ens tamer: is. I (Rev. 5-4?66) :1 7 4 . The Washington Metry-Go-Round GLDisput By Drew Pm General Electric has written; a letter to editors, taking exJ ception to a recent column regarding the long affiliation between GE and ~Ronald- Rea an, lican nominee Gavernor of California. It is i clear from the let- ters whether GE 5 ks to disassociat-e it- Pearson self from the right-wing views of Reagan. The net effect, however, is to muddy the po- litical water. Let me try to unmuddy it. In the column complained of, I stated that General Electric had changed from the old days when three executives were sent to jail and the corporation itself was given a fine of almost $1 million. How- ever, since GE now accuses me of misstatements, let?s ex- amine the GE-Reagan record. First, and most important, the column in question stated that what Reagan is now sell- ing California voters is ?anti- ;communism, morality in gov- - ernment, and platitudes about nm 1: never acted as ?official spokes- .fairness to the working man.? !And, I said, for 10 years Rea- gan was the TV?radio spokes- man for General Electric. Not GE Spokesman General Electric now cor- regt? me on the terms. Rea an worked, stating it was ]only eight, 'whic'hmd to accept; and also claims Reagan man? but rather as i?host and oc?casional star of the ?General Electric Theater? and that if he talked to labor leaders on his tours, ?he did so only when they were included in large audiences of employee at General Electric plants.? GE also states that it never ?edited or censored Reagan?s speeches.? Executives of the Interna- tional Union. of Electrical Workers inform me, and are willing to testify, that Reagan paid ?glamor 3H . LL- I es Colu?m ?jn ReaggnEn {313? main?.? in selling'ihe line?that union was necessary, was vehement? against Medicare, generally downgraded plight of older people and their need for aid, and made a pitch for a John Birch-type of foreign and domestic policy. Obviously GE made no at- tempt to edit or censor him. GE _was also involved in the conspiracy to fix prices for which three of its executives later went to jail and for which it was fined the highest amount ever thrown at a cor- the . poration in a criminal case. Reagan, who now preaches: morality to the California voters, was either willing to ignore this or didn?t know. about it. If the latter is true,' which I am inclined to believe, he was not as, alert as the Governor of a g??'nsfate must be, to prevent graft and com Battle on/ Communism Reagan did not have to be alert, however, to know of the battle over communism that took place inside General Electric between two of its unions. All he had to do was read. If he had read the papers, including this column, he would haVe known better than to get hooked up with a com- pany which did nothing to clean out a pro-Communist union. Norman Harrington, signs himself in letters to editors ?Public Information, ,General Electric,? states ?We are completely confounded by the statement that a Senate Labor sub-Committee. headed by Hubert Humphrey dealt with what is perported to be General Electric anti-labor policies.? Harrington also went into an involved explanation of how GE continues to do business with a pro-Commu- Who .nist union, blaming this on a {vote staged by the NLRB. The Senate report, which Harrington ,does not know, about, is captioned, ?Commu-? nist Domination of Unions and National Security? cover? ing hearings held between March 17 and July 8, 1952, We 82d Con ress run? .51. Elite mmitte en; yd Ll __HasA ' Hubg rt H. Humphre?E then;f sum a good company that no' Sena or from Minneso a. . The hearings dealt with the battl . een Electrical Workers, later ex- - pelled from the (310 as pro? Communist, and the non-Com- munist IEU for the right ton organize General Electric. On page 26, the Senate Commit- tee, in its final report, stated: ?We feel justified in com- menting on an attitude re- flected in certain statements issued by the' General Electric Corp. on the theme of ?aiir plague on both your housesh?l The essence of the theme is:a that there? is little to choose-:2 between the left wingers and? the right wingers. The refer- ence is to the UE and the IUE respectively. ?This is an amazing state. prehcnsion of the forces at work in this world in the year 1952. If an employer says in effect ,there is no difference between a Communist union and an anti-Communist union, it is understandable many workers may not pay too much attention to a valid charge that a union is Com- munist-controlled. Not 'to make this distinction, as apparently General Electric and other employers have not, is to play the Communist theme song.? i This report was written in 1952. Ronald Reagan can read. He had been active as head ,of the Screen Actors Guild, including the picket line. Yet despite this report and the dustrial circles, he went to ment and shows little cem- fl why- The Washington Post and Tavel Trotter Tele. Room Holmes Times Herald The Washington Daily News The Washington Evening Star New York Daily News New York Herald Tribune New York Post stir it caused in labor and in-c: The New York Times work for GE in 1954 and re- New York World Journal New York World Journal Tribune mained its spokesman until 1962 355%, gall-McClure syndicate. Inc. 46 out 14 1966 ?-Re-na d Reaganr337 The Baltimore Sun The Worker The New Leader The Wall Street Journal The National Observer People?s World Date All. steam is Belts, .. -. a; sing; 55/1 lb: 1 1 1963 4?51 lahcm ?1er one . Ros Sulliv 09.1?? Mr. FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION Mr. u. 8. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE .- Mr. Mohr FBI 9c 1? COMMUNICATIONS SECTION. Mr, Wick Mr. Cas er NOVI 1 196 Mr. Callahan?? Mr. TELETY Mr. Felt I FBI SAN FRAN . Mr. Gale 1 Mr. Rose% ENT 11-10-66 KNH 1 ML ?mw?Ifl' Mr. Mr. Trotter Tele. Room Miss Miss Gandy. T0 ECTOR AND L05 ANGELES I 0M SAN FRANCISCO (62-NEW) n1 STUDENT, UNIVERSITY OF THREAT TO ASSASSINATE RCNALO REAGAN, COVERNOR- ELECT OF CALIFORNIA, NOVENEER EIGHT, b6 NINETEEN SIXTY SIX, SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA. b7c f\ RE SAN FRANCISCO TELETYPE NOVEMBER TEN, SF TEL CALLS TO LOS ANGELES NOVEMBER TEN. INVESTIGATION SACRAMENTO REFLECTS NR. BATTAGLIA HAS RESERVATIONS AT HOTEL SENATOR, SUPPOSEOLY LEAVING LOS ANGELES BY AIR EIGHT TWENTY PM NOVEMBER TEN. REACAN SUPPOSEDLY SPENDING NEEHENO VITH WIFE, PRESUMABLY AT HOME. IN EVENT LOS ANGELES UNABLE LOCATE REAGAN, ADVISE SAN FRANCISCO SO THAT MAY BE DETERMINED THROUGH ?1 M4 t" 5/ :i fit) BATTAGLIA, HOTEL 1111 ?5 um 111 RN 161% FBI WASH DC - NET. ENECENNOECN HEREIN IS UNCLASSIFIED +3-st ONTEQ 5 6 5/95 Ronald Reagan-338 Cr. . rd. 0-19 (Harri-4455) ?3 ?(any ALL INFUHMAHGN UU lil?is?dil): HERBN l3 UNCLASSIHED ?3255 The Washington Merry-Go-Round Fgan to Seek California former ball player and stai son of County, who bat- By Drew Pearson LOS are movin ast in the upcoming Ronald for California: a Kerr, 'one of the out-I standing edu-? caters of the Nation, to re: sign or be firedi of California. Reagan x- to ap- point John McCone, former CIA chief to investigate the university. There have already been three investigations of student activities, but Reagan wants another. This will touch off a whole- sale exodus of Berkeley profes- sors. Too many other colleges are eager to snap them up. Tearson More Actors? of ?Stagecoach,? Wild Wind,? ?The Lady Takes a Chance,? ?TalLin the Sad- dle," ?Wake Ithe Red Witch," ?Blood Alley,? ?Wings of Eagles,? ?North to Alaska,? and many other Westerns, to run for the us. Senate agains now Republican Whip. Or if Wayne doesn?t want to desert Hollywood, the nod may go to Chuck eagan Administration incumbent Sen. Tom Kuchel, Connor,? ?Rifleman. Also watch for Reagan?s ap pointment of Mayor Sam Yorty of Los Angeles to re- place Sen. George Murphy, the former actor who is ex- pected to retire for reasons of health. Yorty, an alleged Democrat, who supported Nixon against Kennedy in 1960 and Nixon against Brown for Governor in 1963, hustled back from elections to clinch his support He had already turned over his files to Reagan, and his staff went down the line for Reagan. On election night Yorty appeared at the Coconut Grove victory breakfast With Reagan where the Reaglan?ites gave him a grateful ovation. They Will Be Missed he Ronald Reagan-Pat Brown ace was the defeatof some if California?s most dedicated egislators. Here are some top rusaders for the public who on?t be in Sacramento any- ore: Jack Casey of em County, who pushed the assage of California?s Medi- care bill. Sen. Fred Farr of Carmel, who fought the big lumber ompanies and battled again-st he billboards. . Sen. Jim Cobe?y of Merced, who fought the utilities on water and public power. John William- 53 wovii 1966? l, defeated: Unnoted in the headlines of? Mexico one day before the,Colusa County, i t'led for beaches and parks. Sen. Eugene Nesbit of San Bernardino, who fought for the public interest generally. Sen. Al Winengand, of Santa Barbara, who fought for birth contro and aroused such bitter animosity that during one birth contro-l battle he got a letter from a constituent saying wish your mother had taken one of those pills.? Sen. Virgil O?Sullivan of who foughtl the oil companies and suc-' ceeded in reserving the reve- nue from offshore oil for Cali-, fornia education. O?Sullivan wears an old coat, has eight children, spends his time fighting the oil lobbyists. After he was defeated, he tele- phoned Gov. Pat Brown, also ?We got the tide- land oil bill on the statute books,? he said. ?We may be out, but they can?t turn the law back.? . Election Melting Pot Last week?s election high- lighted the melting pot that is America. Three Rockefellers, scions of one of the wealthiest families, in the world, were elected in three different states, two as Republican Gov- ernor, [w York and Ar- ka-nsa me, John D. Rocke-p feller IV, as Democratic State Senator in West Virginia . . In the same election Louis Kruger, son of a Jewish taxi, driver, ran for the Ronald Reagan-339" Callahan Conrad Felt Gale Rose Sullivo Tovel Trotter Tele. Room Holmes Gondy were; a: A 46 NOV 18 1866 The Washington Post and ?35 1' Times Herald The Washington Daily News The Washington Evening Star New York Daily News New York Herald Tribune New York Post The New York Times New York World Journal New York World Journal Tribune The Baltimore Sun The Worker The New Leader The Wall Street Journal The National Observer People?s World Date . t??ki'rig" ?isti?ict River. He got 12,000 votes but lost . The sons of three famous men?Bob Taft suc- cessfully ran for Congress in Ohio; FDR, Jr. lost for Gov- ernor in New York; Adlai Stevenson Jr. won the post of IState Treasurer in Illinois . . . ?In Nevada, Woodrow Wilson was elect-ed to the Assembly. This Woodrow Wilson is a Re- publican and a Negro. Three Greeks were elected 'in diverse parts of the coun- try. Peter Kyros was elected to Congress in Maine, and Nick Galifanakis was elected in North Carolina both Democrats. Spiro Agnew, Re- publican, was elected Gover- nor of Maryland, defeating an Irishman and Basque sheepherd'er, ?Paul Laxalt, was elected Gov- ernor of Nevada. . ?The Irish, who dominated -:\merican politics for years, 'didn?t do too well this time. iThe following Irish-Ameri- cans lost out in their races for Governor: Eddie McCor- mack in Massachusetts, Frank O?Connor in New York, George Mahoney in Maryland, William Egan in Alaska and Pat Brown in California. Despite general Republican gains, five of the most rock? ribbed Republican states elect- ed Democratic Governors Maine, -- Vermont, New . Hamp- shire, Kansas and Iowa. morals-girlie; syndicate In? . Ronald Reagan?340 .. MEG If?. FEDERAD ~Erh?e?f?oa a u, . ACOMMUN DSTIUE r. 0m ICATIONS SECTI MO. Wick..? 4 Mr. Casper k? A NDVI 0 1955 Mr. Callahan? . XE I: I 1 FBI WASH DC Miss If Miss Gandy__ FBI SAN FRY 510PM GENT 11-10-55 HS ?3/5 TO IRECTOR LOs ANGELES A, TRON FRANCISCO 2P b6 RETRETN IS b7C 9 MBA (15191,? ?mfjs? I STUDENT, UNIVERSITY OF THREAT TO ASSASSTNATE RONALD REAGAN, GOVERNOR-ELECT OF CALIFORNIA, NOVEMBER EIGHT, NINETEEN SIXTYSIX, SAN JOSE, CALIFQRNIA . (I NR34 I SAN JOSE, CALIE., TELEPHONE TELEPHONICALLY ADVISED THAT LATE IN THE AFTERNOON OE LAST, SHE NENT TO THE HEADQUARTERS OF VILLIAN F. STANTON, CANDIDATE FOR RE-ELECTION To CALIFORNIA STATE ASSEMBLY, SAN JOSE, CALIE., AND I b6 THEREAETER GROUPS OF FOUR VENT OUT TO ASSIGNED AREAS TO MAKE CALLS INOUIRING IF INDIVIDU I HIS NEIGHBORHOOD HAD VOTED TO 9? ENCOURAGE SUCH RESIDENTS TO VOTE NO ATTER HON THEY CAST THE RIBALLOT. VAS ASSIGNED TO A YOUNG MAN BY THE NAME STUDENT 6? THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. ??995 ng??Q/fg AL As SHORT IN STATURE, SHALL BUILD, EYES, SLAVIC FACE, SHORT CHIN, AGE TNENTY TO YEARS. END PAGE ONE Ronald Reagan-341 (A (I, . 2,4 .4 m, PAGE TWO AFTER FINISHING THEIR AREA, SHE AGAIN PICKED THIS YOUNG MAN UP ANB DROVE HIM T0 STANTCN HEADQUARTERS. SHE RELATED THAT WHILE IN HER CAR THIS SUBJECT WAS VERY ANTI-VIETNAM IN HIS CONVERSATION, AND WHEN ELECTIGN RETURNS STARTED T0 COME IN OVER HER CAR RADIO-SHOWING THAT RONALD REAGAN HAD TAKEN A LARGE LEAD INCUMBENT EDMUND G. FOR GOVERNOR, SUBJECT BECAME HIGHLY EXCITED AND SAID KILL HIM - ASSASSINATION IS JUSTIFIED AS A THAT IN VIEN OE REACTION ANB HIS STATEMENTS, SHE FELT EEC THIS SHOULB BE BROUGHT TO THE ATTENTION OE APPROPRIATE AUTHORITIES. AGENT LARRY NEWMAN, SAN FRANCISCO OFFICE, U.S. SECRET AND SAN JOSE PG ANO SO NOTIFIED. LES ANGELES AEVISE REAGAN OR APPROPRIATE REPRESENTATIVE ANB LOCAL AUTHRRITIES. SAN FRANCISCO HILL MAKE INQUIRY AT SAN JOSE IN TO IBENTIPY SUBJECT ANB.EHM HILL BE SUBMITTED. END OTHER OFFICE ABVISEB. RCH FBI NASH BC Ronald Reagan-342 - - I 7 mm: - - - 1?72: r? A . ?air. BeLowAiMomn Mr. Wick.? FED UERSL Of INVESTIGATIO r. Casper 0F JUSTG r" r. a a an.? 7 FBI NASH DC (33331.: max/1, 11955 WE Mr. Rosen- 7 Mr. Mr. Tavel- r. Trotter Tele. Room?w Miss Gandy FBI SAN FRAN SSOPN GENT 11-11-66 NS DIRECTOR LOS ANGELES FROM SAN FRANCISCO (62-NEW) 1P I. b6 1070 (LNU), STUDENT, UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, THREAT TO ASSASSINATE SAN FRANCISCO NOVEMBER TEN, LAST. RONALDVREAGAN, GOVERNOR-ELECT OF CALIFORNIA, NOVEMBER EIGHT, NINETEEN - 7 SIXTYSIX, SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA. RE SAN FRANCISCO TELS NOVEMBER TEN, LAST AND LOS ANGELES TEL PHILLIP BATTAGLIA, SUITE EIGHT ZERO TWO, IBM BUILDING, FIVE TWO ZERO CAPITAL MALL, SACRAMENTO, CALIF., WAS ADVISED 0N NOVEMBER ELEVEN, INSTANT, OF DETAILS OF ALLEGED THREAT TO GOVERNOR-ELECT REAGAN. BATTAGLIA STATED THAT MR. REAGAN IS SPENDING THE WEEKEND AT PALM SPRINGS, CALIF., AND WOULD RETURN TO LOS ANGELES NOVEMBER FOURTEEN, NEXT. BATTAGLIA WILL PERSONALLY FURNISH INFORMATION TO MR. SECURITY MAN IN PALM SPRINGS AND A SECURITY MAN TAKE APPROPRIATE E3 ACTION AND CONTACT LOCAL AUTHORITIES. END . OTHER OFFICE ADVISED SEPARATELY . .2, ?Mal 2' . A ?t/Tf?gI?? SH Sc 1703 ALL INFORMATION GGWAA- FS UFO-D -- 43? 73 Ronald Reagan-343 f/br 11% NH .- .3 3 253:.- Tar.? 8mm I 1351'. DeLoach?er - PEI UASUN GQMMUNIGATIONS EEONON gig?~? mm 1 41955 er. Callahan? Mr. FBI SAN FRAN 0\ ,3 62144. - a . . URGENT ll 14 66 JEL M: Sz?g?mg .Mr. T0 IRECTOR CHI CABU AND LOS T?gzmr FROM SAN FRANCISCO (62-5315) HEREIN IS UNCLASSIFIED Holmes 5 ISS Gandy 34557,?3 STUDENT, UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, THREAT T0 b6 RONALQEABAN, GUVERNOR-ELECT CF CALIFORNIA, NOVEMBER EIGHT, b7C SIXTY SIX, SAN JOSE, CALIF., MISCELLANEBUS INFORMATION CCNCERNINGQ SF TO BUREAU NOVEMBER TEN, LA TEL TO SF, NOVENEEN ELEVEN, f? ANO SF TEL To ELEVEN. ON NBVEMBER THIRTEEN TNAT g? ONE IS EMPLOYED BY INESANTA CLARAICOUNTY COUNCIL OF CHURCHES, SAN JOSE, ASSOCIATES NITH PERSONNEL, ONE 42 APPEARS TO FIT DESCRIPTION 01" mm. SEC I BY REQUEST), if; ADVISED ON NOVEMBER POUNTEEN r} c; IS AN SPONSONEO Ev THE FIRST SAN CANE TO SAN JOSE-JUNE SIXTY SIX TO SPEND ONE QUARTER OF HIS TINE NITN THE COUNCIL 61" CHURCHES, P57 ONE ONANTEE DOING SOCIAL WORK ON EAST 5an OP SAN JoSg?c' ?543? HALF TIME NITN FIRST NETNOOIST DESCRIBED China-51955 AN SO THAT HE ALLON NIN fit 6 I WITH THE YOUNG PECPLE 0F PAGE - 3%le ., .- ?z?onald Reagan-344 23-?186618 W3 5/ PAGE TNO NON WORKS PART TIME-WITH COUNCIL OF CHURCHES AND THE REMAINDER OF HIS TIME DOING SOCIAL WORK IN SAN JOSE UNOER NO PARTICULAR SUPERVISION. wAs BORN IN IS nor AN AMERICAN AND ATTENOED THE cuchso THEOLOGIOAL SEMINARY, UNIVERSITY or 53c CHICAGO, FOR TWO YEARS. IS AN IMPATIENI venue b7D WHO FEELS THAT MANY INJUSTICES PREVAIL AND ONE wHo USES EXTREMELY POOR JUOGMENT on OCCASIONS. SAID HAS PARTICIPATED IN NUMEROUS PICKEI LINES AND wAs ACTIVE IN THE CAMPAIGN or WILLIAM F. STANTON. SAN FRANCISCO ONES NOT INTEND TO EXPAND INSTANT INVESTIGATION IN THE SAN JOSE CHURCH COMMUNITY. THEREFORE, CHICAGO IS REQUESTED b6 TO OBTAIN BACKGROUND AND A PHOTOGRAPH OF AT THE b7c NNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO-AND AMSD SAME TO SAN FRANCISCO SO PHOTO CAN BE EXHIBITED TO COMPLAINANT FOR POSITIVE IDENTIFICATION AND APPROPRIATE AUTHORITIES CAN BE NOTIFIED. . ESQ FOR INFORMATION OF CHICAGO, LNU MADE THE STATEMENT ON NOVEMBER EIGHT LAST REGARDING GOVERNOR-ELECT RONALD REAGAN TO COMPLAINANT KILL HIM - ASSASSINATION IS JUSTIFIED AS A END PAGE TWO Ronald Reagan-345 PAGE THREE no RECORD ovl IWAS LOCATED AT SAN .1051: SANTA . CLARA comm 59', AND CREDIT BUREAU or SANTA CLARA VALLEY. LHM uxLL BE suamnm on IDENTIFICATION 01" mu. OTHER anvzsen SEPARATELY. END - RAM FBI wAsu IC Ronald Reagan-346 (Rev: 5-22?64) i Date: 11/15/66. Transmit the following in I (Type in plaintext or code) (Priority) 1. T0 DIRECTOR, FBI, FROM SAC, CHICAGO (62-New) m3? #1031 ?m ?w 1? a tank} OF CALIFORNIA STUDENT, UNIVERSITY OF hos/33 CHICAGO, THREAT TO 0 ASSASSINATE RONALD REAGAN, :30 NOVEMBER 8, 1966, SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA MISCELLANEOUS INFORMATION CONCERNING Re San Francisco teletype to Director, Chicago, and Los Angeles, dated 11/14/66. Enclosed for San Francisco are three copies of a photograph oil I which was robably taken in b6 1964. Photograph was obtained Application on file at the Chicago Theological Seminary, and independent divinity School, associated with the University ROBERT F. SWIERCZ on 11/15/66. In advisedl I matriculated at Chicago Theological Seminary in October, 1964 he would be awarded a BachelOr of Divinity degree. He is pursuing his Divinity studies under the award of a competitive Roc aereller Brothers Theological Fellowship. Bureau 6 ?2 Los Angeles (Info)(RM) . 2 San Francisco 3) 1 Chicago RFS: (7) 9V1 Sent Speci?l A- ent in Charge Ronald Reagan- -347 Approved: I .1 r. Token?ViSUBJECT: (LNU) 31?! Admissions b7C of Chicago and located at 5757 South University Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. It was furnished by the Registrar of that institution, as a fullatime, four~year Divinity student. Upon graduation,igcn A- . CG>62uNew was born onl in ICanada. His permanent home address is which is likewise the address of his iather,l whose occupation was listed as a business manager. His mother is deceased and the name of his stepmother is not known. In 1964, was graduated from the University of-British b6 b7C Columbia with a Bachelor of and a major in stated ent to San Jose, 19669 to serve a oneuyear internship California in June9 under the auspices of the Santa Clara County Council of Churches in San Jose. This is being done to meet the school's fraduation requirement for two units of Clinical Experience. is expected to return to Chicago Theological Seminary for the Autumn term beginning October, 1967 and to graduate in June, 1968. b6 be an excellent b7c student with no record of disciplinary problems or of mental instability. She stated he has been active in the Student Christian Movement and during the two academic years he has completed, he resided in a student's dormitoryl Chicago. according to his records and recollection, is described as follows:\\ Name I b6 Date and Place of . Birth ?5 whic' Sex Male Race White Height 5'4" Weight 140 Dark brown, crewcut Hair .I -2- RonaklReagan-348 I i, .. . . fw??jgjs?i; . 7 A b6 CG 62?New b7c Permanent Residence Canada On 11/15/66, a female clerical employee of the Bureau of Identification, Chicago Police Department, advised a search of her files disclosed no arrest record for b7C A review of indices of the Chicago Division disclosed no information identifiable withl b6 b7C Ronald Reagan?349 :Hw wgfg/sz/7 CHANGED TO ?5 3a, wd/ QEC 5 1966 ALL INFORMAHSN HEREIN IS 40-5, ma Ronald Reagan-350 November 17, 19? DIVISIO 0n 11/8/66, 21 young man named (last name unknown), while working on can- vass to get out voters in California election, was quoted as saying "We'll kill him?-assassi nation is justified as a tool" when he heard that Ronald Reagan was leading in election returns. Attached airtel indicates possibly identical with No violation within our jurisdiction apparent and no further investigation being conducted. Pertinent information disseminated to Secret Service, local authorities and Governor?Elect Reagan. a 413-?? USESTPL- .NFJJ DISK-.51- ZS Jug, annoy-Lilli tom Mo. to solo?10? - Tolson GSA GEN. REG. NO. 27 .r (I. 3 DeLouCh UNITED STATES ERNMENT 3 Mohr . WiCk Ronald Eff; MemOrandum Reagan?352 :4 ?21150 1 3 .. 1?ng 1? To Mr. we 11?16-66 Tove! i Trotter Tele. Room Holmes (in SUBJECT i RONALD REAGAN (R) GOVE RNOR- ELE CT - - CALIFORNIA BACKGROUND: ,3 ,3 3337 My ?Met On 11-8-66, Republican RonaifRezagan f3; Palisades, California, defeated incumbent Edmund G. (Pat) ?Brewn? 3? 3 in the gubernatorial election in California. Reagan, an actor and] "j rancher,was porn 2-5? 11, Tampico, Illinois. He received an A.B. degree from Eureka, Illinois, College in 1932, became a newspaperman and then switched to sports announcing on radio station WHO in Des Moines, Iowa, from 1932-1937. Since 1937?, Reagan has been a motion picture eater and breeds thoroughbred horses and trains hunters and jumpers. During World War II, he was a Captain in the Air Force. are inroniin'iion Genre?1W . HEREEN is INFORMATION IN BUFILES: DATE 5,412 mg The Bureau has not investigated Reagan; however, our files do contain numerous references to him primarily concerning his anticommunist activities in various Hollywood organizations. He has been considered one of Hollywood's most active conservative political figures and election, he camp 1 91,,er Barry Goldwater. g} 31% Mme??3?? 3 Reagan has spoken in various parts 0; on the evils of communism and was a friendly witng?is We? {a House Committee on Un-American Activities in October, 1947. Alghough he has been extremely anticommunist since ther?QMVS, was a sponsor of the Committee for a Democrat Far Eastern Policy (cited [573}, pursuant to Executive Order 10450). In testimony before the inlgj Octeber, 1947, he stated he. had-received some literature from this organization and that he was duped through a telephone call?to lend name as a sponsor of a recital which he later learned was?under th?gr auspices of the Joint Anti-Fascist Re?ugee Committee. In the IQQVS, Reagan was reportedly a member of the Americans for Democra$i>c Action and the American Veterans Committee. In 1950, Dore Schary, IDLE a prominent Hollywood personality, indicated he and Reagan, as well as 3 others, had been active in the Hollywood Independent Citizens Committee 7 ?2193 satinces and Professions in 1945, but got out that year when the :33: ommu 1 00 over. - xii 1 Mr. D?Loach ULsz?fgf (8) Bi 1 - Mr. Wick (Contltiuedw over) a; M.A. Jones to Wick Memo RE: RONALD REAGAN (R) In March, 1960, we cooperated with Reagan by making inquiries he re in Washington concerning Maureen Reagan, daughter of Reagan and Jane Wyman, who was iving with a married Metropolitan Police officer here in Washington Our inquiries appeared to confirm this situation and the information was furnished on a confidential basis to now Senator George Murphy who originally contacted the Los Angeles Office in this matter. (100-382196-7) By letter 8?24?66, the Director stated in response to Reagan's letter of 8-19-66, concerning plans to strenghten law enforcement procedures in California if elected, that this Bureau is always willing to extend its cooperative services to any and all local, State and Federal agencies to more effectively combat crime. The Director invited him to call upon the FBI for assistance in matters of mutual interest. (100?382196?9) Reagan has visited our Los Angeles Office and relations with him have been cordial. By letter 11-9-66, the Director extended his congratulations on Reagan's election. RECOMMENDATION: None . For information. 7 t? 2 .. Ronald Reagan-353 - pl .. i . Crescent, Oklahoma g?ga?gm; November 14, 1966 {Ma amen. . Mr. Felt- J. Edgar Hoover, Director . Federal Bureau of Investigation b6 Department of Justice b7c agg;eai~; Washington, D.C. - jrm.mmaan ?Ir?ele. .- 133 1-9 Dear Sir. In a recent conversation about the fall elections u:amwm;:e a friend que??ioned the political background of Governor? ?1 elect Ronald Reagan of California. He asserted that agate? Reaganl?as"at?8?e?time a "card carrying member of the a Communist Party". When I pressed my friend for his ??wf source of information he attributed it as a quotation ?"Trom yOu} - :w - 7 It would be greatly appreciated if you could clear this clouded situation as you are a well known authority:? on the international Communist movement and its growth in America. Such accusations are not new in American politics, but they seem to be more prevelant in the rise of the political career of the new Governor of California. His?; association with the Screen Actors Guild has led to a great amount of it. But I believe it was at this point in his life that he became aware of the infiltration of Communism in the movie industry and initiated a cleaning of the industry. Thank you for your time and trouble. YOur response? will uncloud some muddy waters. if"? enemas YO tr 1y T. 1333133121) ?sealant. a-zssaeagw i . 44:5 195 ?3 a b6 b7C Ckescent, Oklahoma 730 . 131 ?iirum-l; . ?if teams? 4" ?117$?an #394353 Ff ?2 if; I re ,l Ease .l . @313, a 1 WWVA a? RonaklReagan-354 51"? ,1 1/ Ronald Reagan-355 104 fij/Q/ November 18, 1986 /0 0-3 - i a INFORMATION 601?.th Ian. mu SUNCTJASSIFIEB ENE 405,173 .5 ??ll Crescent. exam. fines Dear Your letter of November 14th has been received. ?is ill J?i i; I never made the statement that Governor?elect of California, Ronald Reagan, was at one time "a card carrying member on? the Communist Party. I would appreciate knowing the identity at your friend who attributed the statemgt to me so that I can advise him of its inaccuracy. . The FBI is eta-iota;v an investigative agency oithe Federal Government and, as such, neither makes evaluations nor draws conclusions as to the character or integrity any organi- zation, publication or individual. Therefore, I am sure you will understand why I could not have made that statement. Sincerely yours, 9. ?gs ?rmer I 'i . .-- 13.21:: I I I I b6 Quartet I 'l :/7c WU M. if in e? Oklahoma City~ Enclosure 45?; NOTE: n61? identifiable in Bufiles. Ronald Reagim has not been inves ted by the Bureau. He testified bef the Boise Committee on ricalti?c'ti?ties in 1947 stating he beenduped when he allowed I his nam to be used as a sponsor to a recital sored by a group known Tolson DeLoaCh Mohr Wick Casper Callahan Conrad Felt Gale Rosen Sullivan Tav 91 NO I Trotter Tele. Rooni?TL Iv' Holmes Candy as the oint Anti? Fascist Refugee Committee. nthe 1940's he allegedly Iected with several organizations which have been cited as being Ronald .- Reagan-356 SAC, an 11-33.1313 1 Mr, FBI mm gunmen 1? ?5 I m: Hermes. :1 emomom, 611mm NN NN 3? - . 6 CALMRNIA Wrens mg! 5% 770%, :41ng3 3' ?t 1" 1103?: m. Moliord I'm Bureau on :1 . November 17, em towel-mine .11 We could 1 hemmedbyeoyemrweled . . paulbkoemm?WMIdt-n .1: 1 . position in the California We 36mm Be new it is Reagan's medium to eliminate mum. perm from the at? gourmet end the University ofcu?enleataerkeley. mm he?e?ed hit. home-mnemhrtetee ewW by 3 number of mines on the 1mm 1 Berkeley. 1 .- Mr. Mahord Restated thisoomml?ur?lhe . - ?alum? MA: 1.43 i1" W?lmw - - .-..I 1- ?he- 5 a 1 :l?h-l his 1 in; For your Mormetm, Mum?! the Winona? from fanlehlagthe Momettuadmredreminded me other muted!? bodies, each are the} Cements. Committee on mnemerieea Ashram, here We?! le?bmebremmherotm '9 5% htheevmmetyoe, ornaherottheCelttoa-nie 6mm 113 2.: by Rem or me of Meeqtetmmim 3:3:ch thtemetter Bummahmw Matthew we}: Mm w? mm Wham? \N?gzw . the 4 REMEMW . . if? 5 memN HQN 281965 R0 1 Mr. Sullivan itI1 Mr. Wick (D NOTE: See Jones to Wick Memo dated 11? 22- 66, captioned Mr. Donald Mulford, 145 Hillside Avenue, Ptedm?s'? Cglifornia, . -. amen? IOIM NO. to 54 1 um no: 1111110? A am. no. no. 17 UNITED STATES 50? 0?!06 NMENT Memorandum To Mr. WicWe?? DATE: 11-22-66 Trotter M. A??g . 7' Ronald . XS I SUBJECT. MR. DONALD MULFORD ?Reagan'357 ii 145 HILLSIDE AVENUE :3 PIEDMONT, CALIFORNIA g?m?m comarnm 3 95:11: 15 UNCLASSIFIM clean out the left- -wing elements which have been so active recently - in the State of California. 71115 ?13 111111195: maxmas?aa; - . 405/93 On November 17, 1966, Mr. Mulford visited the . Bureau and spoke to SA John W. O'Beirne, Crime Re search Section. CALI FORNIA LEGISLATURE i? Mr. Mulford explained that he has been a long? ?time friend of the FBI and is well?known to our San Francisco OffiCe. He said that during his term in the California Legislature he has introduced a number of bills designed to assist law enforcement in that state. He recently introduced a measure which will make it a felony to attack a police officer while he is on official business. Mr. Mulford advised that as very active in the . recent gubernatorial campaign of Renal eagan and desires to . exploit the Opportunity he feels exists to have Governor Reagan He said Phillip Battaglia, Reagan's assistant, will be appointed by Reagan to head a ten member policy guidance committee. F1100: 384/676 He advised he was visitingl Egee whether or not some arrangements can be worked out (Pig rmation given by the Bureau to this committee through Battagliam to assist Governor Reagan in identifying communists and other left yigg extremists. The purpose will be either to eliminate them from theghovernment or to prevent their receiving an appointment to a State position. Mulford said Reagan is planning to clean up the University of California at Berkeley and that shortly after beginning his campaign for Governor, Mulford invited him to his home where, for two hours he was briefed by Mulford and a number of his sources on the Berkeley campus concerning communist efforts to in?uence the students in the University. He said that Reagan was astounded at what'he heard and promised to make changes if he was elected. Elnclosuw 5 ~66 - Mr. eLoach - with enclosure 7 with enclosure Continu?g 11 $8 1955. ORIGINAL 1111:!) IN- (6) 'ivan With enclosure . - . .. 7 7.3, ?11. ?1 M. A. Jones to Wick Memo RE: Mr. Donald Mulford Mr. Mulford was tactfully informed that although his position was well understood, the FBI could not be placed in the position of "clearing" appointees to State positions. He was reminded that . information concerning communists and liberal personalities has been a concern of the State of California Committee on Un-American Activities which has been functioning in this field for many years. Mr. Mulford replied that while he realizes the Bureau?s position, he thought it would be well to place on record what he believes to be the attitude of the incoming administration of his state regarding these matters and he thought the Bureau would want to assist. He was advised that we are precluded from the action he suggested. Bufiles reflect Mr. Mulford has been a long-time friend .of the Bureau and is on the Special Corresp'ondents? List. In addition' to his position as a State he is a self?employed insurance broker. RECOMMENDATION: . For information. Letter to California Offices attached, them that in the event they are contacted by a Reagan representative regarding this matter they should contact the Bureau for guidance. .. f, 1/ {-3.43 Ronald Reagan-358 - 9 ?3.2m? T- ?113% 1 Mr. - . "v Mr: E?yin?uz Mr. Wickim; Mr. Casper? :1 Mt I i Mr?11Date: NOVZ 2.1956 s52. . Mr. I Transmit the following in Mr. (Type in plaintext or code) Mr. Vm AIRTEL AIRMAIL (Priority) Miss is .1 Miss 7" TO FRI b7n rpm-:27 spa-2' FFANCISCO ('62?5315) Ef?e THREAT TO ASSASSINATE savanna? ELECT OF CALIFORNIA 11/8/66 JOSE, CALIFORNIA CONCERNING. rat-U and San Francisco teletype to Director, Chicago, Los Angeles, ll/lH/EB. a '3 Title is marked changed to include the true name of the Subject obtained from the Chicago Theological Seminary. Re San Francisco teletype to Director, 11/10/66 ?17 Enclosed for the Bureau are four (H) copies of letter- head memorandwnand photoscaptioned as above. Two (2) copies are being furnished to Chicago inasmuch as Subject plans to return there to continue studies at University of Chicago. Four copies with four photographs are bang furnished Los .9 Angeles so te dissemination can he made to PHILIP BATTAGLIA, . .e retary for Governor-Elect RONALD FEAGAN. One a COpy with photograph is ?eing furnished Secret Service, San Francisco, San Jose Po Department9 Santa Clara Co. SO.J and winnigration and Naturallza iggq??y San Franc1sco. Bureau (Encl. 8) 2 a Chicago (Info.) (Enol. ?i351[i;au #,ww i 4 Los Angeles (incl. 8 9 2 San FranciSCO' - . MES:bja if?) *4va 2% (12) _+Jr . . . . ?mac cos-2" ALT a ?986 HEREIN .Approved: . Special Agent in Charge Ronald Reagan-359 .. SF 62-5315 MES:bja 1:32 1373 The first source is by SA BALCOLM E. SAMPLE on 11/10 and.15/CB. The second source isl I Santa Clara County Council of .hurches, contacted on ll/lu/GB. The third source is] contacted on ll/lu/BS. b6 . b7C The fourth source 18' Ib7s I local radio newscaster who requested his identity be protected, was contacted on 11/18/66 by an WILLIAM KI LIPTealstrar, Chicago Theological Seminary, was contacted by SA ROBERT 11/15/65. On 11/13/85, SA WALCOLF E. SAMPLE contacted ?rs. DIAEHA WILLSON, Credit Bureau of Santa Clara Valley, Mrs. PEGGY DONALD, San Jose Police Department and hrs. MARY JO FOWLER, Santa Clara County Sheriff's Office. RonaklReagan-36O . on UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION In Reply, Please Refer to . .i b6 . San FranCisco, CaliIornla Fble No. 7 November 22, 1956 .. a? mi: INFORMATEION CONTAINE i" WREIN KS UNCLASSIFIED was ,1 erg/4 marge; On November 10, 1956, ISan Jose, California, advised this office that she had gone to the campaign headquarters of California Assembly? man WILLIAM F. to assist in making house calls to make sure all the people in the area voted. said she was aSSigned to a group of four to work on the east side of the city of Sea Jose. She accompanied a young man introduced to her as He told her he was a student at the University of Chicago and indicated that he was not rec istered to vote in California. described as short, small build, brown eyes, clean cut and approximate 20?22 years of age. b6 b7C After conta tin: all the residents of the assigned area, to STANTON headquarters in car. While in he car expressed anti-Vietnam sentiments and when election returns started to come over her car radio showing that had taken a large lead over incumbent EDMUND G. highly excited and said, him. Assassination is justified as a tool.? b6 On November 18, 1966,] Ipositively identified s70 photograph of las the individual who was intro- duced to her on November 5, 1956 the individual who made statements regarding Governor?elect RONALD REAGAN. 2 . b6 A source of this office who has furnished reliable b7c information in the past, advised on November 13, 1966, that one I lie employed by the Santa Clara Council of Churches, San Jose, and associated with personnel of the Economic Opportunity Commission and the Vista program and a pears to fit the description name unknown.? was a student at a theological seminary associated with niversity of Chicago and that he worked part time with the Council of Churches but is actually sponsored and paid by the First Methodist.Church, Fifth and East Santa Clara, San Jose, California. A second source of this office advised EN b6 b7C This document contains neither recommendations nor con- clusions of the FBI. It is the property of the FBI and is loaned to your agency; it and its contents are not to be distributed outside your agency. y5 7 \fi - C?s EITED 5 I END o?tlai?ia Bvseqmmajgpa01:? ,qq Wu? F: - A if": ?Lu Nari: 6 @937 ii Ronald Reagan-385nm WW ;i .FDl-Sh?lf?Rev. 5-22-64) . a II ..- I ?Wi?r . - i Tem? a; . . I I Mr. Detaachdm I I I Mr. Camel-hm 5 Date: 2?26-67 Callahan." if I 111,?- Cn?mggs i? Transmit the following in PLAINTEXT I Feltm (Type in plaintext or code} 3" GQLM 1* 4? Vic, AIRTEL L, 3% .. (Prior?y) 1 13?. I TruthsTO: DIRECTOR, FBI (Ba-?110790) ?Miea 5 A FROM: SAC, ST. LOUIS (ITS-1) b/r? AMBROSE EARL ARNETTE, THREAT AGAINST JOHN EDGAR HOOVER, 3: if, IRECTOR OF FBI, GEORGE ROMNEY, GOVERNOR OF MICHIGAN i; .GOVERNOR OF PROTECTION OF THE PRESIDENT. ?i i 231?)? 2/7?5 ?3:3 .4 REFERENCE TELETYPES: DETROIT To BU, BU TO DETROIT, ST. LOUIS TO BU, SAN FRANCISCO TO BUREAU ALL DATED 2-26?67. NO COPIES T0 \w I: . . I ?Jif? ST. LOUIS IS ENCLOSING PERTINENT ZEROX COPIES OF SERIALS FROM II nu ITS FILE ON SUBJECT ARNETTE FOR OFFICES AS AFTER SET OUT. if No cepies are being furnished to the Bureau except three copies ii of St. Louis memo dated four dash twenty seven dash sixtysix, since 5; it has received all other pertinent information in the past. 35 0 One copy of these serials are furnished to WFO for information. They are self explanatory. It may be that WFO may be called to conduct investigation this matter at a later date. - Bureau MT @gg?a a Detroit 'End;@ ?g /_my 6 . 2 - San Francisco (End. 23) "r 2 Louisville (Enc. 9) . 2 - W190 (Enc. l3) man. 1 - St. Louis Ann 1,33%me JUNE ?my 1957 UNI-MA 11;: rank.? Pam . m1 0 6? m5. 930 (12) 405:9 bam?? 2?ijth I ~f4?f\ - I 1 Approved/?19 Sent [Special Agent in Charge Ronald Reagan-386 a 6 SL 175?1 - a . .m St. Louis will prepare LHM suitable for dissemination to local authorities on latest defelopments when complete data obtained on 2/27/67. ENCLOSURES FOR DETROIT of SL airtel to Bureau and Louisville, dated 3/2/66 of FD 302, dated 3/8/66 re interview of Ambrose Arnette of airtel and copies of LHM from Louisville to Bureau dated 3/lu/66 copies of St. Louis letter to USA, dated 3/7/66 copy of St. Louis Memo, dated #227/66 photographs of Subject taken 3/1/66 2 front with hat; 2 front without hat; 2 profile) copies copies copies ENSLOSUBES FOR SAN FRANCISCO 2 COPIES of St. Louis airtel to Bureau and Louisville, dated 3/2/66 2 copies of St. Louis teletype to-Bureau and Louisville, dated 3/1/66 2 copies of FD 302 dated 3/8/66 re interview of Ambrose Arnette 2 copies of airtel and 2 copies of LHM from Detroit to Bureau dated, 3/h/66 2 copies of airtel and 2 copies of LHM frOm Louisville to Bureau, dated 3/lh/66 2 copies of St. Louis Letter to USA, St. Louis, dated 3/7/66 1 copy of St. Louis memo, dated h/27/66 6 copies of photOgraphs of Subject taken 3/1/66 2 front with hat, 2 Front without hat, 1 profile) ENSLOSURES FOR LOUISVILLE {2 copies of FD 302 dated 3/8/66 re interview of Ambrose Arnette copies of airtel and copies copies of LHM from Detroit to Bureau, dated 3/u/66 of St. Louis letter to USA, dated 3/7/66 copy of St. Louis memo dated h/27Z66 ENCLOSURES FOR WFO of of of of of St. Louis airtel to Bureau and Louisville, dated 3/2/66 St. Louis telet pe to Bureau and Louisville, dated 3/1/66 FD 302 dated 3/%/66 re interview of Ambrose Arnette airtel and LHM from Detroit to Bureau, dated 3/u/66 copy copy cepy COpy cepy RonaklReagan-387 p. h, a SL 175-1 FOR wpo (oont.) copy of airtel and . copy of LHM frOm Louisville to Bureau, dated 3/1h/66 copy of St. Louis Letter to USA, St. Louis, dated 3/7/66 copy of St. Louis memo dated u/27/66 copies of photographs of Subject taken 3/1/66 1 front with hat, 1 front'without but, 1 profile) copy of Detroit teletype to Bureau, dated 2/26/67 F1 kaden?+4 Ronald Reagan-388 1. 1 OPTIONAL. FORM No. so 1. -, . "Fir-w? . U. STATES 7 - 1 1 fr, (\Jff'f f/?lf 777?; . - 1 an VU- VJ: vuudv. - at) an '20 sac, ST. LOUIS (175-1) - nA-m? 4/27/66 FROM 31 1mm E. SMITH 1:131 commas) . 1 11223103131121??113,331,,qu . 131,1 5539803ng - 1 4051/2? On 4-/19/56, at 5:20 pm, Mr. GEORGE GRIFFIN, Attorney, Monsanto Chemical Company, Creve Coeur, 1eph ned th1s office aL1d stated that an individual been oallinr' the guard office late at night, making kinds of th eats against the property Monsanto the guards employed by them. This individual threatened machine the guards and threatened to come out and up Monsanto Chenaicale. He also told the guards that was a communist, that he was in favor of the over-throw the US Government by force and violence and Was in favor aiding Russia and furnishing scientific information the Chinese. Mr. GRIFFIN stated that he did not know he id entity of this individual who was making the phone calls but that he had been told that a certain individual, name unknow1 to GREFFIN, Was suspected; that the supervisor of this person had listened in on a phone conversation over an extension and believed it to be identiCal with a former Monsanto employeestated that these anonymous telephone calls had began in 2/66, and that the guards were getting "juxmsy". Mr. GRIFFIN wished to know if there was any Federal statute under which the FBI could investigate the matter. He \1 was inloim t1at in the absence of any information that these 1 phone calls were interstate in character, the FBI could 3 take no action. he was requested, however, to ascertain the name of the suspect so that this office would be aware of his identity and coukiadvise the Secret Service in SL ofhis . threats to do violence inasmuch as they wish to know the identities of all such persons as did the FBI. ?n 4/20/66, Mr. GRIFFIN stated that the individual who was suspected was AMBROSE ARNETTE, who has been used occasionally as a temporary employee doing common labor work and whose services are furnished through Man Power, Inc. a A 5; SL 175?1 At ?his tine Ur. GRIFJIN stated that he had conducted qu1"e a research project through the law library at and had asce1tained that it was a Violation of Section 2835, Title 18, to advocate over- throw of the 3- Government by force and violence. Mr. GRIVFIN was informed that this particular section of the USO is ider=t1 cal with the old Smith Act which has been practical 1y emasculated by US Supreme Court decisions; that ARNETTE vas known to this office and that he had made a 1 similar statements to the F31 and that the USA had declined 1 any prosecution against ARNETTE. . Mra GRIFFEN stated that he realized that this was oroba ?or local authorities in View of the threats to blow up Monsanto and machine gun the guards I and that he would take the matter up with the Creve Coeur .w PD. '11 should be noted that Mr. GRIFFIN stated that he was formerly a SA of the FBI but resigned in 1961 and has been employed in the Con ract Division, Legal Dept., . Monsanto, since 1/66. hr. GREFF 1N stated that should any charges be nade against ETTE, he would immediately notify this office. 1 R0naklReagan-390 rmm- no.? a. 1 JJlrIIidl" uElJTahivvb :5 '1 2?43 ragga ?987 FEE WASH DC 31 .. J: 113.5.? Tani?: DZTROIT Inf. TQQ PO URGE 1N1 20 280 06? JCB i:.14 al?Urumugusox e: 2 am LOUISUELLE (Ivs- ~23, ST. LOUIS (175-1); 1% FPOE GET 5P nurm?mvm?i (a ?9?er - .. 61?9?" 3332903 202%. OHDROSE EARL ANNETTEQ THREAI AGAINST JOHN EDGAR HOOVER, OR OF FREQ GEORGE RDWNEYQ GOVERNOR 0F GOVERNOR OF ASSAULTING A FEDERAL OFFICER, EXTORTION. THREAT AGAINST THE PRESIDENT. CHICAGO (175-6) AND INDIANAPOLIS 0 RE DETROIT TEL FEB. TWENTY SEVEN LAST. FOR INFORMATION OF INDIANAPOLIS, INDIVIDUAL BELIEVED EDENTICAL ANNETTE CALLED DETROIT OFFICE EVENING OF FEB. FEVE AND STATED HE ADVOCATES THE ASSASSINATION OF EDGAR HOOVER. MR. GEORGE ROMNEY AND MR. RONALD REAGAN. FURTHER. THAT HE MAY GO TO WASHINGTON PRETTY SOON AND ASSASSINATE THAT NO FEDERAL GRAND JURY COULD EVER CONVICT RIM OF ANYTHING EZIECS THREATENED TO ANYONE WHO VISITED RES NITHOUT A SEORCH WARRANT: BLANED FBI FOR ASS DENOUNCED FBI AS GESTAPO AND OEUGOHCED 223 223 WOULD 22323312272 LEADER. CALLER EFUSED . x" ?22729 HE JUST Inn/Imam? I Mg?. W22 .1 DC. 192? 3 Ronald Reagan- -391 - JAQ: THO I: I75PE INVESTIGATION DETROIT INDICATES SUBJECT ENPLOYED BY SALVATION ARMYQ DETROIT9 ERON EEB. ONE TO FEB. TNENTY FOUR STD SUPERVISOR AT SALVATION ARMY SAID SUBJECT STATED NHEN H2233 TTAT HE INTENDED TO RETURN To HIS PREVIOUS EMPLOYMENT AT HONSANTO CHENICAL ?009 LOUISS AND THAT HIS JOB TS NATTING EOR HTN SUBJECT TOLD SUPERVISOR ON LAST DATE OF TNENTY POUR LASTB HE HAS LEAVING DETROIT HORNING OP TNENTY LAST BY GREYHOUND BUS FOR ST. AND NOULD HAVE A ETVE HOUR CHANGE OVER AT INDIANAPOLIS, -EDIARAO GREYHOUND SCHEDULE INDICATES THAT BUS LEAVING DETROIT AT ELEVEN THIRTY AN ARRIVES AT INDIANAPOLIS AT SIX FIFTY PH AND NERT BUS LEAVING TOR LOUIS DEPARTS AT TEN ETPTEEN PH. GREYHOBND ADVISED THIS BUS ON FEB. TNENTY SIN LAST CONSISTED GE TNO SECTIONS, ONE DRIVEN OTHER DRIVEN BY 136 SUD EXTRA DRIVERQ AND BOTH CAN BE LOCATED THROUGH GREYHOUND, b7c If HAS BHDGE NUMBER SIX FIVE FIVE FIVE AND END PAGE TWO Ronald Reagan-392 ASE THREE 3: 2?5b7C DADEE LEADER THREE ONE PINE SIX. INVESTIGATION DETROIT INDICATES SUBJECT RESIDES AT HOTELS9 OSTAINS EMPLOYMENT THROUGH TEMPORARY HELP TTPE OE EMPLOTMENT AGENCIESS SUBJECT ARRESTED IN FEB. NINETEEN THO AS RULE INDIANAPOLIS CONTACT GREYHOUND TO DETERMINE IE SUBJECT NAS ON BUS DRIVEN BY EITHER OF THEM TRON DETROIT TO INDEMNAPOLISA RED. IWENTY CONTACT EEC PD EOR POSSIELE ARREST RECORD AS DRUNK SUDSEOUENT :3 THAT DATEA CONTACT ALL LONER CLASS HOTELS IN AREA OF CRETHOUND EUS CONTACT ALL TEMPORARY HELP TYPE OF EMPLOYMENT AGENCIES IN INDIANAPOLIS FOR INFORMATION RE LOCATION OE IE SUBJECT LOCATED INTERNIEN HIM CONCERNING TELEPHONE CALL TO DETROIT OEEICE ON FEB. TWENTY EIUE LASTO INDIANAPOLIS ALSO DETERMINE IDENTITY 0F DRIVER.UHO TOOH TEN PM EUS RROM INDIANAPOLIS TO AND INTERVIEN RE TRAVEL TROM INDIANAPOLIS TO ST. LOUIS- 11.12.? PRGE THE EE Ronald Reagan-393 PAGE FOUR OE 275v: STO LOOTS OATOTAIN NTTH NONSANTO CORPORATION. OLSO CONTOCT OLL ARPROPRTOTE LON CLASS HOTELS IN ST. LOUIS OREO OOD NM NTATN CONTACT NTTH APPROPRIATE EMPLOYMENT AGENCIES. STO LOVES PD RE POSSIBLE ARREST OF SUBJECT AS DRUNK. OTROISH COPY OE PROEOORAPH OF SUBJECT TO INDIANAPOLIS FOR 3OOTEET TON TO GREYHOUND BUS DRIVERS. SOSOECT9 NHTTEO BORN APRIL SEVENTEEN, NINETEEN SERO OVENSEOROO FIVE FEET ELEVEN INCHES, :33 EVENTN THREE PODODS EROVN EYES, SROVN HAIR, BALDING ON TORO SSN FOUR ZERO SEVEN DASH TWENTY SIX DASH ZERO EIGHT FOUR ETOHTO END ROSE-FOUR Ronald Reagan?394 .. \dw - I a FOR INFORMATION ENDIANAPOLISQ BUREAU INSTRUCTED ALL LEADS BE PURSEED SUSJECT WHEN LOCQTED BE INTERVIEWED RE THREATS asuginm? VIOLATEOHS CF AFQ AND STATUTES re? ?tr um . a HILL ?8 OF ANY OVERT ACT 0R CONSPIRACY HE MAY HAVE vn r-qu- 1'in??ruu . math. SOMEONEG IF NO BASIS FOR FEDERAL VIOLATION DISCUSS REGARD Y0 MAKING A TRIP TO WASHINGTON ., . .. Li: up. HITH LOCAL RonaklReagan-395 A . i u. uu-L?u - I - . gh.nJNM1-.if? ATT- TNTORNATTON - 3 i" FBI NASH DC #31 TNOATOLS UTOF . DP Trig - AOOPN URGENT s?I-Ov BJS 4051?; ST. LOUIS 55571, AND DETROIT TRON INOTANAPOLTS (22., ?33 EARL ARNETTE: THREAT AGAINST JOHN EDGAR HOOVER: DIRECTOR: OF . I .- . 273:3 GEORGE RONNIE CY: GOVERNOR OF MICHIGAN: RONAL AGAN: GOVERNOR 0F Af?ch A FEDERAL OFFICER, EXTORTION, THREAT AGAINST THE PROSTDENT. 00: DETROIT, RE OOTNOTT TEL TO DIRECTOR, FEB. TNENTYEIOHTI SIXTYSETEN, INOTANAPOLIS PD NEGATITE RE SUBJECT, FEB, STANLEY ASSISTANT REGIONAL MONT, GREYHOUND ENDZANAPOLTSO TNO, AOVTSEO MARCH ONE, SIXTYSEQEN, THAT TNO BOSES LEFT TNOTANAPOLTS TOR ST, LOUIS TEN FITTEEN TM. FEB. SIXTTSETEN, 808 ONE TNO FOON NINE DRIVEN BYI BADGE N00 EIGHT EIGHT: AND BUS FOUR THREE IVE SEVEN DRIVEN Mn?- Run 1. .. :14~.Ib6 BYI NO. SEVEN. b7C - - .1 - FEAR q, TSEIJ ON MARCH SIXTYSEVENTI IBADOE NO. EIGHT EIGHT ONEA I INDIANAPOLIS. IND. AOO: sag f3 BUS SIX TTVE TIVOTTIVE FROM DETROIT To INDIANAPOLIS 2? END gr" - [:{d,j?RonakiReagan 396 AGE END ?0 If . . . A BUT ADVISED THAT HE HAD N0 PASSENGERS T0 b6 INDZANAPOLZS AND HIS BUS was HEADED FOR MEMPHIS, TENN. b7c DRIVER ENETHEE STATED DESCRIPTION OF NOT FAMILIAE To HIM. BADGE FIVE ADOISED HE DROVE BUS No. POOR THREE FIVE SEVEN, TO ST. LOUIS ON FEB. SIXTYSEVEN. BUT CAN REMEMBER No ONE EETEING DESCRIPTION, HE STATED THAT HES IN NEE YORK AND HE BECAME DREVER AT INDIANAPOLES, HE REMEMBERS No ONE WITH A TECKET THAT ORIGINATED IN DETROIT AND . . b6 ONLY YWO MEN QBOARD BUS BOTH VERY YOUNG. b7C 0N MARCH IIBADGE No, SEVEN EEGHT ADVISED HE DEOVE ENS No. ONE Two FROM INDIANAPOLIS T0 5E0 LEAVENG EN91ANAP0LIS TEN FIFTEEN FEB. NE STATED ONE COULD WETH BOARDING BUS As WHITE ONE EIQE FEET RECEDING HAIR, END PAGE 1N0 RonaklReagan-397 OOGO THREE Ozamxme BLUE OORH CLOTHES: PLAID BUSINESS THIRTYFIOE To YEARS OF AGE: DEPARTED BUS AT STOLOUISO DRIVER STATED HE DOES NOT REMEMBER WHERE ANY OF THE TICKETS 0 "7?1 a'lv-I ?3 1 5? PEOPLE THAT WERE 0N AND COULO FURNISH N0 FURTHER.INFO ON MARCH ?Ia PRESENTLY 0N ROAD mL BE RETORNINO WITHEN THE NEXT DAY. ?b6 . - . A b7C 5T9 LOUIS EXPOO PHOTOGRAPHS OF SUBJECT. INVESTIGATION CONTINUING OTHER OFFOOES ADOISEO SEP. END RCS FBI OASH DC Ronald Reagan?398 FBI WASH DC EE 2 26 67 DEGEE. EM *ij E: .1 1-1? I 1. ?t Gig ?62? 9 DETROIIQ LUUISUEFL79 AND AN OJ - n.13' mafia $9169 SEED LGUES g) 21: 38673 ?,Jwi 3533033 EERL ETEETEEQ 98 JOHN EDGAR F329 GEDEGE DE MICHIGANQ RONALDQEEGAE, GPUPQEST 9 A Ir. Ti}. - ..E b? GE TEE fzh?wr, DETEDTT EED BUREAU TESTEET SUBJECT HAS NOT STAYED ORTEL HOTEL SINCE NINETEEN SIXIYSTX. TOR RECORDS NOT AVAILABLE UNTIL HE WAS AT NEWSTEAD FOUR QNE SIX SEVEN ONE NIGHT NINE DASH THREE DASH ED EDEE EECEET IRECAL s/ ETE AS ALCHOLIC AND EELTEVED MAY HAVE STAYED DE EESTETETETEE MORGAN EDTELQESC ETEE ZERO ETEE9 AND REGAL EDDMIEG HOUSE, EDUE ZERO FIVE EIEE SUBJECT ECEOEDTEG To SECRET SEEVTCE was EDEKTEG FOR MANPOWER TNCORPOTP ATED TN SEPTEMBER NTNETEEN SECRET SERVICE DID NOT EEDE EESTDEECE . igc IMDWSANTO ST. "g I EEDEET TEFORMATION EE SUBJECTO EECDEDS EDT AVAILABLE 1? SUBJECT HAS NUT WORKED THERE.SINCE LAST xv END PAGE ONE W?qungp f: 3mm {3:54} 5? {a Ronald Reagan-399 FEED: (92. b6 PAGE TWO b7c IMANPOUER9 SYO LOUISQ UNABLE TO FURNISH INFORMATION RECORDS HOTEL mommyo HE RECALLS SUBJECT BUT KNOW LOST 2.3 CR FLACE OF EMPLOYMENI FROM MEMORYO HE SUGGESTED 333420? ma? ??ve maxpawzag zmc.g DETROITO nun AGENCY IN FOR INIO SAM FRANCISCOQ MOTHER INTERVIEWED THREE DASH ONE REFUSED IO FURNISH INFORMATION RE SHEREQBOBTSO SUBJECT INTERVIEUED 8T0 THREE DASH ONE DASH DENIEO REWEMBERING PHONE CALLS IO SQID DID NOT INTEND TO HARM AMYONEQ WAS LOYQL ADMITIED BEING END MAY HRVE CALLED FBI WHEN PROMISED NOT TO DO IT AGAIN- NO CRIMINAL RECORD SIO LOUIS SENDING BY PERIINENT SERIALS ITS FILE IO DETROII9 LOUISVILLEQ SAN FRANCISCOQ AND HFO FOR COPIES OF IQKEN THREE DASH ONE DASH SIXTYSIX. l-?J LOUIS WILL CONIINUE EFFORTS To ADDRESS OF IO DETROIT, AND CONTACT IN.ST9 . 4 Hui FBI HASH DC Ronald Reagan?400 TBI 'Init". ?3 2/0- 0 04?dais u?l? Iw'Ul I -. . . DETROTTQ AND SII IRAN cISca Ti? 5 SIG Lewis (117 7.,5 Hammowwomow?mm ijj/ IE 449% Hz ARKETTEQ EDGAP [1FBTQ GEORGE GOVERNOR 0F RONALD g; eava?mon 0F PROTECTION PRESIDENT. - Ti? xa'I ~w SE SETRDIT TE T6 saw nmscog AND LOUisg?tyfr?ng\ :ga Irzvaszx SIXTYSEUENO ITII Io CONTACTS SII LOUISQ man I UNEQ SIXIISIKI SUBJECT 3T9 LOUIS OFFICE TELEPHGNICALLY ow IHE DATESI Ann T10 AND JUNE I?w?Iv IT TIME mo THREATS WERE AGAIIQI MRI ICOIER OR THE PRISIDENII AN UNSEB BELTEUED TO BE SUBJECT CDNTACTED MONSANTD CHEMICAL SCIPINVQ LOUT39 FROM FEBRUARY THROUGH APRIL AND THREATEN GUARDSQ DAMAGE TO PLANTQ AND SPOKE OF OVERGOVERNMEWTO MORE HEARD FROM SUBJECT SINCE 33338 IEDICATEDI SUBJECT WHILE TN LOUIS LIVED TN FOURTH RATE .3 'Ja-Ln [7&3 TYPE IGIELSO SUBJECT APPARENTLY KEPI IN HER a CATHERINE AHNEIIE BY TELEPHONEI ww~?ur LOUIS HELL Io DEIROII AND SAN 4. .g m? SUBJ WT AGENTS 3T0 LOUIS ON MARCH 13:. Us SEER ET SEFFI CE ADVISED OF RE BEIROII TEL. 2i GTHEH {If 7 5?57aids 133 Ma"? 6J1057 f: DC Ronald Reagan-401 - C, LE . 3'33". a? 35!. .?zj'n'y?t?ruj- {-11:51 I 1.6: 1 . my 2'2557 - Dc {341? - "3?53: 'Mr 2- 5 FBI. l, T93: 3:3? mm. x. \:i2E: Tm- 2/273/67 DDS far"; - D: - 7:31:33 (Gamma? 90> RED HTS-2) ST: LOUIS (1755}:th ., .4 . If?: TD 7 ALI. r? DTTROTT (WE-T) HEREITIS UNCLASSIFIED DATEAMTQ - AMBROSE EQEL ARNETTET THREATS EGATNST JOHN EDGAR BEBE T032 01? E819 GEORGE GOVERNOR 0f? R?ii?lLD, EZGQEQW GOVERNGR 0F PEOTECTTON OF THE PRESIDENT. RE BUREAU TEL T0 DETROIT THO TWENTY SIX TNVESTTGATTON DETROTT INDICATES SUBJECT RESTDED AT SALVATION ARMYQ ONE TWO TWO ZERO WEST 2? FEBRUARY ONE TO FEBRUQRY TWENTY FIVE SUBMITTED ?71! .. SELF CHECKOUT ON TWO TWENTY TWO WOULD LEAVE . ?il SALVATTGN ARMY 0N TWO TWENTY FIVE BUT NO FORMERDING vent: 4 ADDRESS LTSTED: EXACT TTME 0F DEPARTURE FROM SALVATION a- In; a ARMY LAST PREVIOUS moms DTT: CASTING ?gm? i TTVT BEAUFMTS, FROM gay" :31: SIX TD FOURTEEN SEVEN. U: m; 2 SUBJECT ME some To ECU: 3 To $2263 ESTATE AND OBTAWED LTTVE 0T *k T5), fir? (/75 PAGE DDT ?3.11? L, - "13335.32 SEQ Q: at" Q3.) Z. 23 133nm- 6 1957 a El, cg; Ronald Reagan-402 DE PLOE THO QDSENOE TO FEBRUARY FIVE SIXTY SEVENQ BUT HES NOT RETURNED. SCBJECT LISTED ERENCESI b6 b7C ONENSBOEOQ KENTUCKY9 3T0 LOUTSQ QT LOJTSUTLLE AND 3T9 LOUIS CONTACT REFERENCES FOR INFORMATION 33 LOCATION OF DETROIT SUBJECT TS TRANSIENT AND RESIDES LOWER CLASS HOTEL39 INCLUDING SALVATION ARMY AND EMPLOYMENT THROUGH TEMPORERY HELP TYPE OF EMPLOYMENT SUBJECT LAST ARRESTED TN DETROTT TN NTNETEEN TWO AS GOLDEN RULE DRUNK AND NO PHOTO 3T0 LOUIE RT 3T0 AND LOUISVILLEQ ET OWENSBOR09 KENTUCKY 9 CONTACT LOWER CLASS HOTELS AND TENPORERY HELP EEPLOEMENT AGENCIES TO LOCETE SUBJECT END INTERVIEW RE TELEPHOJE CALL TO DETROTT OEETCE ON FEBRUARY TUENTY FIVE. LOTH OFFICES ALSO CONTACT LOCAL EDS FDR ODRRENT ERR EST RECORD LTD BE ELEET ED OBTATN UP TO DATE PHOTO END IMMEDIATELY T233233 SAME TO DETROITO VD PAGE TWO Ronald Reagan-403 GRAYHOUND BUS NEGATIVE RE ANY TRAVEL 0F SUBJECTO MECHEGAN STATE POLICE ADVISED 2'30? IN POSSESSION OF MICHEGAN DREVERS LICENSE RIC-D NO CURRENT OWNERSHIP Of? CARD ETTER FOR SUBJECT PRESENTLY BEING HELD 73-? run b6 NOTELQ CIRCLE, b7c OUENSBOROQ Eva9 BUT SUBJECT NOT RNONN AT TNAT LETTER RECEIVED EROR SANE ADDRESS AND RETURNED To SEN ER ABOUT ONE WEEK @600 PRESENT LETTER BEING HELD POR DAYS AS BATTER OF HOTEL INUESTIGATION CONTINUING TO LOCATE AND INTERVIEN SUBJECT AND APPROPRIATE POLICE AGENCIES RAVE BEEN APPROPRIATE LONER CLASS HOTELS AND EMPLOYMENT AGENCIES BEING CONTACTED. MATTER NILL NOT BE PRESENTED TO USA PENDING RESULTS OE INTERVIEN OP SUBJECT AND BUREAU UILL BE KEPT ADVISED. SCR UASN DC Ronald Reagan-404 Ronald Reagan-405 SDI NASH 177' 7 7" . 1 27031? . I /7 31 1.11 -11. 3:3: LOUESULE f3?? 73.1} ?15:;11:1. .3177 {71314' I C. 1' 2-26"67 JBR .113421.11. .211 ROD 11 4731' {9/7 FROM LOUISVILLE (175-2) 11v1?1.1 1 ?g?37 RUSROSE ERRL ARNETTE9 IRRERI AGAINST JOHN EDGAR HOOVER, DIRECTOR OF F819 GEORGE RONNEY, GOVERNOR OF MICHIGAN1 RONALD gyt?m1 1 11 ~11, GOVERNOR OE PORTECTION OF IRE PRESIDENT. RE DIRECIORS IEL THIS 1 . 1 . g/szzx?z LOUISVILLE FILE SROUS SUBJECT CALLED LOUIS FBI OFFICE N5 tn - FENCE ONE NINETEEN SEXTYSIX AND THREATENED TO MR. HOOVERS SUBJECT DESCRIBED AS BORN APRIL SEVENTEEN TNENTYSIXQ- HEIGHTS, NEIGHL ONE SIXTY LBS: BROWNS EYES ATTENDED UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY FOR THREE YEARS. ON FEB-.TWENTYSIX INSTANT MOS. CATHERINE BOGGS, EEGHT ZERO FIVE NEST TENTH STREETQ KY1, BUT VERY UNCOOPERATIVE AND OBJECTED T0 BEING HARASSED BY FBI. CLAIMS GETS DRUNK AND MAKES THESE PHONE CALLS BUT WOULD NOT CARRY OUT THREATSG BOGGS CLAIMS SHE KNOW WHEREABOUTS AND IEL IF SHE RUEU1 . . 1 SUBJECT SERIRRIED FROM NAME AND URERERDOUIS UNRNOUN. NO FURTHER.INVESTIGATION BEING CONDUCTED u1ca 1 111 1111121 Ff? '5 ?1311? 1.,111 5; 7777'?" .U QIRVAIL COPIES TO LOUIS SAN ?32;.7 1. f1 1/77 ?1 WED i -1 f'f" 11W 41 11,1? I1I3I. INFORM- I011 OODIAI 191?;ch ?3 11; RSSIFIED 6 1957 1511919 ., . FBIIURSH 91-4-7697 LA SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA Us ?a ?1 FD 36 (Rev 5- 22- 64) 1 Date: 3/6/67 Transmit the following in I (Type in plaintext or code) AIR MAIL REGISTERED (Priority) V. 1C1 TO: DIRECTOR, FBI 17%le SAC, Los ANGEIES (175? AGAINST RONALD IQAGAN, GOVERNOR, STATE OF CALIFORNIA, PROTECTION OF THE PRESIDENT Enclosed for the Bureau are four cepies of a letter- head memorandum (LHM) in captioned matter. A cepy of this LHM is being disseminated to Secret Service, Sacramento, California. 7 Information copy of this airtel and LEM being fur? I nished San Francisco Office(It, 5514920 ?9 - . cu 40", 7? REGAlig'r? 7 (gs? ?g MR 7 ?35? Bureau (Encls. Ios Angeles - San Francisco 103 (5) 5.: snot?? '3 glam; UVJ- J- A A A 61MAR141SBZ Approved: Sent For Special Agent in Charge Ronald Reagan-406 mm (101'- gm cor STATES DEPARTMENT OF FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION In Reply, Please Refer to WASHINGTON, D.C. 20535 FileNo. LA 175-0 March 6, 1967 Director United States Secret ServiCe AGAINST RONALD REAGAN, Department of the Treasury GOVERNOR, STATE OF CALIFORNIA, Washington, D. C. 20220 SACRAMENTO, CALEORNIA Dear Sir. PROTECTION OF THE PRESIDENT - The information furnished herewith concerns an individual who is believed to be covered by the agreement between the FBI and Secret Service concerning Presidential pro-? tection, and to fall within the category or categories checked. 1. Has attempted or threatened bodily harm to any government official or employee, including foreign government officials residing in or planning an imminent visit to the U. S., because of his official status. 2. Has attempted or threatened to redress a grievance against any public official by other. than legal means. 3. Because of background is potentially dangerous; or has been identified as member or participant in communist movement; or has been under active investigation as member of other group or organization inimical to U. S. 4. [3 U. -S. citizens or residents who defect from the U. S. to countries in the Soviet or Chinese Communist blocs and return. 5. Subversives, ultrarightists, racists and fascists who meet one or more of the following criteria: Evidence of emotional instability (including unstable residence and employment record) or irrational or suicidal behavior: Expressions of strong or violent anti-U. S. sentiment; Prior acts (including arrests or convictions) or conduct or statements indicating a propensity for violence and antipathy toward good order 7 and government. - . 6. Individuals involved in illegal bombing or illegal bomb-making. Photograph has been furnished enclosed is not available may be available through 1 - Special Agent in Charge (Enclosure(s) U. S. Secret Service Sacramento (RM) Enclosure(s) (Upon removal of classified enclosures, if any, this transmittal form becomes UNCLASSIFIED.) Ronald Reagan-407 UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION Los Angeles California In Re I Please Re er a Nana; March 6, 1967 THREAT AGAINST RONALD. RRAGAN, GOVERNOR, STATE OF CALIFORNIA, SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA PROTECTION OF THE PRESIDENT 0n march 3, 1967, U. S. Postal Inapector E. J. Smith, Jr., Fresno, California, furnished a COpy of the attached note to the Federal Bureau of Investigation. This note was found in a mail box at the corner of Second and west Front Streets, Selma, California, on March 1, 1967. A xerox copy of this note is attached to this memorandum. Special Agent Robert J. Emonts of the Federal Bureau of Investigation telephonically advised Special Agent Stephen A. Byrne, U. Secret Service, Sacramento, California, of the con- tents of this note at 2:30 PM on March 3, 1967. At 3:02 PM on the same date, Special Agent Raymond Miller, FBI Resident Agency, Sacramento, California, advised he would immediately notify Governor Reagan's Office in Sacra- mento of the contents of the note. Chief of Police James Brockett, Selma, California Police Department was advised that the U. S. Secret Service and Governor Reagan's Office had been notified of the contents of the note. Chief Brockett advised his office contemplated no further action in this Case. This documEnt contains neither recommendations nor conclusions of the FBI. Itis the prOperty of the FBI and is loaned to your agency; it and its contents are not.to be dis? tributed outside your agency. ansa?-ltl?lk? wSS?qi?g?wax Ronald Reagan?408 'l . . . . . . ., . .m . . . . . anoww?w n. .. ?mam. Rib..- no...ll hi?iluikalt . . 5. . .. . JJLW. I.., .18 .. a! 3 1.. .a-ru8.1. .8 igf?i3PF. .31. u. . . ., r? . uni:- {n'hC a lav-2-4.1.5Iluli? I .. 5-20.. . :33; . . ill /0 0 382 3 2? IN THIS FILE SKIPPED DURING an f?nmIImmI eom?rm I IWMSIFIED mingle/?1? 406 ?g Ronald Reagan-411 I TIHNINN NW: A1105 LI MDATIUNS FEB "81967 Pd FBI NASH Dc WELEZYEE, FBI CHICAGO ISSOAM URGENT 2/28/67 JLS TO DIRECTOR, DETROIT AND ST. LOUIS FROM CHICAGO (175-6) 1? AMBROSE EARL ARNETTE, THREAT AGAINST JOHN EDGAR HOOVER, DIRECTOR OF up. OF PRESIDENT. FBI, GEORGE ROMNEY, GOVERNOR OF MICHIGAN, GOVERNOR 3 RE ST. LOUIS TELETYPE FEB. TWENTYSEVEN, LAST, INTRA-OFFICE. RE TELETYPE ADVISED BROTHERI IRESIDES CHICAGO, AND REQUESTED RE LOCATION. ADDRESS 18 BAR LOCATED IN SKID RON AREA EEC NNERE RECEIVES NAIL ABOUT ONCE A NEEN. HOTELS AND BARS IN SKID ROW AREA CHECKED AND BROTHER UNKNOWN. BROTHER HAS RECORD, CHICAGO PD BUT NOT NOW IN CUSTODY. RESIDENCE AND FOR PAST Two YEARS. INTENSIVE INVESTIGATION To ICONTINUING. . 4_ b6 END SWEETEST. /Oz? 53? we END In. SANTIAWEI mdf'?hcoa?w '4ng/ ineMAR 1197 (g If GJG 5 . nah-wrap .- FBI WASH DC ALL fm?" y, . HEREIN DATE 6 9 BY 4 Ronald Reagan-412 . 465, (?73 - I . . I Ronald Reagan-413 . 2-26-67 95 PLAINTEXT - .. 1 - Mr. Cajigas .7 . TELETYPE URGENT 1 Mr? Peelma?n i To SACS DETROIT LOUISVILLE . 5% ST. LOUIS SAN FRANCISCO i . wmw?wmm? . I. FROM DIRECTOR FBI (Oz-110790) - A. LEI AMBROSE THREAT AGAINST JOHN EDGAR HOOVER, DIRECTOR OF FBI, GEORGE GOVERNOR OF MICHIGAN, RONALD GOVERNOR OE PROTECTION OF THE PRESIDENT. RE BUREAU TEL FEBRUARY TWENTYSIX SIXTVSEVEN. ST. LOUIS EXPEDITIOUSLY FURNISH DETROIT, LOUISVILLE, AND SAN FRANCISCO COPIES OF PHOTOGRAPH OP ARNETTE. ST. LOUIS FURNISH DETROIT TELETYPE SUMMARY OF RESULTS OF MARCH ONE If - 3 INTERVIEW WITH ARNETTE AND OTHER BACKGROUND DATA. I E61: If} .I .- gzjim- 63? ?7 if? ATP . Jami-D II 5: I .99? ,Ssmgoz??lgs A--. . .I . "mm To] Son DeLoach Mohr - FB 3 {51967 Wick Egg! 1! . . Casper . . . 3:31:30" A {$006333 ME - FEDERAL on U. s. 2215:? AR Sullivan a . 151? - '2 . . Tavel 7? a ii 1'41": toner ?ref": {a gale. Room AR 8 {56? 51"" a 1&3 33:11:? MAIL ROOM TELETYPE UNIT .E in . I Ronald Reagan-414 ., 5? 1. 1 f1 (ll? 1'5 - ff? ?11:1. 450v: L174 131 EESH DC - . 1,;1 ~1314~11 111/ 1" 57%; . S3: DETROIT 11:. I EEUE URGENT .2-26-ST. LOUIS1-2-3: A 3301 DEER 011 /175-Mira: ?Tc-??mm-?wd? [a 5 -. 51-. 12:15.23 Li} EARL ARNETTE, THREAT HGHINST JOHN EDGAR HOOVER, I: 1 \17 0F FBI, GEORGE ROMNEY, GOVERNOR OF MICHIGAN, EUEELD tz?3\\ ?ng 0 R?w, GOVERNOR OF PROTECTION OF THE PRESIDENTJ 12? $2133 11:11:11; 11)) 15: 1/1111 111 51/ ii - 1, EE DETROIE AIRTEL To BUREEU, COPY ST. LOUIS, MERCH FOUR 2 1 E1 1% 51? GE TWENTYFIVE, SEXTYSEVEN9 ET SEVEN ZERO NINE ng TELEPHONE CELL RECEIVED BY DETROIT OFFICE OF THE FBI FROM EEG To IDENTIFY HIMSELF OTHER THEN BY U.s. MERINE CORPS, 51x FIVE ONE EEICE IS THEE OE THAT HE ADVOCETES THE ESSESSINETIOE OF JOHN VAL. if} JGVEHE NR. HOHNEY AND MR. REGAN. HE DESCRIBED HIMSELF AS CORPOHHL OF WORLD WAR T1109 HE STATED THAT HE WOULD LOVE TO BE 1"?3139 THE BASES OF HIS WAR EXPERIENCE AND RECORD IN WORLD WAR HG THHT WOULD BE DETERMINED BY THE COURT WOULD BE. THAT 12317;? THE ONLY 2311513 CONSIDE RED WE 1111111111123 ARE GOING TO RUN THIS 3i OR THAT J. EDGAR HDOVEH HE. IS GOD, ?1 .cR 1- 2/ DOESH THINK IT AND HILL HEDGE ONE 54;? we) . -. MEEWOREW U11 110T 3.1-3 1.111 ?72 REM. 2 1911 69 MAR 1 41966 :Ea?aqu?a .. QUOTE I MAY GO TO WASHINGTON PRETTY SOON AND ASSASSINATE I, THAT NO FEDERAL JURY EVER CONVICT HIM 0F ANYTHING BUT SEINE HIS NAME NAS HNONN BY AGENT PETERSON, EDI OEEICE, ST. LOUIS 3 THAT THE FBI SENT AN AGENT TO HIS MOTHERS HOUSE NITHOUT A SEARCH THAT ALL HE NANTS IS FOR SONEONE ELSE To SO INTO HER HOUSE HITHOUT A SEARCH NARRANT BECAUSE I GOING TO ASSASSINATE THEN AND THAT THE EDI NAS ONE HUNDRED PERCENT To OLAHE FOR THE ASSASSINATION 0F PRESIDENT KENNEDY BY OSHALD DUE TO THEIR UTTER STUPEDITY HNONINO NHAT THE SECRET HAD ALHE TOT TOLD THE EDI. HE CONCLUDED THE CALL BY STAYIN89 IN REFERENCE To THE F819 TOO ARE THE SESTAEO OF THE UNITED STATES OE AMERICA. I DENOUNCE YOU AND NOULD ASSASSINATE YOUR LEADER. ET WE DURING THE CALL HE REFUSED TO GIVE HIS NAME AND STATED HE JUST TRAVELED AROUND. HE CLAIMED To HAVE- ATTENDED THE UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY TOR THREE YEARS RIGHT AFTER NORLD TN09 NINETEEN FORTY SEVEN - NINETEEN FI TY. DETROIT INDICES DISCLOSE CPGE TWO Ronald Reagan-415 RAGE THREE SUBJECT ST. LOUIS ON MARCH ONE SIXTYSIX AND SAID HE ADVOCATES THE VIOLENT OVERTHROW OF THE U.S. THRT HE COULD TO A COMMUNIST AND THE FBI COULD NOT DO ANYTHING TO HIM ABOUT THAT HE IS AWARE THAT HE COULD BE ARRESTED FOR THRERTENING THE PRESIDENT OF THE U.S., BUT NO ONE WAS GOING TO BOTHER HIM FOR STATING THAT HE WANTED TO J. EDGAR HOOVER, I, AND ADDED COTE WE ARE GOING TO DO JUST THAT ONE OF THESE PERSONNEL AT THE MILITARY PERSONNEL RECORDS CENTER IN MADE AVAILABLE THE SERVICE RECORD FOR AMBROSE ERRL ARNETTE in. .. MARCH ONE SIXTYSIX. THE AND WAS-HONORABLY AUGUST TEN, FORTYSIX. HE ATTAINED THE RANK OF A CORPORAL. HIS RECORD IN THE MARINE CORPS WAS GOOD. HE RECEIVED NO DISCIPLINRRY ACTION. HIS MILITARY WAS.SHOWN TO BE RIFLEMAN AND LATER AUTO PARTS CLERK. HE RECEIVED A FOUR WEEK COURSE AT CAMP PENDLETON IN NINETEEN FORTYEOUR RT THE RIFLE SCHOOL, FROM WHICH SCHOOL GRADUATED. ERD RPGE THREEO Ronald Reagan-416 PAGE FOURE THE FOLLOWING IS TAKEN FROM HIS SERVICE RECORD9 NAME- DOB POB - owzwsaomog xv.; - SEX - MALE: MARITAL SINGLE HEIGHT - INCHES: WEIGHT - ONE 51x ZERO b6 EYES - BROWN: HAIR - COMPLEXION - BUILD - b7C sagas awn MARKS - SCAR om LEFT SEDE BETWEEN SEVENTH AND EIGHTH SOCIAL SECURITY wo. OCCUPATION BEFORE SERVICE - EDUCATION FOUR HIGH MOTHER - . OWENSBORO, BROTHER - SLME ADDRESS. IN FORTYSEUEN, EDDRESS WAS THE SAME AS HIS $561171}? 03% 5m? twin SHOW FEBRUARY YEW AS GOLDEN RULE HIS QDDRESS THEN W95 TWO THREE TWO FIVE CASSQ DETROIT. SUBJECTS ADDRESS IN SEPTEMBER, SIXTYFIVE WAS NEWSTEAD HOTEL, END PAGE FOURE Ronald Reagan-417 PLEE FIVE S?o LGUES, WHERE OWNER- MANAGER HEM MILD - WANNEREDP NON ALCOHOLIC. NOT KNOWN TO HAVE WEAPONS: NEVER WOT KNOWN TO HAVE BEEN ARRESTED. ALL PERTENENT DATQ IN INDICES FURNESHED WITH ABOVE INFORMATKON SRALLY T0 SA SECRET SERVICEQ DETROIT, AT ELEVEN FIFTY TWO ng FEBRUARY TWENTYFIVE. NSF AND DPD NOTIFIED. LHN FOLLOWS. ST. LOUIS SHOULD FURNISH DETROIT END SAN FRANCISCO ANY ADDITIONAL OR CONTACTS 0F SUBJECT WHICH MAY BE OF BENEFIT. HHFL FBI HASH DC TU DISP Ronald Reagan-418 1- lanes? wuu?uo. 10 . f? cad! mu mmou - amSTATES GOVERNMENT Memorandum - 1 - DeLoach 1 - Sullivan I Gale TO D. DATE 1/17/67 2:55: am; INFORM (inseam - Tuvel Trotter HEREIN IS 1 - CD Brennan Tele.Roorn FROM -W. C. SullivanME?l?L - CW Thompson 32:3? SUBJECT. STUDENT AGITATION, UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY, CALIFORNIA INFORMATION CONCERNING . (INTERNAL SECURITY) San Francisco advised on 1/14/67 that California Lieutenant Governor Robert Finch had requested rep sentatives of the Bureau to meet with him and Governor ?ggald?weagan on 1/16/67 to discuss the situation at the University of California campus at Berkeley. SAC, San Francisco, was instructed to comply with this request and to make no commitments but to determine what the Governor had in mind Which prompted the request. . The aforementioned meeting took place as scheduled on 1/16/67. Governor- Reagan advised he is concerned about the situation at the University of California, particularly, on the Berkeley campus. He indicated he is apprehensi?s1$hat1aqnew pf get Berkeleylas a result of his strong.stand agitation and his insistence that the UniverSity of California be operated on a sound fiscal basis . irector if he could be advised of any information developed concerning plans for future demonstrations to be held on the campus or at press conferences scheduled by him. He indicated he feels it is probable that some of his press conferences J?could be stacked with "left who might make an attenpt ?i?D Governor Reagan said he would be very grateful to the. #6 to embarrass him and the state government. He also said it would be Si very helpful if we would furnish him on a confidential basis any subversive information contained in our files concerning f; l\ e. Clark Kerr and the members of the University of California Board of Regents. Kerr is the President of the University of California and has adepted a palliative attitude toward campus agitation. In regard to the latter request, SAC, San Francisco, referred the Governor to the Thirteenth Report of the California Committee on Un?American Activities . which contains detailed information regarding Kerr and the 1 Board of Regents. There is no additional pertinent information in our files. h.(zgg . Enc. l?l? 100-151646 7K WCS:pdb (5) CONTINUED - OVER gyms-?MW ORRENALEHED 5,14 4 Memorandum to Mr. DeLoach Re: STUDENT AGITATION, UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY, CALIFORNIA loo?151646 . As you know, the situatiOn at the University of {California at Berkeley has been an eXplosive one which has i been exploited to a tremendous advantage by communists and other subversive elements. This situation was a political issue during the last election and Governor i determined to take appropriatemactign,to quell the unrest on the Berkeley campus. OBSERVATIONS: We are instructing San wFrancich_to Governor MReagan? requesf?tb bemadvised of informationugh dev61:op regarding plans for future demonstrations on:t_he Berkeley campus or at hisnpress conferences, We are alsgminstructing. Sa?fFranciscq,to confidwntially advise Governor Reagan that.we4 ave qumpertinentm information Kerr_ or th?_?9azd :f'Regents: of the University of California? In addition, we are requesting WSan Francisco? to prepare blind memoranda . concerning faculty members and students at the University of i California at Berkeley who have subversive affiliations. These emoranda are to be forwarded to the Bureau for review. This presents the eanreangwith an Opportunity to take steps to thwart the ever.increasingiagitation subversive elements 6n the campuses. Berkeley has long been the "proving grounds for 6ampus agitators and agitators on other campuses take their lead from activities which occurlat erkeley. ligagitationalcactiv1ty at,Berke1ey can be effectively curtailed, this could set up a chain reac.tion which will.resu1t .in the curtailment?of such activities QR Other campuses throughout the United States. This would also be helpful to the FBIstrongly feel that the most effeCtive way to take advantage of this situation is to have a Bureau official, $h6 i is thoroughly familiar with the Berkeley situation and subversive activities in general, confidentially brief Governor Reagan. At that time, copies of the blind memoranda prepared by the 1 San Francisco Office regarding students and faculty members with subversive affiliations should be furnished to Governor Reagan for his confidential information. Section Chief D, ?Brennan of the Internal Security Section has the qualificatipns nit? this sensitive matterjanmherefore L6 recommend that he be designated to handle this assignment. 5 CONTINUED -3 OVER - I 2 Ronald Reagan-420 Memorandum to Mr. DeLoach Re: STUDENT AGITATION, UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY, CALIFORNIA loo?151646 . . RECOMMENDATIONS: 59:07 (1) That attached teletype which instructs San Francisco to act in accordance with the above observations be approved. . (2) That upon receipt of the blind memoranda requested from the San Francisco Office, Section Chief C. D. Brennan be designated to furnish these memoranda to Governor Reagan on a confidential basis and to personally ?brief him concerning the Berkeley situation and the problem of student agitation on college campu;Ronald Reagan-421 H?mm?mh . 79 JANZG 196 URGENT 1-19-57 RAK T0 SAN FRANCISCO - ENCODED FROM DIRE (I -151646) ?3 STUDENT AGITATION, UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY, CALIFORNIA, INFORMATION CONCERNING (INTERNAL SECURITY). REURTEL DECEMBER SIXTEEN LAST. YOU SHOULD COMPLY WITH GOVERNOR REQUEST TO ADVISE HIM CONCERNING ANY INFORMATION DEVELOPED REGARDING PLANS FOR DEMONSTRATIONS AT BERKELEY OR AT PRESS CONFERENCES SCHEDULED BY GOVERNOR REAGAN. IN REGARD TO REQUEST FOR SUBVERSIVE INFORMATION CONCERNING CLARK KERR AND MEMBERS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA BOARD OF REGENTS, GOVERNOR REAGAN SHOULD BE CONFI- DENTIALLY ADVISED THAT OUR FILES CONTAIN NO PERTINENT INFORMATION. NO INFORMATION REGARDING SUBVERSIVE AFFILIATIONS OF INDIVIDUALS SHOULD BE FURNISHED TO GOVERNOR REAGAN. INSURE THAT BUREAU IS ADVISED OF ALL PERTINENT DEVELOPMENTS REGARDING THIS ?13 03599:;3 A END AND QCCS Segf Serial HIT: . Term 74 a In 11:: :9 1 v? Dd??al 13h 3% ?95 FBI SAN FRA Ronald Reagan-422 Am. J. .i . m. {Lin-{f} ?at 6 <35? 1' ORIGINAL 0 ?4 . I (5120 (Deg. 1-26-66) I 3 DeLoach . - Ronald Reagan-423 1 asper Callahan Conrad. Felt Gale .3 Rosen 1 6 Tele. .Boom 3 'HolmO? Candy; 1 I (REAGAN) SOVIET NENSPAPER SAID TODAY CALIFORNIA GOV. RONALD EEAGAN IS BY THE FORCES NEICH TOOK JOHN w- I LITERARY GAZETTE COMPARED EEACAN TO HITLEE IN ONE OE THE SHARPEST ATTACKS SEEN HERE so EAR ON TEE EX-ACTOR, EEO EAs REPLACED BARRY GOLDNATER As ONE OF THE FAVORITE EEIDPINC BOYS TEE SOVET PRESS. I LITERARY GAZETTE SAID REAGAN IS CONTROLLED BY PUBLIC RELATIONS WEN AND MORE POEEPFUL FORCES WHO TOOK JOFN LIFE THE FORCES WHO ARE GETTING RICH THROUGH THE WAR IN VIETNAM, TFE IOPCES WHO HATE THE VERY IDEA OF CIVIL RIGHTS. HITLER AT FIRST HAD HIS OWN PPOVINCIAL IT SAID THEY LATER BECAME HIS A RDAGAN IT SAID WAS A BAD ACTOR HAD WON PIS NEW FAIN A ROLE WHICH THREAIENS MILLIONS OF PERSONS WITH ALL INFORMATION CONTAINED 15 UNCLIISSIHED 2wNOT R?Ieom??! ?3 ?3 . 145 MIN 23 1961 flingWASHINGTON CAPITAL NEWS SERVIICE DA.E 4% {l My. Assess. -. ?In; FEDERAL BUREAU or INVESTIGATION sIsI. .. - u. 3. DEPARTMENT or JUSTICE FBI NASH Dcas COMMUNICATION SECTION .171. NOW Mani? Of?wmi MAR 1 01967 :23: FBI L05 ANG. 6 . 3, fig/xd?; 7 Ft? IASPM URG 3-10-67 NJZ Aiikb ??f?i?T0 DIRE TOR AND UASHINGTON FIELD OFFICE FRGM JUNIOR ROLAND HUMBLE, AKA GERALD R. HUMBLE, THREAD 0 I. . . AGAINST RONALD PROTECTION OF THE PRESIDENT. b6 b7C A. N. NEILSEN, OFFICE. LOS ANGELES. TODAY I Isms?: JUNIOR ROLAND HUMBLE: LEFT FAMILY HOME MARCH NINE LAST IO RAP: KILL THE: GOUIERNOR. HUMBLE, A RETIRED ARMY CAPTAIN, IS 5:5 I. . . \L?ss ALCOHOLAC AND CAPAOLD ACT OF VIOLENCE NHEN DRINKING. HE IS 1i. RAPORTEDLY ARMED mm A DERRINGER. NEILSEN SIAIED PASADENA: CALINORNIA. POLICE DEPARINENT REPORTS CAPABLE OF ANY DESPERATE ACT. IN IHAT HE HAS RECORD OF PULLIING CON ON g: POLICE AND LAST NEEK NEPONIEDLY THREAIENED WMWINHEWNW E: HFRI 3?7; DEFTNED mm SNIICHDLADD KNIFE. 405, 195 HUMBLE HAS ACCESS TO FREE TRANSPORTATION. HE :3 MAY 50 TO LAS VACAS, NEVADA. . 1 5 . JAWIIJN Hg)?f/ ?g II I If; -3221? Ronald Reagan-424 RAGE INO LA 32.75::0 NIELSEN DESCRIBED HUMBLE As NALE. SIXTY SIX YEARS, SORN ONE THREE, ONE NINE ZERO ONE, LEEDS, SOUTH SIX ONE FORTY EIUE LBS.) BLOND NAIR, GREEN EYES, RSI NUNSER SIX ONE RIDE ONE NINE ONE A: NUMBER FIVE EIGHT FIVE ONE ZERO FOUR. LAST ARREST SAN BERNARDINOS OALIEORNIA. OFFICE JANUARY SIXTY SEVEN DRUNK. My 2 ff NIELSEN STATED OFFICE, SACRAMENTO: ADVISED. Ck? fiuym?y? SAim? A HUNSLE IS APPARENTLY IDENTICAL NITH SUBJECT JUNIOR ROLAND GOVERNOR REAOAN PRESENTLY IN NASHINOION. INPERSONATION. NHIOH INVESTIGATION IN NINEIEEN EIEIY THAT HE HAD SEEN SEPARAIED ERON ARMED EOROES IN ONE NINE FOUR EIVE AS RETIRED AND RATED AS ONE HUNDRED PER OENI DISRQELETYS PSYORONEUROIIO. BASIS OE INVESTIGATION NAS THAI DURING NINETEEN FIFTY RE HAD BEEN UTILIZING AIR EOROE TRANSPORTATION NRILE DRESSED IN HIS UNIFORM, OLAININO THAI AS REIIRED UNDER MILITARY REGULATIONS HE WAS PERMITTED To AIR FORCE AIRORAEI FOR CASE NAS NEVER PRESENTED. NO OTHER INFORMATION AVAILABLE, SEOREI LOS ANOELES. ADVISED, AND IN VIEN OE PREVIOUS USE OR AIR NORTON AIR FORCE BASE, ALSO ADVISED, AIR NAIL OORIES To SAN ERANOISOO AND LAS VEGAS NOR END EASE INO RonaklReagan-425 Yuma-tr 1? .. I 1 RAGE Taagg La ?7s-9 0 T335 gs suamgsuzn FOR INFORMATION or BUREAU IN Vl?w 0% segeraaT IS CURRENTLY IN D.C. LEngaageD MEMORANDUM I ADVISE METROPOLITAN PD. snouab BE comsrn?Rgb ARMED AND DANGEROUS. END: 1 .. I 1731' 1H Ronald Reagan-426 ?j?1?r mi ?7 RET- "I'nlsu min-?H?l I FBI I t: a 2/27/67 infammtm;i_ the followmq II: (Type in plant?; or code) i, 1-1. 31rd?: .UDLM AIRTEL 3.10 I .1, Via I .{qg imr (Priority) I Mir as Candy 5 - :T-Jui TO: Director, FBI (62 110710 I Go??i??im H?pr- mats; 3 FROM: AC, Detroit (175-1) gm, ?1912 BY . I . 5" AMBROSE EARL (7 . THREAT AGAINST JOHN EDGAR HOOVER, I OF FBI, GOVERNOR OF MICHIGAN, (Zr IIKL RONAL EAGAN GOVERNOR OF CALIFORNIA, OF THE PRESIDENT teletype to Detroit. Louisville, St. Louis and San Francisco, dated 2/26/67. Enclosed herewith for the Bureau are 8 copies and for Louisville, St. Louis and San Francisco 3 copies each of a LHM concerning the subject. Two copies of the LHM have been furnished to Secret Service, Detroit; one copy to the USA, Detroit and one copy to Detroit. An extra copy is furnished to Louisville, St. Louis and San Francisco as noted in the event dissemination to Secret Service is desired in the future. Leads in this matter to locate and interview the, subject are being set out by teletype. ,4Qgs? Referenced Bureau teletype instructed Detroit to consider early presentation to USA regarding possible Federal violation. .uaes, Detroit will hold presentation inED a yance pending location and interview of subject. .4 Arum?! xjr?L- ?SBureau (Enc. 8) (RM) [06 Pitch) - Louisville (175 2)(Enc. Igghington 2 1 St. Louis - San Francisco (Enc. Re Detroit teletype to Bureau, dated 2/26/67, Bureau CERHNALFHEDIN )(nm Detroit 1 c, LHM ll?! [item wear. L8) 3 1?1 . We. Approved: Sent Per H, Special 531m in Charge Ronald Reagan-427 175?1 Two copies of the LHM are being furnished to WFO in view of subject's statement that he may go to Washington to assassinate someone. RonaklReagan-428 4n \1 vr,? . UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT 035* $135ng FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION In Reply. Please Refer to . . . mk?m Detroxt, February 27, 1967 He: Ambrose Earl Arnette Threat Against John Edgar Hoover, Director of FBI, - George Romney, Gavernor of Michiga Ronald Reagan, Governor of Califo n, nia ALL INFORMATION IS SSEFEED ism-1W2 m; cam/8;. 5,192. Maw 3157;9/ ENCLOSURE Ronald Reagan-429 -302 Kiev. lC?Il?63(151.? ?ti; "In T?tent?:RAL (BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION .. 1 - Date On February 25, l957, at 7:09 a telephone call was received at the Detroit Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) from a caller who refused to identify himeelf other than by his United States Marine. Corpo Serial Number 955641. This caller stated that he advocates the ase'esihotioh of JOHN EDGAR HOOVER, Diroctor of the FBI, Mr. GEORGE EGMEEY, Governor of Michigan, and Mr. NALD REAGAN, Governor of California. The caller described himoelf he an exwharihe Corporal of World War ll and stated that he would love to be tried on the basis of his war experience and record in World War II and said that the only thing that would be determined by the court would be that he wee considered ineane. The caller also said that, ?We eX~Marihes are going to run thie country or destroy it; that J. EDGAR thinks he is God, but LBJ don?t think it and will be glad to get rid of him,? an: ?that I may go to Waohihgton pretty soon and assaseihete someone?. He aleo said that no Federal Jury :ould ever convict him of anything but being iheaho. The caller further stated that the FBI sent an agent to his mother's house without a search warrant and that all he wants is for someone elee to go into her house without a search warrant becauec ?I?m going to asoaseinatc them". The caller said that his home was known by Agent PETERSON of the FBI office in St. Missouri. He also said that the FBI woo 100% to blame for the aesassination of President KENNEDY by OSWALD due to their utter stupidity and knowing what the Secret Service had already told the FBI. He comeludcd by stating in reference to the FBI, ?You are the Gestapo of the United 8 ates of America. I denounce you and would aesaeoineto your leader?. During this call the caller refused to give his name and stated that he just traveled around? He claimed to have attended the Univcrgity of Kentucky for three Years after Yorld War II from 1947 to 1950. g/gg/gv Bottoit, Michigan V, heircz? 175vww?? SA 15:2{of11?. - document con-lama nonhu- rxums-?V-J?u-h- 13 ..or tonclusmns of the Mil. '3 "f and 15 10:1de to Ronald Reagan-430 I1 it and its. contents are .. be dlaztnhumd ouLSide yOUr agenctb? ~n if? We Re: AmbroMe Earl Arnette Threat Agaith John E?gur Hoover, etc. A revi.eW by Investigative Clerk R. Douglas King on February 18 196., of the Military recordM on file at the Milita r3 Personnel RecordM Center, St. Louis, Mis;Mouri, revealed that Serial Mumber 965641 is assigned to Ambrose Earl Arnette, Who Mervec in the United SteteM Marine Corps from June 23, 19i5, to August i0, 1946, receiving an honorable diMcnarge at Cem.p Le m:ne, Noith Caroii na, by re LES of convenience of the government. Arnette had foreign service in the Asiaticmpacific Theatre and was aWarded the Asiaticupacific Theatre Ribbon With one Mta* and the World tar Ii Victory Medal. The records contained no indication of courtmmartial, absence Without official leave, or treatment for any mental or nervous diMochr. The folloWing background information WMM contained in the records: Date of Birth Piace of Birth Residence Owensboro, Kentucky Relatives Mother I Brother both rcsideb6 I b7C Owensboro, Kentucky Military Occupation I I . Civilian Occupation None?ustudcnt Social Security NO. Veteran'M Administration a Claim Number I I Attached hereto is a letterhead memorandum dated March 4, 1966, at Detroit, Michigan, captioned, ?Ambrogc E. Threat Against John Edgar Hoover,_Director of th-c Federal of Investigation?, Which letterhead mem01r=ncutn contains additional information concerning Arnettc. Dctectiv- Lieutenant George RollinM Specia 1 5.1110ns Detroit Police De?artmant HI. 0n lchxunry 27, 1967, advised that recei'dg 05 1 Ronald Reagan-431 Roz Ambrose Earl Threat Against John Edgar Hoover, etc. Jctroit Police Department contain no record Arnettc bc"ond the nr?cst on Febrnar 10 1962 as a .y a . ?Golden Rule Drunk?, information concerning which is set out in the attached letterhear memorandum dated March 4, 1966. Information Set out above was furnishod to the following individuals 33 noted: Inspector Donald Cunoo Control Center Detroit Police Department Detroit, Michigan At 12:10 February 26, 1967 Corporal James Thomas Redford Post Michigan State Police At 12:22 February 26, 1967 Special Agent William Shiles U.S. Secret Service Detroit, Michigan At February 25, 1967 Mr. Robert Danhoff - Executive Assistant to Governor George Romney State of Michigan February 26, 1967 ThiS document contains ncithr reCommondntions nor conclusions of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. It is the property of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and is loancd to your agency; it and its contents are not to be diStributed outside your agency. Ronald Reagan-432 RONAUDREAGAN GOVERNOR State nf OFFICE SACRAMENTO 958M February 27, 1967 Mr. J. Edgar Hoover Director Federal Bureau of Investigation United States Department of Justi' Washington, 25, D. C. Dear Mr. Hoover: It has recently come to my attention that the F.B.I. will soon open a Division Headquarters in Sacramento having jurisdiction over the newly established Federal Eastern Judicial District. This is gratifying as this will more ably assist all of us in our continuing figh against crime and subversion. As I study the large area covered by the Eastern District, I am favorably impressed with the wisdom of your decision in this matter. I am vitally interested in doing everything I can to combat the moral decay as shown by our rising crime rate in our country today. Having always had the highest regard for you personally and the splendid record the F.B.I. has achieved, please 1 accept my personal assurance that your agency will have the most complete cooperation possible from my office. A) I am looking forward to meeting the new agent in charge for your Sacramento Division in the near future, and if my office can be of any asSistance whatsoever, do not hesitate to call on me person ALL INFORMAHGN CDNIAINEB magLA33ueio 2? 04m _L5n?37 . 'r2- ?h-r i as . 1. RONALD REAGAN mee? Governor an? - - REC- 1, Max-9411 1967 Howrah? The Governor of California sacrammto, California 98814 - AU mammal 14,33,- 145:?: My daar Gave-mar Roam: ?44.14 WELSH 81.29.? Your moat thou?h?ul lotto: waived on? March Guiana, onbohaliolall innitoiiunk you for your panama! momma oi oomplote cooperation in the. fight against crime and muons-lion. haw. instruct? my representative: to all ihluuiltmoo to looal and auto agencies in California ??zzle! mutual Moral, and 1 do hope you will not huh ?1390:: up whmvor we can be of ?Moo. I share on that a amt dual om be by work-? -. it mount mailman: for sultan. quarto? are r, adorable, wo plan to open our memento out? in Early {jg??33 unmet. litter upon problem- aro ruched, lwill name 4,2,1. Maud haw the now would Amt in Charge set intouoh 8 witiyou at his mliut opportunity. You may be sure that all 0111:. lathe Fulookiomdiowormwithymandyour windiniuiatration. With wax-maul personal roan-m, . Simon-My yours, .. Edgar: a Manda.? 1 1 - Los Angeles - Enclosifre 1 $th 1- San Francisco? c?closure . -. QT: Attention Mr. Hyde JV 1 Mr. Callahan "Enclosur?/?W Attention Mr. C. Q. Smith 1- Mr. W1ck- Enclos GEM: 11121.4 (10) $941!: See Note on Next Page 43% .. Ronald Reagan- -434 MAIL ROOM . 4 . 4? lid 1.x ?vi- 1* 1.4- . Honorable Ronald Reagan NOTE: Governor Reagan has visited our Los Angeles Of?ce 336 relations with him have been cordial. By letter mted 11-9-66 the Directoi congratulated Roma upon his election as Govemor. of" Ronald Reagan-435 1:13-35 (new; 5-22-94) . . 8 I Dots: 3/21/67 Transmit the following in (Type in platntext or code) VicDIRECTOR, FBI FROM 5" SAC, 1-03 ANGELES ?75 JUNIOR ROLAND HUMBLE, aka Gerald R. Humble, Slim THREAT AGAINST PROTECTION OF THE PRESIDENT Re Los Angeles teletype 3/10/67.' Enclosed herewith for the Bureau are five (5) copies of a letterhead memorandum (LHM) concerning this matter. One A copy of the LHM is being furnished to San Francisco and one copy to Las Vegas, for information. i FD-376 is being furnished for transmittal of the LHM to Secret Service, Washington, D. C. One copy of the LHM is being furnished to Secret Service, Los Angeles. One copy of the LHM is also being furnished to a a the Office of Special Investigations (OSI), District #18, ?p Norton Air Force Base, California, inasmuch as 081 was pre? viously furnished 1 orpation in this matter. a ,2 m. 5/4/74 rgwa ,3 5; ?k?ue 1 547* 7.3. A ?47 r? i ?55. 2? Bureau (Enos. - 4 E- - San Francisco (Enc. - 3 i? Las Vegas (Enc. - . 5? - Los Angeles Eff}. 105E ?g I it 5 - .1 4?1, far, 3155149 gr: - 451,95 Approved: Sent Per 53 APR ?ec??gagnt Charge 5 Ronald Reagan-436 (Rev. Bel-66} UNI STATES DEPARTMENT OF FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION 1 9 In Reply, Please Refer to WASHINGTON, D.C. -0035 File No. LA 175-0 March 21, 1967 Director United States Secret Service Department of the Treasury JUNIOR ROLAND HUMBLE Washington, D. C. 20220 Dear Sir: The information furnished herewith concerns an individual who is believed to be covered by the agreement between the FBI and Secret Service concerning Presidential pro? tection, and to fall within the category or categories checked. 1. 3] Has attempted or threatened bodily harm to any government official or employee, including foreign government officials residing in or planning an imminent visit to the U. 8., because of his official status. 2. Has attempted or threatened to redress a grievance against any public official by other than legal means. 3. Because of background is potentially dangerous; or has been identified as member or participant in communist movement; or has been under active investigation as member of other group or organization inimical to U. S. 4. U. S. citizens or residents who defect from the U. S. to countries in the Soviet or Chinese Communist b10cs and return. 5. Subversives, ultrarightists, racists and fascists who meet one or more of the following criteria: Evidence of emotional instability (including unstable residence and employment record) or irrational or suicidal behavior: Expressions of strong or violent anti-U. S. sentiment; Prior acts (including arrests or convictions) or conduct or statements indicating a propensity for violence and antipathy toward good order and government. 6. Individuals involved in illegal bombing or illegal bomb-making. Photograph [3 has been furnished enclosed is not available may be available through Very truly yours, REGISTERED MAIL 1 - Special Agent in Charge (Enclosure(s) U. S. Secret Service, LOS Angeles (RM) (Upon removal of classified enclosures, if any, this transmittal form becomes UNCLASSIFIED.) Ronald Reagan-437 Ronald Reagan-438 STATES DEPARTMENT OF ICE FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION Los Angeles 'California In I Pl 9 Re . File :50? eds fer ?0 March 21 3 1967 JUNIOR ROLAND HUMBLE m4;;5f in? THREAT AGAINST GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN 6216 1% 1:51 Siggmm?mmorscmon or THE PRESIDENT ?ns I On March 10, 1967, Mr. A. E. Neilsen, Governor's Office, State of California, Los Angeles, California, fur- nished the following information to the Los Angeles Office b6 of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). b7c . Neilsen stated that oneLj glued advised his office that ?'Junior Rola umble, had left the family home on March 9, 1967, to kill the Governor of California. She said that Humble, a retired Army Captain, is alcoholic and capable of an act of violence when he is drinking. She reported that he was armed with a derringer. - According to Mr. Neilsen, the Pasadena, California, Police Department reports that Humble is capable of any des- perate act in that he has a past record of pulling a gun on police and recently reportedly threatened an unknown person with a knife. Humble has access to free military transportation and reportedly might go to Las Vegas, Nevada. Humble was described by Mr. Neilsen as white, male, age 66, born February 13, 1901, at Leeds, South Dakota, six feet tall, weight l?s pounds, blond hair, green eyes. He has FBI No. 615l9lA and 011 No. 585104. He was last arrested at San Bernardino, California, by the Sheriff's Office in January 1967 on a charge of drunk driving. Mr. Neilsen said that the Governor?s Office at Sacramento, California, had been advised, and that Governor Ronald Reagan was presently in Washington, D. C. A review of the files of the FBI at Los Angeles reflects that Humble is apparently identical with Junior Roland Humble, subject of an Impersonation case in 1950. Investigation at that time reflected that Humble was separated from the Armed Forces in 1945 as retired. He was rated as . This confirms t?12f11?'153 isfermation furnished t3 ;461:4430 law on ?No further investigation is being 5/7? conducted in this matterat?JLrn?i of] arbor/?. . .. ~1IyJUNIOR- ROLAND HUMBLE THREAT mms'r GOVERNOR RONALD mom Pnornc?rm? OF THE Pansmm one hundred per-cent disability, psy?honeurotic.? The basis Ljof the investigation was that during 1950 Humble had been gut111zin?g Air Force transportation while dressed 1n his Officer uniform, ?1?iM1n8 that as a retired officer under 155 ?.;m111tary regulat1ons he was permitted to ut111ze Air Force raircraft for transpartation. The case was. never presented, and no further information is aVailab1e 1n the files at 1he FBF at Los Angel es.? The above information was furnished to Special Agent Frank Slocum, U. 8. Secret Service, Los Angeles, at 11+ 1.14., March 10,; 1967, by Superv1sor wunm John Nolan, Los Angeles.- 1 In View of Humble's previous use of Air Force F13- transportation, Colonel John O'Connell. Office of Special - Invest1gations, District 18, Norton Air Force Base, California, was also advised of the above at 10:17 A.M., March 10, 19 7, '1by Supervisor William John No1an, FBI, Los Angeles. SUBJECT SHOULD BE CONSIDERED ARMED AND DANGEROUS. This document oontains neither recommendations not ,conolusiona of the FBI. It is the p-roperty of the FBI and :18 loaned your agency; 1t and its contents are not to beg. 4,d1str1buted outside your "i . 1 1- 2* - -Ronak Reagan-439 OFHQNAL FORM N0. ?0 STATES . . - Memorandum TO DIRECTOR, FBI DATE 5/1/67 FRmu FRANCISCO (9-0) SUMECT: UNKNOWN SUBJECT, aka John Doe; C5 . GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN - VICTIM EXTORTION Enclosed herewith is one xerox cepy of a letter and enveloPe addressed to "Govenor Ronald Reagan". On April 27, 1967, ARTHUR VAN COURT, Chief, Special Services, Office of the Governor, State of California, Capitol Building, Sacramento, furnished Special Agent PETER T. SEXTON a xerox copy of a threatening letter, with envelope, received by the Governor's Office. The letter is dated April 5, 1957, and is signed "John Doe?. Mr. VAN COURT stated he turned the letter over to the California State Bureau of Criminal Identification and Investigation upon receipt and that agency is conducting investigation. Mr. VAN COURT advised he has already furnished a copy of the letter and envelope to STEPHEN A. BYRNE, Special Agent in Charge, United States Secret Service, Sacramento, for information purposes. He also stated he is providing the same to the FBI for the same reason. In view of investigation by C11, none is being conducted by this office. No dissemination is being made in view of the fact that the United States Secret Service is already in possession of this information. 7 4.1/ I /19 Xigf' I 1 I Bureau (Bnc. l) y5 ?23 rigs-ail San Francisco ?1:t 23?867 VI pr ww 5; mace gig/?? Ronald Reagan-440 wosma . . .. ., . M. GANY- 42353:. EM. QEKMEMMEM .. .. 2:T?P-wrw-vm" Mimi-'r-r ..-- 5 [Ronaid Reagan-4421.? .. TO FROM SUBJECT: 56JUE ?11? OPTIONAL roam no. 10 sale?106 . 2:135:42 27 Tolson STA rEs ?ch Memorandum 33:15:? Felt Gale MR. TOLSON DATE: June 15, 196'? Tovel Trotter Tele. Room Holmes Candy W. M. FELT RONALD REAGAN GOVERNOR OF CALIFORNIA INSPECTION MATTERS On June 14, 1967, I met briefly with Governor Reagan in connection with my inspection of the Sacramento Resident Agency. Governor Reagan was high in his praise of the Bureau. He said that he had the highest admiration for the Director and he was extremely pleased that the Director's representative had called on him. Governor Reagan specifically requested that his kindest fr?. ?7 . personal regards be conveyed to the Director. RECOMMENDATION: That this be routed to the Director for his information. ALL INFORMAHDN CONTAINEL 54M HERBN i3 UNCLASQMEU (magi; a: 4L4?y&# 1 - Mr. DeLoach 3 It! $59985 4051,)93 1 - Mr. Wick 1 - Mr. Mohr 1 - Miss Gandy 3 (6) 5' as,? f/ a ., Wine JUN 23?: 1967 Ronald Reagan-443 01 447' 197677 1mm REC. UNIT. ,1 1 Mr. Tolson . .DeLoach - . .. VIR I PINKLEY M3 hr 2 . . . .3131? 51?? .. .- - . aper EDITOR a. IPUBLIISII-IER, RINKLEY CALIFQRNIA NEWSPAPERS 45-140 TOWNE STREET WP Mugoa?u??Lh $811328? . . F. Mr". Felt Mr. Sullivan Mr. Tavel Mr. Trotter Tele. Room . Mr. Gale . - Mr. RoSen Miss Holmes I . - Miss Gandy . J4When {was an recently I spent $555 tame 1 with Mr. J. Hoover. He- was most complimentary in his; remarks. Yam 5: note that I referred to his - evaluation of RenalMReagan in the enclosed article. . i . 'Certa 5.27.1? you: alh-out fight wains?c crime, and Efforts to improve the moral and spiritual values of 951: sieople, especially youth,? must continue. Best 95:59:15.1 regards-., 5 7 - 1 a - 1513509119 $1 01% CONTAEW SUNGLASSTWED . a Xuglge?l? 335533503 . 9.1 . - .4 Governor Ronald R5agan a $5555 of California. fw, a :2 Capitol Building . "?55 Sacramnto, California- 21..-: . A i I J. 1.6352: Hacv55 . as, ?3 1-5" 55.55550: .. . P555551 Bureau of Investigation I N55 RE ?.0an - w?ashington, D. C. 191- MAY 241967. MW :rWrfig, '32! r: 53 57 . .. CK: is) ?if Vnhl?v?lii? 55.. - Li? I gv'g'jgi: 3? 13,5?: 23 mm? i' Ronald Reagah-444 MAY I 962 EDITION .. 1 Ronald Reagan-445 OPTIONALFORM no 0 ll .1 50,0406 GSA GEN. REG. NO. 27 UNITED STA res . DeLouch . emorandu . Callahan Conrad Felt TO MR. DE LOAC DATE: July 31, 1967 ?gferf Tuvel - FROM W. V. I?letltetjaldoomr SUBJECT: INQUIRY FROM OFF OF 31 if . GOVERNOR RONAL EAGAN I) D. C. Mr. Eel-Gillenwater, Washington representative for Governor Ronald Reagan of California, called on July 28, 1967, and advised that the wife of the Governor's press secretary,W . and three daughters plan to drive from Virginia to Sacramento, California, beginning August 7,1967. He stated that Mrs. Nofziger desires to obtain a permit to carry a pistol in her car for personal protection and Mr. Gillenwater requested guidance as to how this could be done. After checking with ASAC McDermott of the Washington Field Office, Mr. Gillenwater was advised that there is no:. such thing as a national gun permit, neither is there any one agency which 'can authorize a person to? carry a weapon in an automobile across the country, with the exception of Federal officers of course. He was further advised that a driver is subject to each state? particular laws regarding firearms. He was told that if Mrs. Nofziger had a California police officer chauffeur for her it was possible that each state would recognize the authority of a state policeman to carry a weapon in an automobile and/ or from one state to another. :3 Mr. Gillenwater stated that he felt it was highly impossible for them to make arrangements for a policeman- chauffeur. He then stated that perhaps if Mrs. Nofziger was to become an honorary California police officer she would be allowed to carry a pistol in her automobile without being subject to arrest. He was advised that the FBI could make no decision in this regard. Mr. Gillenwater was very appreciative for the information furnished him. 35:1 .1 . fg ACTION: ?at l/ 5.. fut Harmful 0N CONIA "1723?? My, 551 . cue/94 . Sgg?gl?fs upRonald Reagan-446 - {Dotson (r - - .. Eagleachtil ?50; :g?g 'i Tisfr. Casper 5). Aj-ff g; p; - Caliahan? ?5.73 1- Comad FBI NASH Dc I: as Wit: FBI LOS ANS. {5f 311'. Trotter I Tale. Roomw 07PM URGENT 8?4" 67 BAK :1 LESS 30111193.: 3g? Miss Gandy- To DIRECTOR FROM LOS ANGELES (175-0) (3 POSSIBLE THREAT AGAINST LIFE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN. ?Wm PROTECTION OF THE PRESIDENT. DET. JERRY LONRY, SANTA A, CALIF., PD, ADVISED THIS DATE THAT HE HAD ASCERTAINED FROM A SOURCE WHOM HE BELIEVES TO BE RELIABLE, THAT A BARBARA WHO HAVE NO CONNECTION WITH GROUP, HAVE MADE PLANS TO CREATE AN INCIDENT DURING THE ANNUAL SANTA BARBARA FIESTA SIXTEEN LOWRY STATED THAT THE PLANNED GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN DDRING THE FIESTA, BUT COULD FURNISH No PLAN AS TO HOW THE GROUP INTENDED TO REAGAN. LOWRY ADDED THAT THEY WANTED TO HAVE A DEMONSTRATION AT THE OLD MISSION SANTA BARBARA WEDNESDAY NIGHT, AUGUST SIXTEEN NEXT, WHERE THE GOVERNOR NILL ATTEND, OR DURING THE FIESTA PARADE THURSDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST SEVENTEEN NEXT IN WHICH THE GOVERNOR NILL RIDE. aggjge ./~tjg END GEDNE ?53? AUG 9 1967 E251 XUG 16 1967 ALL 1' z/ ?5411:!le ?96 ?4 MR. FOR THE . . . .. . m. Ronald Reagan-447 . .43 . l? . PAGE TNO LA 175*0 LOWRY ALSO ADVISED THAT THERE WAS AN UNCONFIRMED RUMOR THAT BETWEEN THREE HUNDRED AND THREE HUNDRED AND FIFTY PERSONS CONNECTED WITH THE BLACK POWER MOVEMENT LOS ANGELES, SAN FRANCISCO, OAKLAND AND BAKERSFIELD, CALIF., WOULD BE COMING TO SANTA BARBARA FOR THIS INCIDENT. i SANTA BARBARA POLICE DEPARTMENT HAS ADVISED THE OFFICE IN SACRAMENTO, BUT HAS NOT ASCERTAINED IF REAGAN INTENDS TO CHANGE HIS CURRENT PLANS TO TAKE . k? I. V. I. far (I: gl?m DUTY AGENT RONALD HORNE, ONE HUNDRED FIFTEENTH A 'v GROUP, U.S. ARMY, SANTA BARBARA, NAS ADVISED OF THIS PART IN THE FIESTA. 5% i 6:35: (I INFORMATION. 5? SPECIAL AGENT RICHARD ZARZANA, SECRET SERVICE, Los ANCELEs, CALIFORNIA, ADVISED AT THREE FIFTY FIVE PM THIS DATE BY SA LEROY N. SHEETS. ADMINISTRATIVE: sue-OP?: Susnl'r' eaPy END NHR FBI NASH DC I 1.. CG6 MR. SULLIVAN mam mu 16;me mm . mom?setmm WhMr?thdM5ma-t mm mmammn mummy. WEI. M?y mm, . ?Ea Egg: q?i 7W IDEP 22 1967 J. 47 . I . dgar Ex?-113 1 - mm V69: ?25 1967 1-1mm 1 .. HEREIN IS w- Framing DATE. I mag-j Kb 1 8? E35147 I: EC- 6 {23! C3 1 31: NOTE: We have enjoyed cord? a1 relations with Govern6r Reagan. a?gF??zdi/j?mgn ,ry?at: .4 arm: a" g3 331-35; MAIL noon/1E] TELETYPE UNITE Ronald Reagan- -448 Su GHEVGD :trfo .Roo . ?iv ,3 TO FROM SUBJECT: a .3333: mm 0293, let/8?. '1 i 1 19STATES GOVERNMENT Memorandum ornomn ronM N41. lo I MAY 1962 EDITION GSA GEN. REGTolson DeLrooch gshop f?CQSper Calla dun Co Gale Rosen Sullivan Tovel Trotter Tele. Room Holmes Candy MR. TOLSON DATE: 10/27/67 cc Mr. DeLoach . D. DeLoacE-E?g GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN (Homosexuals on staff) 3 7 Jack Anderson, of called me A on 10/27/67, and stated that Pea son had called him from the West Coast to ascertain if any information could be picked up to confirm a rumor Pearson had received while on the Coast.3 Anderson told me that.Governor Reagan had on his staff Irecently complained that her l?uyear-old son had been the subject of a homosexual attack by a member of the staff of Governor Reagan. The Governor assigned an, investi ator the name look into this matter.i Iplaced a microphone in a cabin owned by I b6 b7C b6 AnderSon stated that Pearson had learned that: b7c microphone reflected homosexual activities at the above-mentioned cabin on the_nart ofl another staff member whose name is land a third individual whose last name ?Anderson was unable to state whether this is or not). While at the cabin one of the visitors reportedly /o352. 37525173?? new. was a young FBI Agent who did not know that the three aboqe- named individuals were homosexuals made a pass at the FBI Agent. The FBI Agent allegedly turned him down and left the place. Anderson wondered if the FBI had any statement to make concerning this matter. I stated we b6 did not. W3 Anderson stated it could be that Pearson had garbled? his facts, inasmuch as Pearson had another rumor that R?agan- had become alarmed over the fact that was "leaking" the results of cabinet meetings, and he had therefore, asked to investigate the matter__33 .3 .n 62 DEC 1 1967 8 Ronald {-1.10 ., UNREC Mr. Tolson b6 b7C investigate and ascertained that a newsPaper reporter had a compromising homosexual position with a young boy. The reporter then blackmailedl into leaking information concernin cabinet meetings. Governor Reagan, based onl Ievidence, I told Anderson that this was not a matter within the investigative jurisdiction of the FBI and we could not be of any assistance to him whatsoever. I stated I wanted him to know, however, that we had no information whatsoever reflecting that any FBI Agent had been involved in such a matter. b6 b7C After talking with Anderson, I called SAC Grapp and asked if he knew any of the above information. Grapp stated there was no truth whatsoever to any statement that an FBI Agent was involved in this matter, but that he had icked up a rumor several weeks ago about the fact that been found in a compromising position by a reporter an had been blackmailed as a result. SAC Grapp mentioned that his source of information stated this was the reason for I told Grapp of Andersonisscall and of the fact that Pearson was out on the West Coast. I stated if he received calls from either one of these men he should make no comment whatsoever. Grapp stated he would be guided accordingly. ACTION: 12.4% For record purposes. -2- Ronald Reagan-450 - UNITED GOVERNMENT . 6 emom nag . Carson?g. ?i as: To Mr. DeLoac DATE: 10/24/67 Su?sm?d - . i? A, $351; - - . 1 com fir"flu/011 . . T. E. Bishogxyf/ 9 ALL A CON WEB 241,, LA Mason 13 ALLEGED DIVULGENCE OF WHITE paras: Wji HOUSE TELEGRAM 0R DIOGRAM $1794 Lssm??s BY GOVERNOR RONALD AN (CALIF. 5815/3?: .1 It will be recalled that for the past several days press stories have advised that a telegram or radiogram (or copy thereof) - sent by Marvin Watson of the White House to Price Daniel on the SS Independence during the Governors? Conference somehow fell into the hands of Governor Ronald Reagan of California, who disclosed its .contents to the press. There has been speculation in the press that this matter may be or is being investigated by some Federal law enforcement agency as a violation of the Federal Communications Act of 1934. . UPI ticker of 10/24/67 reflects that the White House denied any knowledge of reports that the FBI planned to investigate the circum- stances which led to Reagan receiving a copy of this communication. The UPI story said that Press Secretary George Christian of the White House would not comment but instead, referred questions to the FBI. On this UPI ticker the Director has noted, assume we are not in on this H. For the Director's information, we are not conducting any investigation into this matter, nor have we received a request from the Department of Justice to conduct such an investigation as of this date. We are so stating in inquiries being received from the press by my office. {29/1 ORIGINAL FILED IN 9/ . RECOMMENDATION a None. For information." EN 1. - Mr. DeLoach?: I 1 - Mr. Rosen - 1 - Mr. M. A. Jones f/ . 1 . yr RECORDED 6-th1-1ns37 m? - 4? . 23? I 0?RU'Hd-lu I A a A 0-20 '(Rev. 7-27-67) . Kn} lson74? DeLoach -. . Cas er Conrad Felt i Sull lIvanh Tcwel Trotter Tele. Room Holmes I 3 Rohald Reagan-452 UPI-57 ADD LBJ MESSAGE ABOARD CONSTITUTION (UPI- -14) A THE NHITE HOUSE DENIED ANY KNONLEDCE OF REPORTS THAT THE FBI PLANNED TO INVESTIGATE THE CIRCUMSTANCES UHICH LED TO REAGAN RECEIVING A COPY OF THE UNITE HOUSE TELECRAM. PRESS SECRETARY CHRISTIAN UOULD NOT COMMENT ON THE REPORTS. INSTEAD REFERRED QUESTIONS TO THE FBI. 10/2 W2 .ALL CONIAMLD 1 i i i . x. HEREIN Is UNCUISSMEU 5ij if" gin/g. I ROG \O\v Spl?j I 30!? ya) 353.3 A ?916: HA . - Q4. A MADE FOR MRI TOLAQE ANCEOSEAA WASHINGTON LOSURE L. NEWS SERVICE A ..-. A . watAgqu if?? . - . a [a Tel, or? 0-20' (Rev. 7-27-67) . ?Loach . A . Mohr Bishop . Casper Callahan Conrad Felt 632:2? Trotter Tele. Room Holmes Gandy I UPI-26 . (LBJ MESSAGE) NEH EIGHT- DAY CRUISE OF POLITICS AND PLEASURE TOR THE NATION GOVERNORS ENDED YESTERDAY WITH THE SUSPENSION OF THE CHIEF .OPERATOR OF THE LUXURY LINER INDEPENDENCE, IN THE CASE OF THE. RADIOGRAM. A GOV REACAN, HHO RECEIVED A COPY OF THE RADIOGRAM INTENDED FOR A NHITE HOUSE LIAISON MAN ABOARD THE FLOATING CONFERENCE SAID: ACTION SMACA OF PERSECUTION. THIS IS THE GREAT SOCIETY AT BENEVOLENT REPORTS CIRCULATED THAT THE FBI HAS INVESTIGATING To SEE IT A FEDERAL LAN HAD BE EN BROKEN BUT SOURCES IN NASHINCTON SAID A COMPLAINT NOULD HAVE TO BE THROUGH THE JUSTICE DEPARTMENT BEFORE AN INVESTIGATION. THAT HAS NOT BEEN DONE, THEY SAID. THE SUSPENSION OF THE RADIO OPERATOR CHARLES BERGER A VETERAN OT 16 YEARS HITH THE AMERICAN EXPORT- ISBRANDTSEN LINES HAS ANNOUNCED ESTERDAY AFTER THE INDEPENDENCE BROUGHT IKE NATIONAL I CONFERENCE BACK To NEH YORK. THE SUSPENSION NILL BE .IN 1 EFFECT PENDING AN INVESTIGATION, SAID LINER CAPTAIN, CHARLES I REAILLY. FLL JNFORMAIS 0N HEREIN ?3 UNCLIASSLT HI) A. 3L a/C 5547553; -r LillyQ .3. an.? .3 .l .31; . . WASHINGTON CAPITAL NEWS SERVICE - Ronald Reaganqu . m. Ronald Reagan-454k Tolson o-is?Tnev. 7327-671 . . - . F) 1 DeLoach Write an Remohe? in, Cavernors Ease AW NEW YORK, Oct. 24 The ?chief radio operator of the liner Independence was suspended today pending investigation of how'a White House telegram got into the wrong hands during the ship- board Governors? Conference. Shortly after the liner .brought the National Gover- 9nors? Conference back to New York, Capt. Charles W. Reilly announced he was suspending 'chief radio operator Charles Berger. cruit support for a resolution backing Mr. Johnson?s Viet-' nam policy Reagan told a news confer- ence ?in Sacramento, today that he had not broken any Federal law, intentionally or accidentally, when he read, and disclosed the radiogram?s contents. The delivery of the telegram to the wrong party could be the subject of an investigation either by the Marine Inspec?, tion Office of the Coast Guard or by the Federal Communica- The mysterious ?purloined?ions Commission. The FBI radiogram??as it came to be .known during the Governors? eight-day cruise to the Virgin Islands?was sent' by White House Aide-Marvin Watson to . former Gov. Price Daniel of Texas, President Johnson?s liaison man..'at the floating Cnference. But the message ended up -in the hands of California Gov. Ronald Reagan, who dis- 5closed its contents. It specifi- Daniels to re- said it would only conduct in- quiries into the matter at the equest of the Justice Depart- ment CC said late today they were{ not yet investigating the tele-ai gram incident; The criminal code makes it a crime for anyone ?not an agent of the sender? to divulge a'telegram message without authorizat' except in cases '9f_ ?ships Ail. INFUR MAT 10h! (SONIA: 1415? 1 Half.? .1l?l lg 911?" 13/6 1} 11:51 11111 61;; 465, I73 The Coast Guard, FBI and? - Mohr . . Casper Callahan Conrad Felt Gale ,Rosen Sullivan Tavel Trotter Tele. Room Holmes 1. Candy The Washington Post Times Herald The Washington Daily News The Evening Star (Washington) The Sunday Star (Washington) Daily News (New York) Sunday News (New York) New York Post The New York Times The Sun (Baltimore) The Worker The New Leader The Wall Street Journal The National Observer 'People's World .47 7?s; o-tb (new. 7- I ?Reagan described as 27-67) this . Dil Says He Broke No Law in . Disclosing the Radiogram Special to The New York Times 1 SACRAMENTO.. Calif., 'Oct. 24?Gov. Ronald Reagan de- nied today'that he or his staff had broken any law in reading and disclosing the contents of ancopy of a wire from the White House to a Presidential conference?of the nation?s Gov- ,ernors. . . The Republican Governor aide at last week?s shipboard told reporters here that he had received a copy of the radio: . gram, in a seated envelope ad- dressed to him, as just one of the. number of mistaken. deliv- eries _at the conference. think in an operation this: big. it iust happened that this. - .?was Big Casino, this particular :message,? said Governor Rea- ?gan ?but there were at least a dozen that I know of-. mistaken deliveries. As a mat-? ter of fact Paul Laxalt, Gov: 'ernor of Nevada, received a message intended for me.? . Mr. Reagan said he had not been questioned by agents of he Federal Bureau of Investil ation about the incident", al- though there was a report that ,Ethe bureau was participating ,in an investigation to determine i. Whether Federal law had been- violated by the disclosure of the wire?s contents. -1 would have thought that? Washington wouldhave pre- ferred to just let the matter die," Mr. Reagan said. {L?Intended for' Price Daniel The White House_rnessage Was intended for Price Daniel. former Governor of Texas, who was President Johnson's liaison man at the_59th Conference of Governors, which took place aboard the Independence on a cruise to the Virgin Islands. :The message, from W. Mar- vin Watson, at special assistant' to the President,? inciuded suggestions for what "Mr. ?arm- twisting" of several Republican Governors to get them to support the resolution backing the Administration?s Vietnam war policy.? 'He said that he and other Governors were seated around the table when conference aides began distributing mes- . sages to them and _their assistants. ?Mr. Reagan said three. were given to" his staff a'n immediately handekdrengmsmegma. the. segue. =a ?6 sees . a n. Hm" :"Wmm?lin sealed eta?m? 5, A and addressed to him. After. opening one, which turned out to be a copy of a message he had received earlier, the Cali-4 fornia Governor said. he opened - . another. ??When I opened it and saw the heading ?White House, 1 immediately'took the envelope andlooked again to make sure thataI hadn?t opened something in "mistake,? said Mr. Reagan. "?It was a Xeroxed copy. As. it: developed, Price Daniel re- c'?ived the .original _20 hours earlier than received this can . . . fl?liveryone almost every- ?ohe around-the table was re-2 ceiving messages. As I say it .r"w?as a. regular delivery. The first few lines were ob iously 'dEaling with a Vietnam reso- Ilution and a list of such reso- lutions in the Governors Con- ence. f3?50, frankly, I assumed that this must be.some kind?of a general distribution, trying _to convince us of the necesSity, for aii?dtingial .tion, and I read it. It wasnt Lintil ?th to the last fggv?lgines 'cided that evidently it?wasn?t :meant for'~ my eyes or anyone '-else?s because in the last few lines were the instructions for arm-twisting a couple of Re- publican governors.? . Governor Reagan said heare- turned it to his staff amgdis- closed to the Republican Gov- ernors the existence of the message ?and that evidently 'this whole thing [the Vietnam resolution] was as we _had thought from the beginning, the desire of the White House,- springing up from? our fellow Governors." That evening, a reporter- for The. Associated Press asked him about the message, Mr. Reagan said. .The reporter was, re- ferred to the Governor?s staff. The tions secretary, . Nofzxger, copy of . the wire 3 b?t?ald'clle?d: on ?the next page that?"I de-_ Governor's? "communica-; I Ronald Reagan-45; A Tolson . . DeLoo'ch - Mohr Bishop ., Casper Collohon Conrad Felt Gale ,Rosen Sullivan Tovel Trotter Tele. Room Holmes Gondy an; thrush/men commute HEREIN lS ENCLOSURE Esteem v-u . ss??imsw a 405; M3 The Washington Post Times Herald The washington Daily News The Evening Star (Washington) The Sunday Star (Washington) Daily News (New York) Sunday News (New York) New York Post The New York Times . The Sun (Baltimore) The Worker The New Leader The Wall Street Journal The National Observer People's World OCT 2 5 19.57 Date 1-. . .. nu~ - klitf?x?? .- . . 7-27?67) . ?m . 1 Tolsocn - . a DeLooch . 9 Mohr Ronald Reagan-45 BishOp Casper .-. .. - . .1, . Callahan . i A ,1 - tam-=29. "-53 - .Jll. ?i ?as. 1 "luv?. ?v?llflilll} Gale Sat I la? . it"..unhulslirrgf Bosen . r43: . nlnunll'llil Sullivan By TED LEWIS - ??91 Trotter Washington; on: 24"?Now that federal law enforce'??: 1 mentagencres are in the act, presumably the White House-4 Te 6' Room finally find out how Gov. Ronald Reagan got hold of Holmes a secret message from a presidential political aid; Candy The? purpose of this political madness is impossible out. If it is an effortnto cut Reagan down to the-size of brain-'3 washed Gov.- Romneytit is a curiously inspired piece of political. shenanigans. . . Q. i 'Sure, the entire episode has been' . Masgage embarrassing to the President and the? . -. ?_?dministration! And the White House: - as a natural and admitted curiOsity- . Shaves concerning just how the ?leak occurred: ., . ?But theusuggestion is ludicrous .. . Ferqet hat 'Rea'gan acted unethically by readli "mg-and distributing. a White House: . - . =?telegram addressed to a Democratic, {politician Any politician would?ve a damfool in any big 'campaig'n; .if he didnt read?and make full use of?anytitillating bitof the." .opposition?s private correspondence that fell into his hands. - 3?13 So Reagan, whilevon the luxury cruise of the nation?s-gave: ernors aboard the Independence;- acted 'with political astuteness-t when he let other Republicans r? 4 see what the White House in-_ Km. - -, structions were to governors. - As a result of this leak "of "i course, the GOP governors irised to go along with a'White House plan for them to endorse formally the Johnson-Rusk Viet policy. And the President hadvto cancel tentative plans to fly diWn -to the Virgin Islands and make 8a speech commending \them on 1 their patriotism. - . The damage has been (loner 5 It would have been better for-all; sides to ferg?et the incident That") would be the advice of all?na-a, . tionally experienced politicians. They know that a display of vin- . dictiveness is ineffective in a case where voters find humor. rampant with politicians messed up by their own conniving. - Even Reagan, out in' Sacra- abstain from re- arr'nroeninon comma ilERElil as 4 ?as" 052193 . The Washington Post Times Herald The Washington Daily News The Evening Star (Washington) I The Sunday Star (Washington) Daily News (New York) Sunday News (New York) New York Post ;i The New York Times The Sun (B altimore) viving the ?whole ethical-political . Th issue. today. He was aware at - Ronald Reagan :53; Worker the time . that the .Isbrandtsen 3 Was, it so terrible? 15,; r. The New Leader Line had investigated the leak. - "1?53, and that the coast guard ?_and the Federal? Communications Come; The Wall Street Journal a- mission wanted all the facts?just in case. The National Observer 1 Edit was even reported here that the FBI'w?as in on the-fringes? of the investigation! This is pnlikely of course, but when this adj? People's 66M ministration .expr'es'ses even- gimple curiomty rat. the- White'Houlse) 2 5' .1523? level, pretty much the whole Date ..- ..-. . .. .mus-I carafe". Won A Form Letter. Reagan Thoughf wwm?? What Reagan had to say was comparatively unimpmtant ex?1 cept that he thought he we just getting a. copy of a fo_11n letter that while addressed to :liaison man on the cruise, Daniel of Texas, was in esumably for general distribution; 5.. ,He should not have weaselcd. He had all sorts of pieccdents fiom previous political wars to show that enemy co1respo1'1dence?; belonged to anyone who could lay his hands on it and exploit it. As far back as the oldest pa1ty hack can remember, both parties?{ national committees and campaign operatives have operated 011 th'e'i ;basi_s that nothing should be put in uniting if secrecy is vital. Teoi many times in the far distant past letters meant for the ?eyes on"ly??i .of another loyal party ?gure have turned up in the other party?s headquarters and in?uenced elections. In 1964, there Was a big hassle with hypociitical cries of ?1311-; . ethical? tossed around wildly. The GOP National Committee had; placed a ?spy? in Democratic Party headquarteis. Copies of LBJ s' travel plans wele leaked, so Barry Goldwate"rs managers knew\ where Johnson was going before local Dmocratic leadeis. was a real cute trick, but the Reagan affair was more like a case in the presidential election of 181_8, when Benjamin Harrison beat G10ve1 Clevland by a narrow margin. Just before Election Day that year, Blitish Ambassador Sack- ville West was revealed to have written a letter to an A111er:ican. citizen who pleaded for advice on how to vote as a British sympa3? thizer. sackville West 1eplied in effect: Vote for Cleveland. .Andi sine enough the diplomat? 5 letter ended up in GOP headquarters, as splanned? .. 1. - The Interesting Question of Ethics "ii How about the ethics in that skulduggery, which definitely Helpied Harlison win the election over incumbent Democrat Cleve- an 1 i And how about the ethics in Bairy Goldwater?s admitted she: nanigans at the GOP National Convention in 1964? He admitted a few weeks ago, and not sheepishly, that his suppmters had been 1eady to cut TV lines if at any time his GOP opposition appeared: able to sway the delegates against him. As for Reagan, some 'of his fancy- pants c1itics keep on insisting that, in the Independence incident, he had taken the cynical appi oach to politics when he had been expected to rise and shine above- the' gutter of partisanship. This insane admonition has been based 011'- ?his nice-guy roles on the late- late shows. In other words, he was letting down the little old ladies' in tennis; shoes by acting like a big- time politician rather than a novice from Hollywood. Regardless of the ethical controversy over his conduct, is no valid argument about one result-?-what he did in connection with the letter made the Texas mob, in and out of the White; ?,House look like rank amateurs. {1 That is why they have been bleeding so much'm-Marvin Watson 'iri the White House, who ?put in 'what 'no smart politician LWould' put?f 1'1 paucity: Price 1111111111? 'w?ho had?th? audacity to 'cry foul? I?on shipboaidj ?and Texa's' G'ov. John Cohn'ally,? who' suddenly My!? mission for Clean politics?at least outside of Texasm?t? . Ronald Reagan-457 Ronald Reagan?458 "if" Bisho" ?brin 11f QIaIifnmia OFFICE I Mr. 5111311.. A SACRAMENTO 95814 .: .- r. Felt Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. TeIe. Room? Miss Miss G5ndy-.. OCtOber 23' 1967 {w Mr. J. Edgar Hoover Director, Federal Bureau of Investigation United States Department of Justice Washington, D. C. Dear Mr. Hoover: Governor Reagan has asked to acknowledge receipt of your letter of ecent date, in which you informed him that the FBI has opened an additional office in Sacramento under the super- vision of Mr. John H. Williams. I have already spoken to Mr. Williams, and feel sure that we will become better acquainted in the future. Please be assured of this Office's fullest co~ Operation at all times. ALL INFORMAHON CONTAXNED Sincerely, HERENV ISU . "7777? .. agamame??lg' r?r?r 5 3 I I EdwinAX se 5 (iji Legal Affairs Secretary :f?I gf?yfr 2pm ,gg/ LA REG 3% M53752 NOV 7 1967 Jr . mai??mmcs January 18, was 6 Harm-able Ronald Rama The Getter-her e: 031th Sacramenta, Canter-his; ?814 My dear Geverner Reagan: was certainly a pleasure ta we and Mr. weenie in my of?ee this naming. As memeetm the mansion, copies at the plants. graphs nude aiming year mt: Will be sent to yea and ML Mme separately. ALL WORMAHDN comma; . . . an 53 mammcu7 Sincerely years, 3.35- 31.3697 Rik Hoover <51 $539303 mblgSacramento - f: - {j 2 rs more path?? ?a v5 I.- JAN 19 1958 i? 1&9? Tolson DeLoach Mohr Bishop Casper a? ?2 11 Callahan .7 Conrad Felt G01 1 . ?1 305:? GTQ: Ll . t' .v {h Sullivan Tavel . . - it: :t 333" 23.5.3; Tro er Telg?oom' .4 - Holmes v? . Candy . MAIL ROOM TEL ETYPE UNIT El 61? a Ronald Reagan-459 r- 3/ 4-572 (Rev. 7-18-63) 31312223733? . 33.53.. .3. no a. Ronald Reagan-460 UNITED STA rEs GOVERNMENT Memorandum T0 The Director 3 DATE: ?257 FROM 1 N. P. Callahan SUBJECT: The Congressional Record 3333 3333333 3333.. 333 3.333 3 333 3333 33s . 3313 3333333333 3333* 333 3333' - . . 33 3332 333333333 33 33mm f; 3?10 {3333333333} 33 M3333333133 ?333 333 33333 3333333333 33333333 3333. 1.33 333333 mwzt?m? 33 33333 ?3 3 3.223313 3333mm3333333333333333333333333333 333333 3:333333333333333333333 . :1 - 3% 3333333313 333 a: . . 3333333333333m3m 333336333 . .. . . 33? 333333333 33 333 33333 3333333333 333% ?3.3 3% 3333333331: W3 . .. 3333.333 3333:333333333333 33? 27333333333333 3333 31333 3333331323 33%? - 33333333335? 333.. 3.333% - 333333 3.3333 333333333 333% $333 W3 333333 in 33% 333233 ?33; 33333? 333% 333.. 3%3331353 33333 3333 3335 33333333 33333 3333 333333 ji?f (1964 items concern Walter Jenkins.) M1. ?411.454 3 ., u' 1? Jr! 33:33:33 :3 c: 3:35.332) 93351.1? a 4 55%) 7133362 405/(93 ?013.43; ENC, 3113313133331310313.33.3331? .. de?Z?w/rm f4? NOT WRECORDED 1341050 '33. 1357 In the original of a memorandum captioned and dated as above, the Congressional Record for 2.3/60 was reviewed and pertinent items were marked for the /Director' 8 ttention. This form has been prepared in order that apartions of the original memorandum may be clipped mounted, and placed a3133aopirtat?cgpureau?ease or subject matter files. a 2 311/ '1 '3'4 t? ?5 0-19 (Rev. 7-27?67) Ronald Reagan in. {mommies commas) asses i3 Mai - 52mm DATE..- 6 The Washing on erry-Go-Bound -461 [i [/73 Deo Tolson sperw (111011011..? Gov. Reagan9 ?Ti?9 Charge hallen O?ed credibility gap in Washington, Reagan must stand scrutiny as to his own credibility. Hearst?s veteran political re- porter, Marianne Means, was told by Mississippi?s Gov. Paul Johnson earlier this year that he had advised Reagan in a private conversation not to run for the Presidential nomi- nation in the South. Reagan at a luncheon of United Press International editors not only called the story a ?lie? but declared scornfully: ?Further- more, I have never met Gover- nor Johnson. She must have been talking to the hippies at Haight-AShbury.? The enterprising Miss Means produced a picture of Reagan and Johnson hud- dled together at a governors affair. Kossen, political writer for the San Francisco Exam- iner, told this column that he had heard Reagan tell a lum- 63y? Jack Anderson Four times in a 20- minute press conference, Gov. Ronald Reagan alst week called Drew Pearson a 1i1.ar It was one of the veteran actor?s most per su-asive performances. The point of Reagan?s per- formance was that 4 Pearson had lied-about the dismissal of two sex deviates from the Sacramento staff. Reagan de- scribed the Pearson column as ?scurrilous? and ?ridiculous.? ;When reporters pressed him about his investigation of homosexuals in his official- faIWov-ernor snap-:ped just don?t know what you are talking about, really Facts have now filtered out, disputing Reagan. Such re- spected newspapers as the New York Times and Boston Globe, after careful investigation, have concluded that Pearson was and Reagan Wrong bermen?s convention at San Charged the Globe. ?To put it as politely as possible for the readers of a family news- a: .. woo-d, on have seen them all. paper, Ronald Reagan is not Othery reporters were also to be believed.? . present, said Kossen. Columnists Rowland Evans Reagan not only denied he 33d); gobert Nov?k udeclaired had made the statement that a eagan was te 111g con- the reporters had heard With siderably less than the truth.? - . . their own ears, but he took the They quoted a prominent Cali- trouble of playing a tape of fornia Republican, following his speech for the reporters. Reagan?s press conference as Th 1 - . - tape omitted the contro- snorting. Mr. Integrity Just versial statement. Trained re? went down the drain.? porters, however, seldom make :Wide Credibility Gap mistakes. Reagan had made he statement. esi-dentiall prospect 1 New York. columnist. and TV ing in the Ladies? Home Jour- n-,a1 has also told of mailing a registered letter to Reagan which he blandly denied re- eeiving Later, Sullivan was startled to read in Hedda Hop- per?s column: ?Ronald Reagan and I had a great laugh at that letter from that New York col- umnist. Reagan repeated his denial in a letter to Sullivan, date-d Hopper item, he said: have just never been a reader of the Hollywood columns.? Sullivan could swallow Rea- gan?s story of the unreceived letter, but he added with dis- belief: ?This statement that a Hollywood actor never read the Hollywood columns is in- credible.? ?1 When asked whether his press secretary Nofziger had discussed the homosexual case with reporters on the govern-ors? conference cruise, Reagan snapped: am pre- pared to say that nothing like that ever happened Then he turned to his press secretary and asked: ?Want to confirm it, Lyn?? ?Confirmed,? said Nofziger grimly The New York Times has now published the names of Six reporters who heard Nef- ziger discuss the homosexual case: Paul Hope of the Wash- ington Star, David Broder of The Washington Post, Karl Fleming of Newsweek, Carl W: Grecnberg of the .J?k M-cDowgl oi ?e July 8, 1966. As for the Hedda? The Washington ost has Times Herald The Washington Daily News The Evening Star (Washington) The Sunday Star (Washington) Daily News (New York) Sunday News (New York) New York Post The New York Times The Sun (Baltimore) The Worker The New Leader The Wall Street Journal The National Observer People's World MW ti Date old? 0 . isco Examiner ?and B111 Ames of the A Broadcasting System The question now buzzing in political circles is?why? It would have been far less damaging for him to admit the facts and point out that he had fired the homosexuals. Why did he try to cover up? The question will be asked by the politicians for many; months to come. is . a Challenge for Sen. Javit't?} For a long time Democratic leaders. in New York have been sitting on their swivel chairs figuring that Sen. Jacob Javits, the senior Republican of their state, was unbeatable. - However, a young Democratic Congressman, Joseph Y. Res- nick, from the Rip Van Winkle country up the Hudson Valley; lhas now decided to dispel their defeatism. Resnick will an; nounce this week that he will run for the Democratic nomi- nation for the Senate with a View to taking on Javits. Resnick, a Jewish liberal, Will run on a pro-American ticket. He intends to challenge what he calls the ?hate-Americans? and the ?peaceniks? who have inspired draft card burnings and peace marches. Indirectly he will also chal- lenge Sen Bobby Kennedy and John Burns, New York State Democratic chairman, who have exuded a sense of defeatism re-' garding bo?h Javits and the Vietnam war. 1967, Bell-McClure Syndicate Ronald Reagan-462 FIl()hd Trotter Tele.Room - Holmes .M. .- ef? SUBJECT: 64K a? - 1 OPIIONAL 140.10 5010-406 MAY 1962 EDITION GSA GEN. REG. NO. 27 DeLocch UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT :1 a shop COSper Memorandum 333,130? Felt . Gale Mr. Bisl?? DATE January 18, 1968 Tove] GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN (R - CALIF.) I MEET WITH THE DIRECTOR THURSDAY, Veg," ,1 JANUARY 13, 1968, AT 10 ALL is 3?30; 02%. DATL I Reference is made memorandum T. E. Bishop to C. D. DeLoach dated January 12, 1968, captioned as above, which enclosed a brief for the Director's information in connection with Governor Reagan's meeting with him on January 18th. Late on January 17th, SAC Grapp, Los Angeles, telephoned the Bureau tO advise regarding a matter about which he has just learned, which Governor Reagan may discuss during his meeting with the Director. He said that the California Senate Judiciary Committee is currently holding meetings in Sacramento on a proposition that a state -wide campus police force be created and placed under the control Of the Governor. This would centralize law enforcement on the nearly 30 college and university campuses in the state. Grapp said this is apparently becoming a hot political issue and Reagan may ask the Director's views. He advised many of the campus police departments are in Opposition to this proposal and prefer to remain independent. Grapp ii ?gist? stated that although there could be certain advantages in the plan, such em as uniformity in administration and perhaps better training, it would seem best for the Director not to express an opinion since this is purely a state issue. This matter was discussed with Assistant Director Cas (per . who concurs. . 10 5 ga/ .. I151 11% JAN 19 1?68 For the Director's information mm 1? Mr. ,DeLoach 1 - Miss Gandy 1 Miss Holmes f: i ?1351?? Ronald Reagan-463 (8) I Mr. . FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGAT DZLoachm U. 3. DEPARTMENT OFJUSTICE . OOMNONICATION Mi. 3:311:15" 3 JAN 181368 I own- A A: as (5:13:23: I: 3212;? I . Rosen FBI . Mr. Trotter NT 1?18?58 EEC Tele. Room Mi'ss HolmcsI TO DI CTOR aw? FROM PITTSBURGH (100-15884) PICKETING DEMONSTRATION OF GOVENOR RONALD DURINO HIS APPEARANCE AI PITTSBURGH, FA., JANUARY EISRIEEN SI TY i1t3_ INFORMATION CONCERNING. (IS). .?'l9umm?m?? ?3 SOON ?33; 9,1 RETEL PITTSBURGH IO BUREAU, JANUARY EIGHTEEN i :i DO JANUARY EIOHIEEN INSTANT LIEUTENANT CLARK TONER, PITTSBURGH PA., P.D. ADVISED THAT BETWEEN TWELVE NOON AND ONE VT SE 3" rm- 3 PM, INSTANT DATE, APPROXIMATELY THIRTY FIVE INDIVIDUALS Tam: II, - .3. 32' CONDUCTED PICKETING DEMONSTRATION BEFORE SYRIA MOSQUE, PITT- BURGH, WHERE GOVENOR REAGAN WAS SCHEDULED TO SPEAK AT REPUBLICAN FUND LUNCHEON AT TWELVE FORTY FIVE PM. Finis-mu DEMONSTRATION WAS CONCLUDED BEFORE ARRIVAL OF GOVENOR REAGAN. an" MOST OF SIGNS CARRIED BY DEMONSTRATORS PROTESTED U.S. INVOLVE- MENT IN WAR IN VIETNAM. LEAFLETS OPPOSING WAR IN VIETNAM WERE DISTRIBUTED. DEMONSTRATI WAS ORDERLY AND WITHOUT INCIDENT. ALL INFORMATION CONTAI LHM FOLLOWS. UNCTIIADSAFIED I, $51,244,! I I Mme 110 .3 END l?i?S? 3 JAN 22 1953 591% 55c! '95\9\ A 71wa XEROX 363 Ronald Reagan-464 JAN 1958 ?x cur-noun FORM no. in 5010?106 my 1902 EDITION GSA GEN. REG. NO. 27 Tolson UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT Leach Ronald Reagan-465 Memorandum (5333:2399 . -- .. Felt Gale DATE: December 22, 1967 3 Tavel 9? timed?ss??eiile? 329%? '99999999 2:31? SUBJECT: QQYERNQR RONALD FEM 4 9 /M?zw 9 REQUEST TO SEE THE DIRECTOR MORNING OF JANUARY 18, 1968 .. gr At approximately 1:30 p.m. today, 12/22/67, Ed. 3 Gillenwaters in Governor Ronald Reagan's (R- Calif. Washington 9? office telephonically contacted my office and made the following 3.. request: 93.191 Gillenwaters stated that Governor Reagan is making 31,333.79 3 an Eastern trip in January and would be in Washington, D. C. on the morning of January 18th and would appreciate an appointment to see the Di??tor that morning. Gillenwaters advised that Governor Reagan would have to leave Washington at approximately 11: 33 a. m. 2? .- that day as he has a luncheon engagement in Pittsburgh. Gillenwaters ?-3.33 3.3725929;- advised that the Governor would be most appreciative if he could visit .. with the Director, as he would like to talk with Mr. Hoover concerning '9 9" the crime problem and the situation at the University of California. Gillenwaters said that if the Director so desired, there would be absolutely no publicity in connection with the Governor' 5 visit in the event the Director could see him. 1 98 3g Gillenwaters was thanked for calling and advised of the a 31? Director?s heavy commitment schedule, but told that we would be in 9 g; touch with him within a few days. Gillenwater?? office is Suite 708, 3 1101 17th Street, N. W. and his telephone number is 23? 1742. a 3959 Elie?c?h/f?w?f??/ 3/3 RECOMMENDATIONS: 1 *5 1953 9 - F: (1) That the Director indicate whether or not ha w?EQfe'z 9 5:1; 3 E: 5:13 able to see Governor Reagan on the morning of January 18th next, and 3 ?9 99? in the event he does, the Crime Records Divigsion will prepare an . 3:3} apprOpriate brief. 1 all SENT DIRECTOR 33:3, 99 .39 99 FOR APPROVAL {3n :9 "399' 9 (Int? 1111/: (2) That this memorandum be returned to the Crime Records Division so that Gillenwaters can be appropriately advised of the Directors (19*?9 GJr-ywa in v4 . decision in this matter. [439/ .: :3 e1?: 39 1 - Mr. DeLoach 1 - Mr. Gale 1- Mr. Jones 1 Miss Holme?g 1? Mr. Rosen 9' ,r (36 If; 1- Mr. Sullivan EB) . at; it; $539. 5?51: 1- Miss Gandy OPTIONAL FORM NO. 10 MAY 1962 EDIYION a GSA GEN. [66. NO. 27 UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT Ronald Reagan-466 egzomndum To Mr. DeLo??f/d/ DATE: January 2, 19.6% FROM . . \y SUBJECT: GQYERNQR RONALD REAGAN (R-CAL.) REQUEST TO SEE THE DIRECTOR MORNING OF JANUARY 18, 1968 2.1?3 1? 2 I BACKGROUND: Sullivan Tsvei Trotter Tele. Room Holmes Gondy The Director has agreed to see Governor Ronald Reagan of California at 10:00 a.m. January 18,1968. This appointment has been confirmed with the Governor Washington office. The Crime Records Division is preparing a suitable brief for the Director 3 use in connection with this visit. I 5 CURRENT REQUEST: 0n the morning of December 29, 1967, Donna Crouch, ,4 Secretary in the Governor's Washington office, telephonically con- tasted the Bureau and advised that she was calling in behalf of Ed Gillenwaters, head of Governor Reagan's Washington office. Gillenwaters was on leave for the week but had asked Miss Crouch to call the Bureau to advise that Governor Re would be; accompanied by individuals. She identified them as follows: E-d??mi who is the Governor' 5 Secretary for Legal Affairs and 'William Jr. who is th?Governors Executive Secretary, Miss Crouch indicated that these individuals are members of the Governor' 3 Cabinet, are appointees and not elected officials. 1?70?? cerrarm (1.315314 7? 2 SURCLASSIFI Mi 1 EASE 0n the basis of information furnished, Neese and Clark are not identifiable in Bureau files. r? at 1 RE COMMENDATION 3 FEB ?Ze1953 None. For the Director's information. The Crime Records Division will, through our Sacramento Office, ascer'T?a'in further details as to the background of Meese and Clark. 1 Mr. Delhoach 1 - Mr. Jones WW 1 Miss Holmes Q, 1 - Miss Gandy . 1- Mr. Gale DGH:dse (9) I it; .. 1- Mr. Rosenm 119.3,.? 1.. 1 - Mr. Sullivan OPTIONAI. FORM NO. 10 . 5010-406 my 1962 EDITION GSA GEN. (56. no. 27 . Tolson UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT Blah A emomnd 2523.20? Felt TO 7 Mr. DeLoac January 1968 .- 'Tele. Room FROM 3 Mr. Bighogyd?g/ (O I MEET THE DIRECTOR THURSDAY, JANUARY 18, 1968, 10 A. M. 31/, The Director has indicated he will meet Governor A Reagan at captioned date and time. There is attached a brief concerning material of interest that the Director may use in his discussion with the Governor. RECOMMENDATION: For the Director's information. Enclosure Mr. DeLoach - Enclosure A A . . 17 Emlosure ALL comma? 1 MISS GandY Endosure mm. as unclassmm 1 - Miss Holmes - Enclosure 9 $949303 JHC. (8) A I 405(iv'k?Anew-2' ?Em 5 41/Ronald Reagan-467 TO FROM SUBJECT: .- OPTIONAI. FOIM NO 10 mu 1952 21:11qu csapEN. use. no UNITED STATES 00.1 5010?106 NMENT Memorandum Mr. Bishogypj 935? DATE 1?17-68 Tolson DeLooch Mohr Bishop Casper Callahan Conrad Felt Gale Rosen Sullivan Tovel Trotter Tele. Room Holmes Gundy GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN (R. - CAL.) MEET THE DIRECTOR THURSDAY, JANUARY 18, 1968, 10 A. M. ,1 Reference is made to Mr. Bishop to DeLoach memorandum, 1-12-68, captioned as above, which enclosed a brief concerning material of interest that the Director may desire to use in captioned meeting with the Governor. There are attached; copies of two articles from Washington, D. C. newspapers concerning Governor Reagan. These have been received subsequent to preparation of the above- mentioned brief and they may be of interest to the Director in his discussion with the Governor. One article comments on the Governor's Republican election primary plans and the other sets forth his speechmaking schedule in conjunction with his current visit to Washington. Neither article mentions the fact that the Governor will meet Mr. Hoover. 323% 1% For the Director's information. Enclosures (2) I . I 1 Mr. DeLoach? Enclosures (2) 7/ ?at/t RECOMMENDATION: M7: VA innar- AA. A 55:53: R8 1 Mr. Bishop- Enclosures (2) 5:55.55 1 - Miss Gandy - Enclosures (2) A iv . 1 - Miss Holmes - Enclosures (2) innit comma g! i Aw A is Ramssxeio C:nls 8 DATE as}: fgip - A. ?1 '62Ft853 MQEBEOEY MADE FOR ER. Rec-R] Ronald Reagan- -468 A, so. ACKSON DOYLE. Special to The Star SACRAMENTO, Calif. Gov: Ronald Reagan says he will stay out of- states where his name is being entci ed in Republican pri- maries including New Hamp- shire, where he has become an ?unwilling? write-in. candidate. Reagan told a press confer- ence here yesterday that ve? done eveiything in the world Ii can in New Hampshire to stop" what he labeled a ?mailin. or write-in? campaign in his be- half. He said he ?certainly wouldn? t, stick my neck out by going; ,there. 1 Any such visit to New Hamp: shire, he said, ?would open up a; can of peas that I think we have; -?managed to keep the lid on. The leading contenders in the New Hampshire primary March 12 are Michigan Gov. George Romney and former Vice Presi- vdent Richard Nixon. Nixon? strategists fear any strong Reagan effort would take conservative votes away from Nixon. "Convention Group Named. - Reagan, just beginning his second year in the statehouse here, meantime announced ap- pointnient of a 36-member com-. .mittee composed largely of1 conservative Republicans but with a sprinkling of moderates. --. to help form his ?favorite .son? delegation to the GOP Na- tional Convention in Miami BeachinAugust. William French Smith, a Los Angeles attorney and longtime Reagan backer, was named, chairman of the organizing com-r mittee. . The panel does not includei Senators Thomas H. Kuchel or George Murphy, nor any other statewide officeholder. - Smith said both Kuchel, a moderate who refused to en- dorse Reagan for governor, and Murphy, longtime Hollywood as- sociate of Reagan? s, have said they do not want to be on the. BEE-member delegation' in August. This-, French said, is because "Kuchei will be busy seeking re- election, and Murphy will be busy as chairman of the Senate Campaign Committee. Mm?? 53h Won 1in States ?Where Name Is in ?imsy} I 'mmv?-w mg Financial Backers .J The organizing committee is: loaded with big financial back- ers ?including oil men and m- dustrialists who were among the earliest "Reagan for Governor? hackers and who worked for Barry Goldwater in 1964.1 There are a few on the organ- ?izing committee who supported New York _.Gov Nelson A. Rockefeller over Goldwater in the bitter 1964 California pri- marv. All 36 members of the organiz- ing have one thing in common they all supporte his nomination. Furthermore, they all have stuck by. him dur- ing his first year in office. Committee chairman Smith- said each of 86 convention delee gates and 86 alternates will be asked, as a condition of their appointment ?to remain com-. mitted to Reagan-unt11heRea?- gan, releases the delegation bind delegates to vote for the candidate to whom they are pledged, even on the first ballot 1 1' 1 but they are morally bound to do? so until released": and historical! ly no delegate has Violated such? asnmmitment. Reagan has 11.11.12.115; .fund - raising giving next week through Tulsa, Okla. ., Washington, D. C. New York, Pittsburgh, Philadelphia and St. Louis. He indicated yesterday that this will be the last out-of-state foray during the 1968 legislature session, which could run into late summer. Last year, Reagan spent a good deal of time politicking around the country?resulting in ever-rising speculation that he is, indeed, running for president. But he reiterated yesterday, him to campaign in states? other than California where he inheing pushed for the GOP nomination. -. ?a mil:- - .1 Reagan for governor following - California does not legally; that he can?t conceive of any circumstances that would lead ALL WQRHAHOH NED ?5 UNCLASSHEFQ L311 519- 7% The Evening Star Washington, D. C. . January 11, 1968 Page ?y Ronald "Reagan-466 M. Tolson 0-19 (Rev. 7?27-17) - .1 1 DeLo'ach I \1 .1 . . Mohr. . . Bishop I - . Casper Callahan Conrad Felt Reagan Plans A We Rose-n Talks Here . 51111111 Tovel Tomorrow . 1111111 Tele1--Room California?s Gov. Ronald Rea- - Holmes gan makes a one-day stop here . Gondy tomorrow in the midst of a five-. day nationwide tour to raise! close to $1 million for. the Reg; publioan 'pai?ty. .I The governor, often men- tioned as a possible candidate for the GOP presidential nomi-, nation, will raise no money for; the GOP while here. Tomorrow he will meet with GOP leaders in Congress and GOP members from California. He also will hold a mom con- ference. Reagan will be in Tulsa to- night to appear at events that will bring in a total of $90,000 for the GOP. On Thursday, he; 9 ALL li?t?FOR CONTASNED will ts111111111133was) is 0110111331th even 111 1 ur - to be raised End Phila- DATE 12.31011 5k. delphia, where the GOP expects me 5349803 #4 to gain $525, 000. 4051/43 - 7 On Friday, he will be back '1 in California to deal with a hot 1 issue there-the question of im- - posing tuition fees on students? of the University oi California . .. The Washington Post Times Herald 4.1.1. He resumes his fund-raising ;tor the Republicans on Satur-? day in St. Louis with a series E- of events expected to bring inI well over $100,000. ?Wild 1111.- .W :1 The Washington Daily News The Evening Star (Washingtomo The Sunday Star (Washington) Daily News (New York) Sunday News (New York) New York Post The New York Times The Sun (Baltimore) The Worker The New Leader The Wall Street Journal The National Observer Pe0ple's World Date JAN -1 6 1968 1111 3 ?11 4. 111g mien? dJReagan-470 January 31, 1968 MEMORANDUM FOR MR. TOLBON 0 On. Janoaryla, 1m, 1 eaw?emor?ooald??g?m of California, who was accompanied by Mr. Edwin Meese, the Governor's Secretary for Legal Altair-s. The Governor called to pay his respects and to renew his friendship. He was quite strong in his commendation at the excellent relationship-that exists between hi; of?ce in Sacrame and our Agent in Charge there. We discussed generally some of the problems which the Governor has had to face up to at the University of California and his determination to see that law and order are maintained there. The Governor evidenced strong support of the FBI. Very truly yours, ALL monomeric-n comman- :3 - 95k Eyelet, 5549803 3? John Edgar Hoover 45"? Director Tolson DeLooch . Mohr . Bishop - Casper Callahan (5) I I Conrad Felt Gale 5132;? M. 3:33:19 FEB 12195 Ronald Reagan-47 ndy MAIL ROOM :1 TELETYPE UNIT i: - a. . .mv- . AI 'n .9 i -us . State nf Qalifnmia OFFICE SACRAMENTO 958M 1 M4 RONALD REAGAN g" GOVERNOR r/ if; 1 3T Nil/f; January 24, 1968 The Honorable John Edgar Hoover Director Federal Bureau of Investigation United States Department of Justice Washington, D.C. Dear Mr. Hoover: Thank you so much for the picture. Nancy is having it framed, and I shall be very proud to have it here in the office for all to see. It was good of you to give me go much time, and both Mr. Meese and I are very grateful; It was a most productive morning for us. Again thanks, and best regards. Sincerely, ALL MATION MATE. 3.1 LBT -. 40/96 553% - 4?25"? RONAL REAGANWWM GovernOr ME g} f; EEB 119% 8\ Ronald Reagan-472 w/ . 1-, MR.Toksdh Do?k I OFFICE OF DIRECTOR 7- MR. DELOACH FEDERAL BUREAU OF MR. MO UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF MR. Egg, ?1 Ronald Reagan-473 MR. CASPER MR.CALLAHAN .GALE .ROSEN .SULLIVAN .TAVEL .TROTTER .JONES TELE.ROOM MRS.METCALF ALL CONTAINED may: 1:5 umcuassmm 9m SL869- $391803 4051!?!) Q7 Max:112, 1968 a) newbie Ronald Ream The Gamma: a! Camel-n1: Sacraments, Cameras?. 95814 My dear. Govemr Reagan: I It is a pleasure to unclean a my a! the Max-ah, 1988, ism o! ?Ths Investigator, smileys: of the FBI. The photograph 91 you taken in my attic: W8 .9180 19, I mm you might like to have this my. WLEQ 3 1 Sinesrely yours, MAR 2 1968 J- Edgar Hoover 1:23: Enclosure 1::7 1 Sacramento a 1: All COM/mew 5 :2 JRP- th (6) HEREIN all1968 555 i 406Tolson DeLouch 5? . r' Moll?$15.3 .1 CUSper Callahan Conrad Felt Gale Rosen Sullivan Bishop 149* Pi fl 19 1968 Holmes Ronald Reagan-474 MAIL ROOM TELETYPE UNIT E3 1 Ronald Reagan-475 . Mn Nam? Mr. y, A. 933-3. FEDERAL BUREAU OF A Mr. Mohr ?2 U. S. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE Mr. . COMMUNICATIONS sacrum . Mr, Casper Mr. 03.11.31 APR 1 1 1958 Mr. con. Q3 EEI UASAI DC AA 3,,?33 MA. ELETYPE (470 Mr. (W Mr. 1" I33 .333 Mr. Mr. Tavel1.?th Mr. Trotter . . Tale. Room- 4/11/69 JXR Miss OR A Ac. A23 3?3 (s2? MEAD 2P 3, 3~ 1% I 3.31 A. f- .36qu .. A 9 UU9UE 3 TH BEAT AGAIAST UDUEPMHD PCNALD Ar.? OF 3 362 APRIL TEN LAST, ALAMEDA, CALIFCENIATELEPHONV CALL TO THIS DATE. 1&3 333 ofg?? DURING THE EVENING HOURS OF APRIL L.- ST, I 1 AIR STATIQA, ALAAEDA, THE EQLLGAIAG Egg AT APPEOXTHATELY THREE THIRTYFEVE P.A., APRIL TEA LA9T, wuo 19 ALSO EMPLOYED AT NAVAL AIR STATION AND AITH AHOA HE RITEE Tn AND FROM AQPE, EHICLE 1A CCAPAAY CF UTSUE CCLORED MEAN. DID NOT OVERHEAR DUT TOLD 97c COLORED MAM SAID, ARE GGING To GET i: CONSTRUED THE9E As A THREAT TO THE LIFE OF PTA )0 J. THE CALOAED NAN IS REPGRTEDLY INI THE FOLLOWING UER 303 3?333 0 dA43. c. ATEUEL, wHo 3331.1 .r 3333:1333 3333333333333 339. 9333633 ,11- i?A? .2 ..L REPORTING THIS IMMEDIATELY TC FRWESI E. SMITH, ASSISTANT LEGAL AFFAIRS SECRETARY, OFFICE OF GOVERNOR SPECIAL AGENT TIHCTEY 3C INTYRE, FECRET SERVICE, SAN FRANCISCO: HRS. JUANITA STERNE, DETECTIVE BUREAU, ALAEEDA POLICE AND FERGEANT JOHN NQCRE, IGENCE, COUNTY OFFICE. AIR FAIL COPY TO SACRAEENTO. LHE TO FOLLOW. END. GFH p91 mp CH DC Ronald Reagan-476 FD 36 (Rev. 5- 22- 64) 6. FBI Dme: ?[12/68 Transmit the following in (Type in plaintext or code} AIRTEL AIRMAIL 10 (Priority) FBI (2, SAN FRANCISCO (52?52452) - i -reat Against Governor AGAN of California, E?i Apri1 10, 1968, Alameda, California MISCELLANEOUS - INFORMATION CONCERNING There are enclosed the original and three copies of a ,f/fletterhead memorandum in this matter for appropriate dissemina- tion. Copies of this LHM have been disseminated to U. S. Secret Service, San Francisco, Alameda County Sheriff's Office, Oakland, California; the Police Department, Alameda, California; an to Naval Intelligence Service Office, San Francisco. Four copies of this LHM are being enclosed.for Sacramento, which office should make appropriate dissemination to the office of Governor RONALD REAGAN and local authorities. in; ?moms 8L u? JACLASSIFIED W4, ??2114me 435/?3 @Bureau (Enos. - Sacramento (Enos. 1 San Francisco C972 ?7 a . 9/1 a aa/M 3 Ma 5 ?lm (I ?38 an!" 35 APR 17 1963 a a 31.2%? 2% 3 ?17 App?pgj?fd?go? Special Agent in Charge Sent Per RonaklReagan-477 UQTED STATES DEPARTMENT FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATIQN IsRobJ%mesew San Francisco, California April 12, 1968 at UNKNOWN SUBJECT: THREAT AGAINST GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN OF CALIFORNIA, APRIL 10, 1968, 405/75 ALAMEDA, CALIFORNIA 1? b6 On April 10 1968, b7C Alameda Naval Air Station, Alameda, California, telephonically b7D furnished the following information to a Special Agent of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Oakland, California: employed inl Alameda Naval Air Station, telephone He rides to and from work with I who is also employed inl resides atl Oakland, California, telephone that at approximately 3:35 P.N., April 10, 1968, he was standing by vehicle waiting to depart for home when up to the vehicle in company of a Nehro male. This Negro male is employed inl Iorl I also but his name is not known to He further identified this individual as the only Negro who works onl inb6 ItoI land tol . Irelated that he did not overhear the conversation betwee the Negro male and: but that quoted remarks of the Negro male to him as ?We are going to get said he construed these words as a threat to the life of Governor RONALD REAGAN and felt the matter should be reported to appropriate authorities. The above information was telephonically furnished by Special Agent DONALD E. LARSEN, Federal Bureau of Investigation, San Fran? cisco, to the following individuals on April ll, 1968: Supervisory Special Agent ROBERT C. RIEDEL, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Sacramento, California, #:25 P.M. RIBDEL advised that he was immediately furnishing this This document contains neither recommendations nor conclusions of the FBI. It is the property of the FBI and is loaned to your agency: it and its contents are not to be distributed outside your agency. 2% Ni?; 97? ?imsy? Ronald Reagan-478 .44. . I . . . - . . . information to Mr. ERNEST B. SMITH, Assistant Legal Affairs Secretary in the office of Governor RONALD REAGAN. WILLIAM TIMOTHY MC INTYRE, Special Agent, U. S. Secret Service, San Francisco, California, at #:35 P.M. Mrs. JUANITA STERNE, Stenographic Clerk, Detective Bureau, Alameda, California, Police Department, at 4:40 P.M. Detective Sergeant JOHN MOORE, Intelligence Division, Alameda County, California, Sheriff's Office, at #:50 P.M. This information was also furnished to Mr. RALPH LOMELE, NaVal Intelligence Service Office, San Francisco, California,' at 9:00 A.M., April 12, 1968, by Special Agent GEORGE P. 2 Ronald Reagan-479 .- FEDERAL BUREAU OF 8. DEPARTM MAY 2 01958 TELETYPE FBI WASH DC 39 FBI CLEVELAND 208 URGENT 5-20-68 JMS DIRECTOR FROM CLEVELAND PROPOSED DEMONSTRATION AGAINST GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN, CLEVELAND, OHIO, MAY TWENTY TWO, SIXTY EIGHT DASH INFORMATION CONCERNING. CLEVELAND wEws MEDIA ANNOUNCED on AMY SEVENTEEN, (g SIXTY EIGHT, GOVERNOR REAGAN SCHEDULED TO MAKE PUBLIC SPEECH IN CLEVELAND PUBLIC SOUARE MAY TWENTY Two NEXT . AT FIVE PM. CLEVELAND RELIABLE SOURCE ADVISED ON THIS Adja? DATE CLEVELAND CHAPTER UTH ACAIAST FASCISM WILL DEMONSTRATE IA PUBLIC AREA AT TIME OF REACAE SCHEDULED APPEARANCE. CLEVELAND POLLOV ADD SUTEL AFTER DEMONSTRATION. LOCAL AUTHORITIES ADVISED. Y1 END I I RECLZO GFH 1968 . Sifica?an a MAIEL. FBI . ADD COMMITTEE 5 3?1 a; I LAJIEQIQE ?rm {ymw/ XE 4b?193 f3 Ronald Reagan-480 Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Bishop-? Mr. 1 Mr. Mr. Mr. Felt- Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Tela. Miss Helmet: Mill i ?wq?ar TMW. I Mr. l?h.I/EinlftRONALD Fer/\oAN. - eov?HNow - ?liltit oovaamonscoche' ?1 - ?B-i1.Tmtt 3.Tele R00: Bliss Iitlr i? May 6, 1968? The Honorable John Edgar Hoover Director Federal Bureau of Investigation United States Department of Justice Washington, D. C. Dear Mr. Hoover: Thank you for your letter of April 23, 1968, concerning the correspondence between you and Mr. James M. Hall, Superintendent of Banks for the State of California. I appreciate your advising me of this informae tion. I have asked Edwin Meese, my Legal Affairs Secretary, to follow up on this matter with Mr. Hall. We are very grateful for the cooperation which has always been extended to my office by the w~ (Federal Bureau of Investigation. In particular, the close liaison which has been established by M. John Williams, Special Agent in charge of the gw?; rdivision headquartered in Sacramento, has been very beneficial. Best personal wishes; 7 Sincerely, All: anamrm - warm is UNCLASSIFIE a; A f; . 405, ?3 - Governor "afrmf I ,m NOT RECORDED 70?? 21958 . . i 102%?- I7i968 Ronald Reagan-481 -Ronald Reagan-482 .A 5-i6 I: ORDER I WPK IO 5R IDI-SSGS AND BALTIMOREA DUIEALO - ?erAwii77 AND NASRINGTON IIELD (CODE) NASRINGION IIELD AIIENTION DONESTIC INTELLIGENCE DIVISION IRON NEN . AxSLACK ANTI-EAR ANII-DRAII UNION (NDANADU), RACIAL MATTERSI ALI, INIORNAII ON UGANTAW I - IIAREINI . DATE. 6 10 - . - NIO SOURCE NIIR NRON INSUEIICIENI CONTACT HAS BEEN MADE IO 3 ESTABLISH RELIABILITY, ADVISED ON APRIL SIXTEEN LASI, THAI DURING IRE CONFERENCE OF THE NAIIE IN NYC DURING AIRIL INELVE IO IOURIEEN LASI ADR g? . 3 NEI IN VARIOUS RGONS IN IRE DIILONAI HOTEL AND HELD DISCUSSIONS CONCERNING IREIR PLANS FOR ACTION AND IACIICS IO DISRUII THE US. SOURCE ADVISED T?n AT A SPECIAL MEETING VAS HELD If: IRE AI ARINENI OI IELERHONE INHICH 135.; {m b7C $3 NA NDED BY SIONELY II 5 9 AND SEVERAL OTHER LEADERS IRON IRE VARIOUS IE.E IN AIIE NDANCE AI THE CONIERENCE. A An MET IN VARIOUS ROOMS IN THE DIPLOMAT HOTEL AND HELD a: i GENERAL DISCUSSIONS CONCERNING THEIR PLANS FOR GUERRILLA - ?g REVOLUTIONARY ACTION AND TACTICS TO DISRUPT THE U.S. SOURCE ADVISED THAT A SPECIAL MEETING WAS ALSO HELD AT. It; ., HEAT 7, (gar/5M; THE APARTMENT 0F (TS-NH) (PHBureau NOT - b7C T\eletype Unit T83 ABA 26 1968 CM -- RETREAT I. . ERW: 1aa ?ggf?gz} . I Appro ed: Sent Per . Ronald . u. . . wReaan_485 . . - w_ (Rev. 5:229.FBI Date: Transmit the following in (Type in plaintext or code) (Priority) WFO 157- PAGE TWO b6 A WHICH WAS ATTENDED BY STOKELY rruu?f 4:th A . WE. Aw; mam. (PNU) . AND SEVERAL OTHER LEADERS FROM THE VARIOUS GROUPS WHO WERE IN ATTENDANCE AT THE CAPTIONED A CONFERENCE. THE FOLLOWING ITEMS WERE DISCUSSED FREELY AMONG ALL i A AND PLACES: PRESENT, HOWEVER, N0 SPECIFIC PLANS WERE MADE AS TO DATES .. ONE. PREPARATION OF SMOKE BOMBS MADE FROM SULPHUR 3 AND SULFURIC ACID. IT WAS MENTIONED THAT THESE COULD BE USED IN POSSIBLE BANK ROBBERIES, AS WELL AS IN CAUSING CHAOS POPULATED AREAS. A WASHINGTON, D. C. HIGH QASCHOOL STUDENT, IS SUPPOSED To BE HANDLING THIS MATTER. TWO. THROWING DYNAMITE ONTO THE FLOOR OF THE NEW TORK EXCHANGE TO CAUSE CHAOS ON WALL STREET. Approved: Sent . Per Special Agent in Charge . Ronald -.-. . .4. . . .gu. FD-36 (Rev. margin In '0 - .0 FBI Transmit the following in - (Type in plaintexc or code) I I I I Date: I 1 (Priority) I WFO 1574 PAGE THREE egg THREE. PLACING DYNAMITE IN THE EMPIRE STATE BUILDING. FOUR. DESTROYING THE ELECTRICAL CIRCUITS IN NYC, .PJTHEREBY CAUSING ANOTHER ON THE EASTERN a . m?m 15 .5 A: SEABOARD. .- SOURCE IS OF TI-E OPINION THAT THE ABOVE DISRUPTIVE JTACTICS ORIGINATE WITH WHOM HE DESCRIBED rl" any W1 EAS THE INDIVIDUAL WHO ATTEMPTED T0 DESTROY THE STATUE OF 1) 6 I LIBERTY A FEW YEARS AGO. R70 3 i-J - ACCORDING TO THE SOURCE, A DISCUSSION WAS ALSO HELD RETALIATORY MEASURES FOR THE MURDER OF DR. 3 aim? ?gta-h? 3 A. AND GEORGE WALLACE WERE MENTIONED AS POSSIBLE TARGETS. ?ng DEFINITE PLANS CONCERNING THIS MATTER WERE MADE. 6? MARTIN LUTHER KING AND THE OF RICHARD NIXON, {16 5 '2 TE SOURCE ADVISED THAT THROUGHOUT THE MEETING IT WAS AGREED BY EVERYONE THAT ANY DISRUPTIVE ACTS Ea Approved: Sent Per Special Agent in Charge Ronald .. . .- . a .v . rm. (Rev. 5?22-6433 . Date: (Type in plaintext or code) (Priority) PAGE FOUR SHOULD TAKE PLACE WITHIN A MONTH OR SHOULD BE 1? 1; . AND NATION MINISTRATIVE: REFERENCE NEW YORK TEL APRIL FIFTEEN LAST. SOURCE IS @m m/ waomwxr WASHINGTON, D. 0. b6 b7C 13713 LEADS. ALL RECEIVING OFFICES ARE REQUESTED TO CONTACT SOURCES IN ORDER TO CORROBORATE AND TO DEVELOP ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CONCERNING THIS MATTER. Approved: Sent Per . Special Agent in Charge . R0na4., FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION 0. DSPARTMENT Mr. Or? . COMMUNICATION Mr- DeLoach?m. Mr Mohr MAY221968 . I N: Mr- Mr. Mr. Felt Mr. Regen 2 1 1r. Sullivan? Mr Mr Trotterm Teie. Roomw MISS Holmes Miss . FBI WASH DC FBI CLEVELA ND 9%ij 5-22-68 GDS TO DIR on FROM CLEVELAND (100-28892) 1P PROPOSED DEMONSTRATION AGAINST GOV. RONALD REAGAN, CLEVELAND, OHIO, MAY SIXTYEIGHT, INFORMATION CONCERNING. RE MYTEL, MAY TWENTY, LAST, GOV. REAOAN APPEARED IN CLEVELAND, OHIO, FIVE PM THIS DATE AND MADE PUBLIC ADDRESS ON CLEVELAND PUBLIC SQUARE WITHOUT INCIDENT. PROPOSED DEMONSTRATION CANCELLED DUE TO LACK OF UPPORT. assz?r NEON R33 .- END $5.2 ?38313; sew 3-114 ??11 CONEAIM 1958 I . 46'! [.93 5 a l/w Ronald 1? UDL 9 1968 01% Reagan- -489 OI-IIONAL pom N0. l0 50?0-l06 . MAY 1962 EDITION GSA can. use. no. 27 . Tolson UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT I 7" Bishop 4 Casper w! ijnunandunz Felt 019 To I Mr 0 W. C. 51111111311 Val? 5 DATE: June 22? 1968 ?j?j?iefcn ?7 No IISIM FROM J. Brenna I gm? RONALD REAGAN SECRET SERVICE PROTECTION OF 7 PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES INFORMATION CONCERNING At 9: 30 a. June 22, 1968, Mr. Gary McCleod, Secret Service, telephonically advised Extra Duty Supervisor Herbert D. Clough, Jr., that protection of Ronald Reagan as a potential presidential candidate was initiated on June 21,1968. The aforementioned was for information purposes only and no request was made of EBI assistanceSullivan 1 - Mr. D.J. Brennan :r ska 1 Mr. B. C. Rachner - MI: H. D. Clough gx rim. 53 #0 C: 5 mm?: t/j?eg' AIM/fax 1M 1'2 261968 I i??gsjv; ?If? ET Ska: a}z?ka L. 9/ >41 gag/? ?/yy 2m KIDNTAINE IINRE NOT 0 DIIESIL all~ei?gm I E. I I JUN Ronald Reagan-490 bun?6 If - July 10, 19681 GENERAL INVESTIGATIVE DIVISION This is the matter in?Iing the attempt to fire bomb the residence 0 Governor Ronald Reagan in Sacramento, California. Secret Service Agents on the scene were not able to apprehend individuals responsible for this attempt. We are conducting no investigation, and contact with Secret Service Headquarters discloses they are fully aware of all facts. AU. INFORMATION IS v52 52m: elqtp ?3498 Ronald Reagan-491 . rr?) Mr. sper VIA 1/ WASHINGTON JUL 1 01968 W12: . SB 356 AM 6-68 URGENT LAL I ER 5 Mr. Mr. Tavel-_-_ T0 DI CTOR PLAINTEXT ED 5 . -- mom SACRAMENTO 62-51%! 11311:: 3:13;? ATTEMPT TO FIREBOMB RESIDENCE OF GOVERNOJ RONALDCEEAGAN, SACRAMENTO, 5 CALIFORNIA, JULY NINE SIXTYEIGHT. Nico {lam CAPT. PAUL HANNIGAN, SACRAMENTO-PB, ADVISED JULY TEN INSTANT THAT TWO NEGRO MALES, TWENTY - TWENTYFIVE YRS. OF AGE, OBSERVED PARKING ACROSS STREET FROM GOVERNOR REAGAN RESIDENCE, ONE THREE FOUR ONE FIFTH STREET, SACRAMENTO, IN LATE MODEL CHEVROLET DURING LATE EVENING JULY NINE LAST AND WALK ACROSS STREET WITH WHAT APPEARED TO?/jg BE BOTTLES IN THEIR HANDS. THIS OBSERVED BY THREE SECRET SERVICE AGENTS WHO WERE PARRED IN VICINITY 0F GOVERNOR-S RESIDENCE. SECRET SERVICE AEENTS GOTEEUT OF THEIR CAR, APPROACHED THE TWO NEGRO MALES AND ORDERED THEM T5 STOP. THE NEGROS DROPPED TWO NOLOTOV COCKTAILS AND RAN, ONE ON ONE IN CAR THEY ARRIVED IN. ONE SECRET . FRONT SERVICE AGENT INTO AIR. ONE COCKTAIL DROPPED ON SIDEWALK IN T-: OF GOVERNOR- RESIDENCE THE OTHER 0N NEIGHBORS FRONT LAWN. NEITHER EX- 1C3 END PAGE ONE - 393 3: ?ma CONTPINEU REG-34 t. ?(17 - 1-. Wald/<14 ?amalgam *6 u: 405,193 - .7 . .. Ronald Reagan-492 RE qyjijL,E? MR. DELOACH FOR THE DIRECTOR PAGE 2 HAD BEEN IGNITED. THE TWO NEGRO MALES NOT APPREHENDED, BUT EYEWITNESS IN VICINITY BELIEVES HE CAN IDENTIFY ONE OF THEM. Ponce 0m CAPT. HANNIGAN ADVISED NOT FEEL THAT ABOVE INCIDENT AN ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT. HE ADVISED GOVERNOR REAGAN AND HIS FAMILY WERE AT HOME BUT NOT AWARE OF INCIDENT WHEN IT TOOK PLACE. GOVERNOR REAGAN TO MAKE STATEMENT CONCERNING ABOVE AM INSTANT DATE. Mien Department SECRET SERVICE MAINTAINING VIGILENCE AT GOVERNOR- RESIDENCE. LETTEN IEAD ME SACRAMENTO WILL FOLLOW, KEEP BUREAU ADVISED, AND SUBMIT- 3M4 END ACK AND HOLD FLES RM FBI WASH DC Ronald Reagan-493 8 fllb/CERNMENT Memmu? FORM NO. 10 UNITED STATES MAY 1962 ECHTION GSA GEN. REGFROM 0? C3 :3 .524 .55: i: +3 (3) C: ?r?i 1-1 G) 43 {3 312? r?l I'-0r7-5 L1.) r4 CO m: \0 3mg Wmfd?o '3 r7. (:10 C.) ., LC. - .1 L.) .1510 M055 82/594; NOT RECORDED 183 mm 21 1953 *Tv mn-ww I ?.63 L9 . I, r} '1 3m. lved, SSI-FIED 1011 0031mm .4 rm IS NOLA ALI: INFORM: . Date: 7/10/68 I I Transmit the following in I 7" 20 (Type in plaintext or code) Vm AIRTEL AIRMAIL (Priority) T0: DIRECTOR, FBI M: SAC, SACRAMENTO (62-86) (0) \Ji?l/?gffh?hv ATTEMPT TO FIREBOP RESIDENCE 0F GOVERNOR RONA CONTAIN SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA JULY 9,1968, 1.ng MW ASSAULT 0F PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE 405:1?) Re Sacramento teletype to Bureau dated 7/10/68. Enclosed herewith for the Bureau are seven copies of a letterhead memorandum concerning captioned matter. Source in Governor's Office is Assistant Legal Affairs Secretary ERNEST B. SMITH (NA), Office of Governor RONALD REAGAN . Sacramento sources are being alerted to develop any information they can regarding two Negro males involved as well as to advise of any information indicating that further attempts to firebomb or otherwise attempt to harm the Gavernor, members of his family or residence. Sacramento Police Department is conducting active investigation in an a @mpt to identify unknown subjects. REC-68 am The Sa ?lg?atb Offideg is conductin??go act ve?3 investigation. 6/1755 - Bureau (Enc. (Rb?j?iapt - Sacramento l? . 532%: 25:,an NN 134$ Sent Ronakl SAPJUL 2 6 1933(11 Agent in Charge I may.) SC 62-86 A copy of the enclosed letterhead memorandum is not being furnished to Secret Service locally inasmuch as they.are the agency directly involved and are in complete possession of facts related thereto. Ronald Reagan?496 STATES DEPARTMENT OF FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION InRWUJ%mem?rw Sacramento, California ?khm July 10, 1968 T0 FIREBOMB RESIDENCE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REACAN, SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA, JULY 9, 1968 On July 10, 1968, Captain Paul Hannigan, Sacramento, California, Police Department, advised that during the late evening of July 9, 1968, Secret Service Agents Michael Endicott and Robert Horan were sitting in their car just south of the Governor?s residence, 1341 - 45th Street, Sacramento, California, when they observed two Negro males, 20 to 25 years of age walking across 45th Street and then toward the Governor's residence. As the two Negro males approached the front of the Governor?s residence, the Secret Service Agents observed each of them carrying a bottle. ,At this time Secret Service Agent Endicott notified Bouglas Duncan, a Secret Service Agent who was near the front of the Governor's residence. ?When the two Negro males stopped on the front lawn of the Governor's residence, Secret Service.Agenu3Endicott and Horan got out of their car and yelled, ?Hold.? Captain Hannigan advised that the two Negro males immediately split up and ran, one north up the middle of 45th Street, and the other on the sidewalk north on 45th Street. One of them ran around the corner on Street where his car, believed to be a 1967 or 1968 yellow Chevrolet, was parked and drove west. No license number was noted. The other individual ran to Street and then east on Street. Secret Service.Agent'Duncan, when he found he was not going to be able to overtake this individual, fired one shot at him with no effect. 921% SCW??-llm -2: ., .- W- ,36930?% 5 4o; I - l/fs - Ronald Reagan-497 RE ATTEMPT TO RESIDENCE 0F GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN, SACRAMENTO cameraman JULY 9, 1968 Captain Hannigan advised that when the two Negro males were told to ?Hold,? one of them smashed a molotov cocktail in the street and the other one threw his on the lawn just north of the Governor's residence. Neither cocktail ignited. Both cocktails were quart wine bottles, one with a Franzia Vin Rose label and the other with a Gallo Burgundy label. No fingerprints were found by the Sacramento, California, Police Department, on the bottle that was not smashed. Captain Hannigan advised that Governor Reagan and his family were at home but were not aware of the incident when it took place. He also advised that there were two witnesses in the vicinity who felt they might be able to identify the individual who fled on foot. These witnesses did View photographs at the Sacramento, California, Police Department, but did not find an individual wholooked like the one they observed. .A source in the Governor?s Office advised on July 10, 1968, that the Governor was not concerned about the above incident, indicated complete confidence in the security arrangements being afforded him by the Secret Service and the California State Police. The Governor also expressed this confidence to members of the press upon his arrival at the State Capitol Building in Sacramento, California, on the morning of July 10, 1968. Copies of this memorandum have been disseminated locally to the intelligence agencies of the Army, Navy and the Air Force. RonaklReagan-498 ATTEMPT TO FIREBOMB RESIDENCE OF GOVERNOR RONAED REAGAN, SACRAMENTO, JULY 9, 1968 This document contains neither recommendations nor conclusions of the FBI. It is the property of the FBI and is loaned to your agency; it and its contents are not to be distributed outside your agency. Ronald Reagan?499 1 - .5162 7-2_5-s7) l. 15- 3 Ronald ReagaQOO As YELLOW ALL INFORMATION 1? ED 111 1 HIS UNCLASSIFI- 1 WWII 5 I ?9?3 CI IMMEDIATE Transmit the message that follows by coded teletype: Date: 15? FIELD DISSEMINAIION [?rms EJDIRECTOR, CIA . To: THE PRESIDENT I: SECRETARY OF STATE [j DIRECTOR, DEFENSE INTELLIGENCE AGENCY F0 WHITE HOUSE SITUATION ROOM, ATT. SECRET SERVICE (PID) (For disseminating classified data to Secret Service) Cl AND NATIONAL INDICATIONS CENT ER DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY DEPARTMENT OF THE AIR FORCE [21630 RET SERVICE (PID) BY PLAINTEXT TELETYPE 3 A From: DIRECTORFIN-J Iii; fez?? ClassificationSub ect: {21711.1 .131 A: 7~ - 5 3? ?uwr?mw?cw {waf?m?a E??g??ri WW ?519.13 Mo- MQMA - ins on next (Text of messa- Tolson DeLoach Mohr Bishop Casper Callahan Conrad Felt Gale Hosea Sullivan Tove) Trotter I 1 FEDERAL BUREAU INVESTIGATION U. S. DEPARTIENT OF 1031165 COMMUNICATION SECTION JUL 1 1958 EL MAIL ROOM 1' ?mnpe Mr. Mr. JUL161968 111i: A - Mr. Casper Mr. gr 0' ER Mr. Mr. Felt-.. . Mr. Mr. Rosen-.. Mr. Mr. Tavel- Mr. A Tele. A Miss Holmes Miss Gandy I unsua; THREAT AG 135! a Eamon REABAH, Les AABELES, CALIFORHIA, JULY AEAINST PRESIDE SIXTY EIGAI. THREAT IAL AT TEN FIFIY FIVE A.A., HILLIS, CENTRAL COMMITTEE, Los ANGELES COUNTY, Les CALIFORNIA, r31, THAT AT TEN roar: FIVE A.n. tars DATE HE RECEIVED A FROM AA FEMALE STATEB, nozsu'r STAY HOME INSTEAD 9? seer aur OF STATE ALL THE HE 5AAULA NOT an anus sourA. HE SHOULB BE SHGI. 1 AA EOIHG re ALBA THE AAEA ASAEA re IDEHTIFY HERSELF. THE 1 H, FEMALE REPLIED. is FANILY. SHE THEN HUNG UP. b6 . i b7C PAGE on: Ronald Reagan-501 . .. . Max. DAT-TE nan: In runway?: W37 nan: "mm mm sutures, Les guns?um mum: asp-1 #3330? av sac-m. mun ?mm 1.. mom, was. :43?th =9 ENE . I b6 b7C JBR FBI HASH 90 Ronald Reagan-502 a FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION .1, 7" US. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE COMMUNICATION SECTION 710 822 0000 JULIG 68 Mr/ To TELETYPE FBI WASH DC PRIORITY 7-16-68 SLB TO U.S. SECRET SERVICE - INTELLIGENCE DIVISION FROM DIRECTOR FBI UNCLASSIFIED - UNKNOWN THREAT AGAINST GOVERNOR REAGAN, LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, SEVEN SIXTEEN SIXTYEIGHT THREAT AGAINST PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE. AT TEN FIFTY FIVE A.N., JULY SIXTEEN INSTANT, CLINT NILLIs, REPUBLICAN CENTRAL COMMITTEE, LOS ANSELES COUNTY, LOS ANCELES, CALIFORNIA, ADVISED FBI, Los ANCELES, THAT AT TEN FORTY FIVE A.N. THIS DATE HE RECEIVED A CALL FROM AN UNHNONN FENALE NHO STATED, REAGAN STAY HOHE INSTEAD OF GOING OUT OF STATE ALL THE HE SHOULD NOT GO DUNN SOUTH. HE SHOULD BE SHOT. I AH GOING To SIGN THE RECALL HHEN ASKED TO IDENTIFY HERSELF, THE UNKNOWN TENALE REPLIED, IS THE (PHONETIC) SHE b6 THEN HUNG UP. WC AT ELEVEN TEN THIS DATE SPECIAL AGENT ANTHONY SHERMAN, SECRET SERVICE, LOS ANGELES, ADVISED OF THE ABOVE BY SPECIAL AGENT MELVIN L. FLOHR, FBI, LOS ANGELES. END ATT INFORMATION comum TT TS UNCLASSIFIED AA. 710 822 0000 Ronald Reagan-503 .le TELETYPE JUL161968 ENCIPHERED LDS IBOBPM USE URGENT 7-16-68 LRC TD L05 ARGELES FROM DIRECTOR 2P (UNCLASSIFIED) UNKNOWN THREAT AGAINST GOVERNOR REAGAR, LOS ANGELES, CALIFORRIA, NINETEER THREAT AGAINST PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE. AT TEN FIFTY FIVE A.H., JULY SIXTEER INSTANT, CLINT WILLIS, REPUBLICAN CENTRAL COMMITTEE, LOS ARGELES LDS ARGELES, CALIFORNIA, ADVISED FBI, LOS-ARGELES, THAT AT TEN FIVE Ao?. THIS DATE BE RECEIVED A CALL FROM AN UNKNOUR FEMALE WHO STATED, REAGAN STAY HOME INSTEAD OF GOING OUT OF STATE ALL IRE HE SHOULD NOT SO DOWN SOOTH. HE SHODLD BE SHOT. .1 AH @0136 TO SIGN THE RECALL HHEH ASKED TO IDENTIFY HERSELF, THE URKROUR FEMALE IS THE (PHORETIC) SHE THEN HUNG UP, b6 IS UN CLASSIFIED 414,199 BY *5/13 Ronald Reagan-506 1378 PAGE THE A I I 1 AT ELEVEII TEN AJI. THIS DATE SPECIAL AGENT ANTHONY SHERMAN, SECRET SERVICE, LOS ANGELES, ADVISED THE ABOVE SPECIAL AGENT MELVIN L. FLOHR, FBI L05 ANGELES. END II BOD FBI LBS ANGELES Ronald Reagan-507 I 3 FEDERAL SMILE-.1 U. EJUSEECE CCWEWELENECA i SECTIC. L. '3 HC8 p, FBI WASH DC FBI RICHMOND 112 PH URGENT 7-20-53 LNG To FROM CHMOND (175- -NEN) UNSU ALLEGED THREAT AGAINST CHARLOTTESVILLE, UA., JULY TWENTY, SIXTY-EIGHT (GOVERNOR RONA REAGAN, PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE, SCHEDULED To APPEAR CHARLOTTESUILLE, JULY TWENTY, SIXTY-EIGHT) r- A: 33715 UNCLASSIFIED BY H. M. HAWKINS, MAIL CARRIER, i ENA., TODAY ADVISED THAT A PERSON STOPPED HIM ON MAIN 3 ST. STATING THE PERSON HAD BEEN IN A ON MAIN ST. AND SAN A MAN NITH A GERHAN LUGGER STUCK IN HIS BLET. NHEN ASKED NHAT THE GUN NAG FOR, STATED HE WAS GOING To SHOOT HIM A .C7C5L HAWKINS UNABLE TO FURNISH NAME 0R HANKINS STATED MAN TOLD HIM UNSUB IN LATE TNENTIES, 0F AVERAGE SIZE, FIVE TEN INCHES, ONE a? HUNDRED SEVENTY LBS., DRESSED IN NHI AND NAME OF RESTAURANT. 3M1 BLUE PANTS. ?y/A/Cf? 'ng 3 egg END PAGE . L, a a i A $51. Lav Apr} "Cf? 5 ROMA Ronald Reagan- 5-08 a9?? PAGE IVO RH L75 NEV SECRET SERVICE AND LOCAL AUTHORITIES SERVING AREA NOTIFIED BY RA AND VIRGINIA STATE POLICE, RIORNOND, VA., ADVISED. LHM EOLLONS. BUREAU WILL BE FURNISHED ANY FURTHER DEVELOPMENTS IMMEDIATELY. -P- END. SHOULD BE TODAvawv END OAD FBI NASH Dc Ronald Reagan-509 1/ . a Ainsvx;fV' Mr. i 5-22-51Anti. . I Mr. Mr. (151151".811: . Mr. Conrad_ Defies-?er" 22 58 Mr. Feit__w 7/ . Mu A~_m Mr. 1., TransmIt the followmg 1n Mr - (Type in plaintext or code) - .7 .. MT- . 311? [Mr AIRTEL 1C1 - '1 dc . . (Pnonty) [Miss II me I TO DIRECTOR, FBI FROM sAc, RICHMOND (175-17) - SUBJECT: Alleged Threat Against ?Governor" July 20, 1968, (Governor 3001: ?ghA1an, Presidential Candidate, Appear Charlottesville, July 20, 1968) ,1 - Re Richmond teletype to Bureau, 7/20/68. Enclosed herewith for the Bureau, are 8 copies of a LHM captioned as above. Oral dissemination was made to the SecretSService at Charlottesville and to the Charlottesville, Va. PD by SA JOHN G. Oral dissemination to the VSP, Richmond, was made by SA CLAUDE A. BASS Dissemination of enclosed LHM is being made locally to the Secret Service, Richmond, Va., VSP, and Charlottesville, va. PD by Ff~342. W?dv k/ ited 632:5" Esafcn 7 i I Assets '7 a @Burea M?qu?z? 73 6.836%, 51 c? 6-- ALI: INFORMATION EONIAIW 7 I. HEREIN IS I rm- I I if 453;: 433?!" sent Per RonaklReagan-510_ . .- STATES DEPARTMENT OF FEDERAL . BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION Richmond, Virginia In Re I Please Refer to July 22, 1968, RE: UNKNOWN Alleged Threat Against "Governor", Charlottesville, Virginia, July 20, 1968, (Governor Ronald Reagan, Presidential Candidate, Scheduled to Appear Charlottesville, July 20, 19680 Hugh Hawkins, Postal Carrier, Charlottesville, Virginia, advised on July 20, 1968, that he had been approached by an individual on his delivery route on West main Street, Charlottesville, Virginia, stating that he had just come out of one of the Joints on West main Street and while in the restroom saw a white male in his late twenties, 5 feet 10 inches, 170 pounds, with a white T?shirt and tight fitting blue jeans, carrying a German luger, and when asked what he was doing with the gun, stated he was ?going to shoot himself a Governor". Hawkins did not obtain the name of the individual furnishing the information or license number of the car driven by the individual. It should be noted that Governor Ronald Reagan of California was scheduled to arrive in Charlottesville, Virginia, at #:00 P.M., on July 20, 1968, to meet with Republican state leaders and to give a speech that evening in Charlottesville, Virginia. The information furnished by Hawkins was furnished at 10:30 A.M. to Joseph Stromick, United States Secret Service, temporarily assigned at Charlottesville, Virginia for protection of Governor Reagan. Information was also furnished to Chief of Police James E. Adams, Charlottesville, Virginia Police Department at 10:35 A.M. and to Sergeant R. H. Oliver, Vir inia State Police Headquarters, Richmond, Virginia, at 10: A.M. .P-B - ?v my: an?? .in? further inw?iigation 4; .654, a. a :smi?andi? marinated 111 this matter?if ,tna; a 4057/23 This confirms to .nhcnic information a. 5' ?11 . furnished to?! ?ora? on 7? 20, win?: age.? PM $749.60: @1/6657 BK?v//f- 1/ RonaklReagan-Sll ,r r? 1? ii? '5 1 ?vi-V -- - ?a . RE: UNKNOWN Alleged Threat Against "Governor", Charlottesville, Virginia, July 20, 1968, (Governor Ronald Reagan, Presidential Candidate, Scheduled to Appear Charlottesville, July 20, 1968 b6 b7c Subsequently, on the morning of July 20, 1968, Chief of Police James E. Adams, Charlottesville, Virginia Police Department, advised that Patrolman Via, working a beat on West Main Street, Charlottesville, Virginia, had been approached apparently by the same individual who approached Hawkins and Patrolman Via had obtained the individual's name as .?panoke, Virginia andLl lwas driving a car bearing Virginia license Adams advised that a search of the area by Via and Detective B. L. 00168 had failed to locate anyone fitting the description of the Unknown Subject. Chief Adams was requested to furnish the information developed by Patrolman Hie directly to the Secret Service at Charlottesville. b6 b7C On July 22, 1968, Secret Service Agent Joseph Stromick advised that he had made inquiry at bars and grills on West Main Street, Charlottesville, Virginia, on the morning of July 20, 1968 and failed to develop shat anyone fitting the description of the Unknown Subject had been in any of the bars and grills. Stromick further advised that telephonic contact with a Sergeant vest of Roanoke, Virginia Police Department determined known personally to vest as a heavy drinker and prevaricator. Secret Service Agent Stromick advised that all appropriate law enforcement agencies in the Charlottesville area had been alerted to the Unknown Subject's description and no incidents had occurred during Reagan's appearance in Charlottesville, Virginia. This decument contains neither recommendations nor conclusidnss of the FBI. It is the property of the FBI and is loaned to your agency; it and its contents are not to be distributed outside your agency. 2* RonaklReagan-Slz .. :9 3.43?41. J. .1755 f" - I . BI NASH ??24 ?1??ng Q14. #19 53%- ?153% ENVL I: If E?s; MUOFI 7? FBI MASH DC - FBI-BUFFALO IOSOPM GENT 8-5-68 me TO RECTOR AND MIAMI BUFFALO c9 A w" THREAT AGAINST PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN MIAMI w- BEACH, FLORIDA a u: . ix AT NINE FIFTY PM THIS DATE, BUFFALO POLICE DEPARTMENT ADVISED OF AN ANONYMOUS CALL RECEIVED LOCALLY AT ITS SNITCHBOARD WHEREIN CALLER ADVISED ABOVE PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE AT MIAMI AIRPORT AND THAT BOMB WAS LOCATED IN AIRPORT WHICH WOULD GO OFF AND KILL SEVERAL UNBEC COPY HUNDRED PEOPLE. MIAMI TELEPHONICALLY ADVISED OF ABOVE AND BUFFALO SECRET SERVICE ADVISED. MAI :33 5?53. A 5;,30 .9 SEQ END ELR FBI NASH Dc 6 AUG 6 1968 ?-me CONTAIHE -.. - - Iv?iniifn-z is: it?; .. I g- 1 . Ronald Reagan-513 ?6 5 6 AUG 141953 5 (NJ 1" ITO . FBI WASH DC i174?: I Ronald Reagan-514 IIOOPN PRIORITY 8/5/68 ELR TELETYPE TO US SECRET SERVICE - INTELLIGENCE DIVISION FROM DIRECTOR FBI UNCLASSIFIED POSSIBLE THREAT TO GOVERNOR RONALD THREAT AGAINST PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE. 1 LONG BEACH, CALIFORNIA, PHONEI THAT APPROXIMATELY ONE VEER PREVIOUS NHILE NORRING SECURITY FIRST NATIONAL BANK, ADANS AND FIGUEROA BRANCH, LOS ANGELES, A NEGRO NALE, FORTY FIVE To FIFTY, FIVE FEET TEN INCHES, BLACK HAIR, BROWN. b6 EYES, ONE HUNDRED NINETY POUNDS, HEAVY BUILD, BROUGHT b7C IN RECALL PETITION FOR GOVERNOR REAGAN TO BE SOME DISAGREEMENT FOLLOWED. MAN FINALLY STATED AFTER PETITION NOTARIZED THAT SHOULD PERSONALLY SIGN PETITION AS NAY SAVE SHE HAS NAME IN NOTARY BOOK AT BANK AND CAN FURNISH MONDAY NEXT. ROBERT J. SECRET SERVICE, LOS ANGELES, ADVISED ELEVEN FORTY AH INSTANT. Lam; ASPEN END . NEAT ALL INFORMATION ETHERNET-I IS I. it - A 7.0 822 0000 193 . T013031 h. Trotaer . Mr. - . VI VIA TELETYPE Bishop..- I . . rji? Mr. Caspex? ?1 Mr. HASH--5..- ?f Zr? 4 ERRED 3-3-53 EREJI E: 13% T0 IRECTOR (175-5) . In. Tav ., FROM LO ANGELES (175-POSSIBLE THREAT TO GOVERNOR RONALD THREAT PRESIDENTIAL A .21 CANDIDATE. 3?77 I PHONEL ADVISED INSTANT THAT APPROXIMATELY ONO WEEK SECURITY FIRST NATIONAL BANE, FORTY FIVE To FIFTY, FIVE FEET TEN INCHES, BLACK NAIR, BRORN EYES, ONE HUNDRED NINETY POUNDS, HEAVY BUILD, IN RECALL PETITION FOR GOVERNOR REACAN TO BE NOTORIZED. {if - SOME DISAOREEMENT FOLLOWED. MAN FINALLY J-. 1 PETITION NOTORIZED PERSONALLY SION PETITION 7., AS MAY SAVE SHE HAS NAME IN NOTARY BOON AT #354 CAN FURNISH MONDAY 730? *1 17?. 5 . 'Tn 100 ROBERT J. LUTZ, SECRET SERVICE, Lg? ANGELES, UL: 1958 ADAMS AND FIOUEROA BRANCH, LOS ANOELES, A NECRO MALE, b6 R5, 14' I ~15 mam?H1. SUCOP -. va??f L/e I, END CORTAEW gyr?f" ?7 fer Jd?l [1 mm? . . I?g Ronald Reagan-515 ONRECORDED can mm IN - Mr. Troislso?nu . . Mr: A. Mr. VJAJELETYPE Y: 2:121:27? ?suns-- AUG 3 1968 E: 3333,1233: Mr. 5 I Eli: Gale . Mr. cm T0 '?WJTf?ai/?W?i Mr. Tavelr? I. .., Mr. 1? MI: ETTA. Miss Gandy- nan-m TRREAT To GUVERRGR LONG BEACH, CALIFORNIA, PHONE THAT APPROXIMATELY PREVIOUS YHILE AORKIAG SECURITY FIRST NATIONAL BANK, ADAMS AND FIGUEROA BRANCH, Los ANGELES, A NEGRO MALE, 56 FIVE To FIFTY, FIVE FEET TEN INCHES, BLACK HAIR, b7c aaown EYES, ONE HUNDRED NINETY POUNDS, HEAVY BUILD, BROUGHT IN RECALL PETITION FOR GOVERNOR REAGAN To BE SOME DISAGREEMENT FOLLOWED. MAN FIAALLY STATED AFTER PETITION PERSONALLY SIGN PETITIGA As MAY SAVE ?f SHE HAS NAME 1A NOTARY Bong AT LA BANK AND CAN FURNISH MONDAY NEXT. :51 ROBERT J. LUTZ, SECRET SERVICE, LOS ANGELES, ADVISED ELEVEN FORTY AN INSTANT. L- . . "a 9?33 33hm?i?n Ronald Reagan-516 gf?a?P1r_ Rama nduTted MD a ALL INFORMATION IS UNCLASSIYID L526 FBI YASH DC ?3 .563- 465,163 . 7-26-67?) 7. i bx . DISSEMINATION 12/? AND NATIONAL INDICATIONS CENTER '3 DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY 1m. Imonmrron 0mm - Is UNCLASSIFIED - DEPARTMENT OF THE AIR FORCE MAM {15, BY ?7 405, f) SECRET SERVICE (PID) Service) 3? HITE HOUSE SITUATION ROOM, ATT. For disseminating classified data to Secret A .4 1 'cation: 4W d5 3 . 7/0 if}? 7? 4/7] 5; fjf? 1?41. L. L. I message begins on next page.) a I1.- haveELETYPE . a. - Approved . Ronald Reagan-517 Per 1: 9.: /f'i . I 516"? j? UNIT Sent . FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION DELETED PAGE INFORMATION SHEET Civil Action# O7-cv-3240 Total Deleted Page(s) 5 Page 135 Duplicate; Page 136 Duplicate; Page 137 Duplicate; Page 138 Duplicate; Page 139 Duplicate; Deleted Page(s) No Duplication FeeX Forthis Page 4 FD-36 (Rev. 5?22-54Date: 8/7/68 Transmit the following in . (Type in plaintext or code) Via AIRTEL (Priority) 7 MO FBI s? FROM MIAMI E3 SUBJECT: UNSUB, t\ \9 THREAT AGAINST PRESIDENT CANDIDAIE GOVERNOR RONALD GAN, - AUGUST 3, 1968 Re Buffalo teletype to Miami, 8/3/68. Enclosed for the Bureau are 12 copies of an LHM with a copy to Buffalo. LHM is being disseminated locally to Secret Ii;/ Service, U. S. Attorney and 111th M. I. Group, Miami a Orlando, Florida. Miami is not conducting any investigation in this matter in view Of the fact Governor REAGAN had already arrived and departed Miami International Airport without incident. UNREC COPY AND COPY OF FILED IN kiwi TILL.- my Iv?i?5? gap/ac. smegma; 405,193 a My ELM - 1/ . ?at: 2f 3' . . (a @612? ?le Bureau 1? 1 _ffa10 (Enc ?33 97M RonaklReagan-518 (l 105 16665)(Repcon) @317 131/3)in 13" Sent Per A proved: Aim Af? Ee%%gqent in Charge l~ UNITEDQIATES DEPARTMENT OF i FEDEEXI Miami; Florida File No. furnished to $23 Eh ll5?38 August 7, 1968 Re: UNKNOWN SUBJECT. THREAT AGAINST PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE GOVERNOR RONAID AUGUST 3, 1968 On August 3, 1968, the Buffalo Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) telephonically advised the Miami Office that the Buffalo, New York Police Department had received an anOnymous telephdne call at 9 :50 PM, wherein the caller stated, "Reagan at the .airport at ?Miami, bomb will go off and kill several hundred people. The caller then hung up. At 10:21 PM, that same day, Officer 0. R. Martin, Dade County Public Safety Department, Miami International Airport Sub?station, telephonically advised Governor Reagan had arrived at the airport eight minutes earlier and departed the airport complex without incident. The Public Safety' Department was not going to conduct a search in view of the nature of the call. . . gr~ The receipt of the above referenced threat was immediately disseminated to James M. Masterovito, U. 3. Secret Service, and Roger Herman of the M. I. Group by Special Agent J. Mc Breen of the Miami Office of the FBI. This document contains neither recommendations nor conclusions of the FBI. It is the property of the FBI and is loaned to your agency; it and its contents are not to be distributed outside your agency. Ronald Reagan-519 is being. I . This confirms No further investigation conducted in this matter. telej?? r. nic Wjaggp af 4051 . 5?93 3134/; __}71Vi by e: mew EWOLESMRE (Rev. 5-22-54) Transmit the following in . FBI Date: 8/7/58 (Type in plaintext or code} AIRTEL AIR MAIL (P riority) DIRECTOR, FBI SAC SAN FRANCISCO (175?0) 1 San Franc1sco, Calif. THREATS T0 PRESIDENTIAL CAN l? U) UBJECT: Enclosed herewith for the Bureau and Sacramento is one cepy each of a letter written ject to NANCINNEAGAN, wife of Presidential candidate RONAL EAGAN. This letter was 7/18/58 and was received from SA LARRY NEWMAN, U. 3. Secret Service, San Francisco, Calif., on 8/7/68. NEWMAN indicated that his office had received the letter a week or more prior to furnishing it to the FBI and that a review of the letter indicated no real threat had been made to Mrs. REAGAN. am v.1" new .. NEWMAN stated that the letter had been furnished to his office by Secret Service Headquarters with instructions to furnish it to the FBI and that his office contemplated no additional investigation at this time. He stated that the matter had been informally discussed with AUSA JERROLD M. LADAR, San Francisco, and that AUSA LADAR had indicated he saw no violation. SA NEWMAN further advised that his off' ice has an exten ive file on the subject under the name of xi 121:1 Inasmuch as there?g?gagrs to be no real or implied threat contained in the letter and since the Secret Service is already aware of the existence of this letter, no further action is contemplated by Francisco Office UACB. :15 a if: A copy of this communication is being furnished to Sacramento for info tion inasmuch as Governor and Mrs. ??gg??AN's cff1c1al $93 dence is in Sacramento. 2 - Sacramento San Francisco A. ?bna GNM: 10 AUG 9 1953 App ."crr Re; :a?bp?eciol Agent in Charge eag n' dated .11 b6 b7C I . A. . . if}: 7'b7Cr c?w7w ,1ij ?"gf?w MM . - .. a wan-w - ?a7f5?Mr- cud/?J . .. fl??1 :15 CF . 7 597% ?nrW-r?t 1' 7 a i 7 Ronald R?agan- -521 we: /00 3699/3/96" if? 9d 2 :ri?ii?a? H, A x. an. .. 1--.., j. ,qu-vr - xi; ..x?mk f/ 4/ 26,41? HM ,t-f 7 [22:5, ?yw_ x41" WW I 53/ if?? 33.x? 4 4. .., M?L?vf'r?f Z4 Ronald Reagan- -522 ?ag II rim. uw? .4115Wain .. i? n. a. .4 u. ?lrv paw? ha?. ATM Um H040 . . 4 Bag: 2. mwv?l?vlux? . . kgar ?KEr?n?mx?KS a in?lK EX. I \x .12. \grk ?Ki Ram ?fawn. \?Ki?f?x \lk \ixgz?lli?v 13x .., A Kg .AK ?33 ?$th \wu?t Raf! \xk/ .A?xg: a . IluulK?kal'lliA . mWauexnqu?rKn? Noam: 53%-me m. i: . Egg}? - 53% - a, r-yfl . . ?5 . NC). Ii? ?f 5' ?use L/cz ?szzw-z?? ?35> Mm Ronald Reagan- 24 ?m.2.n11911.3..1..9. .. . a 31.111 3.1g? - 1- .. . . ?.1191?. . . . $3 4.3.1-5 . a 5% . \Ni ?\Il .. 19.1w9..311 . 1. ..R. f1. \H..?s?n.11nw.x F31. 1. 19.9.1.1. mosma . . . . .-VV - mm. A Suva-tuna .- . .KL . . :z - - "an-.1 H4, .3. h. ?43 ?w .zm gnaw: a? . -. . Lt:- L, . ?may .19.: .1 m6"; 3? we Ronald Reagan-526 Ronald Reagan-527 .r ?a lwzf'arwh?J?fgm a: Mag-L .5 251-? :?uLL-lh i inunIf: ?Liz? if) a; $2279? .957?? .W.M xi zgxm? f?W?mwwr?\?11 ?1&1 Wk 1111 11111 ?1 121 111. ?121.1% KW 11111. 11.11 V1.1 ?1111?; ?111111. 11 1 f3: :4 4/4/ 0. .9. 1151.511 131.1111. Hr? L05 gageles,_ca1ifom= Fay 1 1? '1 .5, 31%? 9r l. 1111. 1111 1111. 1111 111 1111111 1111 1111. 111 Wm Ronald Reagan-528 1 AA EDT WU A 8/8/68 LAS TC EIEECTCE (157-9760(105"15663) L. ff?,e,d UNSUB, LITTLE RUSTY THEE AT ACAIAST PRESIDENTIAL xx ?5 CAADIDATE I AT CAE AIAETEEA AA EIGHT IASTAAT, SECRET SERVICE kv/"Qr? ADVAACE UAII ADVISED TELEEHDAE CALL HAD SEEA RECEIVED BY AA AS YET MEMBER OF CAADIDATE EEACAA STAEE EACA AA ff?g?k/ IN MISSISSIPPI, FROM A MAN WHO CALLED HIEVSELA AR. IS AE HE AILL BE SDASED TDAITE. TO A EEASAA STAEE AEABER-CALLEE SAID HE AAS A COLORED EEDA MISSISSIPPI. HE SOUNDED DRUNK. HIS AGE GUESSED FROM VOICE AS FORTYFIVE FIFTYSECRET SERVICE ATIEAETIAG To TRACE 3% i 5 SEACR PD OAE HUADEED ELEVEATR A. I. . NOTIFIED. . m- A 3 - .ADAIAISTEATIVE1959 LHM EDLLCAS r?rr--$3A9$a3 THQL, EASE .1394 {1953? FD-rgs (Rev. 5-22-54Date: 8-5-68 I Transmit the following in I (Type in plaintexz or code) I AIBTEL AIRMAIL 1 (Priority) TO: I. DIRECTOR, FBI _35 FROM: SAC, SAN Disco fi?5~ll) Letter Addressed to ,iee?e\\ Contai Threat Against Governor ype? Ronald eavan mailed at Ran Diego I 5 Jaly57; 193333 EN A AL I ATES ?33329i' I THEE Reference is qah Diego teletype Aug met 1, ahd Ran Diego letter Augusty?; 1968. I Enclosed for the Bureau are 11 copies of LHM. Copies of this LHM have been disseminated locally to Recret gervice, the San Diego Police Department, and the san Diego County sherit Office. the letter received by been-4kww;_ forwarded to the reauf?br dissemination to Qecret Service and for laboratorye eihatioh under separate covei. 3; C(?W?E?i?hjj . 7. rinse Bureau (5mg. 11) (1551) ?4559/15/96 San Diego 0553 SE- 102 I $19 p113, Me, big/M 23 Z/dffp/ 16 AUG 8 ?958 fem/m4 {t 24/ ?0 Ego}. 445%; 196524 proved: Sent Per Special Agent in Charge Ronald Reagan-530 55554 mo- '38 15% fit? UNITEQ STATES DEPARTMENT OF -ICE In Reply, Please Refer to San Diego, California 7 File N01 August 5, 1968 Letter Addressed to Containing Threat Against Governor Ronald Reagan mailed at San Diego . July 7, 1968 b6 b7C On August 1, 1968, Mr. John H. Hansen, Special Agent, Bureau of Criminal Identification and Investigation, Department of Justice, State of California, made available to a Special Agent of the FBI a xerox copy of a letter written to the San Diego Evening Tribune and published July 6, 1968, and a letter to in anss3e to her letter to the editor. letter to the editor was as follows: - ?Deterrent to Dictatorship? Editor: I commend-Police Chief O. J. Road and Governor Reagann for their stand against gun legislation. The ?Bleeding Hearts? keep releasing criminals and demanding more rigid gun laws to regulate the law abiding! If they were really honest in what they propose, how about legislation making a long jail term mandatory when a gun is used in the commission of a crime? They want to condition the public to the idea that for citizens to have guns and ammunition in their homes is some how dangerous. The people of the United States present a unique menace to its aspiring dictators. Somewhere out there, there are more rifles, pistols, and shot guns than are possessed by all the armies of the earth combined! And the ?Soft on Criminals and Revolutionary Boys are going quietly out of their minds.? The only way they are going to know is to have you register them. Then and as murders and assassinations continue unabated, guess whose guns will be confiscated? rm; as,? ?may ?13.3 AOL. mmedp?a Bi 5574980~3?% 9?05 I93 RonaklReagan-531 3'6 1 seems 2 . I . 6 LETTER ADDRESSED To b7C CONTAINING THREAT AGAINST GOVERNOR RONALD REAOAN NAILED AT SAN Disco JULY 7, 1968 During the recent riots in WashingtOn, D.C. police stOod by helplessly, on-orders, for hours while revolutionaries shelped themselves to the loot.' Read the report ?Guerrilla ?Warfare Advocates in the United States,? recently released by the Government Printing Office and ?Insurrection" by Susan L. Buck and see what is planned for yOu! Then you decide who is going to pretect your home and family while the "Bleeding Hearts" 'tie the hands of our police. The time to let your Congressmen and the Representatives -know you are opposed to gun registration is now. The time to elect men who will stand up for America is November 5. . 314/ Jim FormeW? The letter written as ollows?m I b6 b7C "gRonaklReagan-532 32hi.304. .24 p-I I I 049 jVL?r?w/V -- a A IJ 4 "may [111*- k? 40?.342 two IggI 11It-zI'Ror'iachI Reagan-533 i IL um" . .- .. . - . My .u?C . 70/ 50077: Dim in . u' Cy . LETTER ADDRESSED To MRS. b7C VCONTAINING THREAT b6. RONALD REAGAN MAILED AT SAN DIEGO JULY 7, 1968 Mr; Hansen advised that 701 South 32nd street, is a nonexistent address. Chester Miller, Secret Service, qan Diego, was personally advised of the content of the two letters quoted above at 4: 57oF. M. on august 1, 1968. Copies of the above letter_were made available to the Ran Diego Police Department and the San Diego County- Sheriff's OffiCe on August 2, 1968. a a This document contains neither recommendations nor cenclusiOns of the FBI. It is the property of the FBI and is loaned to your agency; it and its contents are not to be distributed outside your agency. RonaklReagan-535 X30459 (Rev. 7-17-68) it?. Gov. Rona fonnia as pu 1c a nounced that he will campaign for Rich- ard Nixon. But close ?riecnds Tolson r? DeLooch . . Mohr Merry-(yo-Round Bish ?A'd d' eagan to man Ell/lie . .. . 33?. . Dr? on for two, ballots, and indicatedl "Did the bakers know for Gale 1 Ii that if after that Reagan was whom the cake was being Rosen i I no la . a serious candidate he barked?? asked the security 11' 9 men? Rhodes, would plump for Rea- don?t think so,? replied Tovel ga-n on the third ballot. Stofbelrg. Trotter of Reagan say he won?t. Maybe he?ll make a few speeches in California; but unless his pres- ent mood changes, that?ll be all. Inside reason is that rela- tions between Reagan and Nixon, two Californian-s repre- senting the conservative wing of the GOP, were not cordial in Miami Beach. At times they tended toward the vitriolic. In the first place, Reagan was convinced that Nixon was behind the movement which rounded up around 700,000 sig- natures demanding that he be recalled. Reagan figured that'Nixorn had inSpired this as a means of embarrassing him just prior to the Miami Beach convention. Second, a a 11 really thought/he had a chance to get the nomination. He was vastly encouraged at first by Southern delegates, and took himself quite "seriously. One of those in whom he c'onfided was Gov. James Rhodes of Ohio, to whom he offered the position of Vice President on the Reagan ticket. Rhodes, a skilled poli? ticiva'n who plays his cards close to his chest, would not cammiit himself. He did prom- Nixon was worried over the fact that Reagan picked up the story printed in this column that Nixon advisers had rec- ommended Sen. Ed Brooke, the Massachusetts Negro, to be Vice President. Reagan forces copied the column and made sure it was delivered to every Southern delegation.' The whole Reagan move- ment frightened Nixon. .The two men left Miami Beach publicly cooperative but pri- vately not friends. Bombs for Agnew? How many bombs can be hidden in a birthday cake? bath the question which up- arently worried Richard Nix- on?s strict security men at the Eden Roc hotel last week in Miami Beach. The question as raised when Sam S?tof- berg, a' Baltimore business- sent a birthday cake fes- tooned with elephants to the hotel suite of Gov. Spiro Agnew, congratulating him on his nomination to be Vice President. Shortly after the cake was sent up to Agnew?s sullte, tofberg got a telephone call rem the security men want- There were other questions. In all it took 20 minutes to get the cake delivered to Gov. Agnew. Questions and Answers Dan Moore, Jr., Cleve-l land Heights, Ohio?No Vice President of the United States in this century has differed with his chief in the White House with the possible exeep- tion of Charles G. Dawes, Vice President under Cool~ idge. On March 10, 1925, Dawes was late in getting up to the Senate to break a tie vote on the con?rmation of Charles B. Warren to be Attorney,Gen- oral. The vote was 40 to 40, and if Dawes had been present he could have voted with Cool? idge. There was speculation at that time that Dawes was pur- posely late because he was at odds with the Chief Executive. This is the only pub ,zed case of a difference bet?Wee-n the President and Vice Presi- dent ~in this century. Critics who assert Vice President Humphrey should differ with LBJ over Vietnam forget this. Vice President Nixon was most obsequious toward Presi? 1 ing to know where the cake ise Reagan that he would hold as baked. Stofberg told them. Jlu'g ..O_i_iio delegation intact All. manor. 63 mg cm 3:313.- (?5:193 i 13 6 5%?8 m? sit/WE NOT RECORDED )8?er -- 2' fRoh?aId Reagan-536 dent Eisenhower, even after Ivke, asked at a press confer-u %mnc lelat Nixon had?- - ed to the Ra?-fiance?s- tic-n, hesitate-d and said he could not answer. He said he would need some time to think 1t over. Norman Beach Poolesvill Md._Contrary th some 1-: ports, Rep. Charles Mathias of Maryland was not for Rocke? feller because of any financial offers to support Mathias?s {campaign Mathias felt that ?Gov. Rockefeller-?5 position and exerience on? urban and Negro problems made him a better presidential candidate. It was difficult for Mathias to take this position, in view of Gov. Agnew?s staunch cham- pionship of Richard but the decision was one of 0 not 1? Egg! 59g- tr?u?o} ?1Tele. Room c: limes I Ligda Tarler, Mic, Senate voted on the poultry inepection bill on July 29, one day before our "column of July 30. Hence the apparent error in reporting that the Holland amendment, which would have weakened poultry inspection, was still an issue. The Holland amendment was defeated overwhelmingly by the Senate one day before the column was published. 1968, Bell-McClure Syndicate, Inc. Drew Pearson will predict whether LBJ will change his and run again, on radio station WTOP at 9:40 morning. My #9 ?e Washington Post Times Herald The Washington Daily News The Evening Star (Washington) The Sunday Star (Washington) Daily News (New York) Sunday News (New York) New York Post The New York Times The Sun (Baltimore) The Daily World The New Leader The Wall Street Journal The National Observer People?s World Examiner (Washington) met-1 53.3% i. 7 j. Date .. 1L W43, it?, . . I FBI Date: 8/8/68 Transmit the follow' in 1% (Type in plaintext or code) REGISTERED MAIL (P ribrity) DIRECTOR, FBI (151?9760) . Mir TON CGNTAI :11in AC, MIAMI (105?16665) (P) .5 gum; . UNSUB, Aka "Little Rusty"; THREAT AGAINST SIDENTIAL CANDIDATE EDNAL Remytel 8/8/68. Enclosed herewith for the Bureau are 11 copies of LHM, dated as above, captioned SUBJECT, Also Known As "Little Rusty"; THREAT AGAINST PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE RONALD REAGAN. Since Secret Service is handling this matter, Miam1 is conducting no further investigation. . of; 4 a? Copies of the LHM are being disseminated locally to the Secret Service (Miami and Miami Beach Advance Unit); 111th I. Group 6agaiiando and Group Operations, Miami Beach), and SI 031 Disrict, Robins HEB, 6a., and Bureau (Enc-ll (RM) 50 1 Jackson 2 - Miami (1 - 105?16665 355" [696; (1 l75j'Newt)? A 15. 1-2-1: Maia: ?12: .r-gsi: y" I. (6) "r fif?z?z?h?rr - 41" Ronald Reagan-537 6 ,ve "wt1211/ - ?1 ?11 $.51 . STATES DEPARTMENT OF 11.1w FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION Miami, Florida In Reply. Please Refer to Angus; 3 1968 File No. 105~16665 UNKNOWN SUBJECT, Akee Known As "Little Euetys" THREAT AGAINST PRESEDEETKAL CANDIDATE RONALD REAGEE At 1:19 August 8, 1968, Secret Service Advance Unit Miami Beech, Florida, advised a telephone cell had been received by an as yet unknown member of candidate staff, from en we own town in Mississippi, from 'e men who called himself LITTLE The caller stated "Mr is :nnocent We don' need REAGAN anymoreo He will be bombed tonight. According to a REAGAN staff member, the caller said he was a colored man from Mississippi? He eeunded drunk. .His age was gpessed from his voice as 45 to 50. Secret Service was attempting to trace the call. All local and Federal agencies were advised PROPERTY OF FBI - This document containe neithe; recommendations nor conclusions of the FBI It is the property 0: the FBI and is loaned to your agency; it.end iEscontente'ame not to be distributed outside your agency. alts [7(4331335593393 EM 403 [7?3 RonaklReagan-538 3? my, in. Mr. Tomb- . DeLoach?.. . . . Mohr- . Bishop__- Em am I . Casper I. mm arm . sscnon\ . . ACID 1968 2' Miss Holmes..? FBI LOS ANG. I Miss Gandrm RRED 10-8-68 NLB I FBI HASH DC 12:42 AM TO DIREC R, AND SACRAMENTO FROM LDS ANGELESI (115-0) THREAT AGAINST LIFE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN, YORBA LINDA, CALIFORNIA, OCTOBER SEVENTH SIXTY THREATS - MISCELLANEOUS. AT ELEVEN FORTY THO PM, OQJOBER LOS ANGELES OFFICE, FBI, SEVENTH, SIXTY EIGHT, RECEIVED PHONE CALL FROM I PLACENTIA, CALIFORNIA, NND ADVISED AS FOLLOWS: HAD BEEN DRINKING NIIN UNSUB SINCE EARLIER THIS 71:36 UNREG COPY FILED IN .2 EVENING IN THE YORBA LINDA INN DAR, YORBA LINDA, CALIF. DURING CDNVERSAIIDN, UNSUD NENIIDNED I?m HERE BECAUSE REAGAN NILL BE REAGAN $5 XDAZY ?5 HERE AND NILL SIAIED UNSRE IRANSIENI DUI DID NDI SAY b6 WHERE FROM. UNSUB DID NOT ELABDRATE 0N ABOVE STATEMENT REGARDING b7C REAGAN AND DID NDI FURNISH ANY FURTHER INFO EXCEPT Io 1 1968 YEARS, DESCRIBE UNSUB AS WHITE MALE, DARK NAVY HAIR, THIRTY MEDIUM BUILD, PROMINENT NOSE BROKEN AND TURNED TO RIGHT, WEARING BLACK AND WHITE CHECKED SPORT COAT, UNABLE TO DESCR BE ANY FURTHER. CA [25" I: :\Ror%ld Reagan- -539 45:3 PAGE TWO LA 175-0 LT. BARNEY MCKOVN, VATCR COMMANDER, ORANGE COUNTY 50, SANTA ANA, CALIFORNIA, ADVISED OF ABOVE INFO BY SA JAMES G. KEENAN AND u.s. SECRET SERVICE, LOS ANGELES BEING ADVISED FOR THEIR INFO. STATED-NE DID NOT HAVE ANY INFORMATION THAT GOVERNOR REAGAN DUE IN ORANGE COUNTY AREA NITRIN COMING NEEKS. STATED VODLD DISPATCH PATROL UNIT TO CHECK MATTER CDT IMMEDIATELY. SACRAMENTO ADVISE GOVERNOR OFFICE OF POSSIBLE THREAT AGAINST LIFE. END SVM FBI WASH DC Ronald Reagan-540 sac, has Angolan Io/sxsa 1 ix 0 ?3353!? 633M (.4 I Bhact??ki 23 1 Mr. Schutz mans; maxi: mum m3 at ammon- nonm ?mm, mm. mm, 10/7/68 1 1mm .- rims laurtel 10/8/68. As you If. tiara, Governar Ronald Itnsan is no longar considernd a Presidential candidntn undar the statutory prot?ctiou a! tn: 3. 3. Saerut Garviau. As in? dicated in roioum nonunieation, hmm, the still has the responsibility under agreement with Secret Enrica to advise that ?may hon an I last}. and qutors level of any thrants against tan life of Gowernar luagan. Inch threat am In weighed independently and Burma noti?ad by appropriate communication. In ?very in.- stance, appropriate letterhead 3min should be prepared for dissemination imlly and at headquarters to B. 3. Secret Barrie-m. Accardingly, you should submit an: in this in- stance and be so guided in the future. 1 Sacramento (Into) 1F fk'mim 91 53W (95? MAILED :23 OCT 8 - 1958 COMM-FBI 3v: 1 3 3 00m '31. 41L UNITE Ronald Reagan 541 561.1111 1 W1 51-2): Transmit the foilowing 1.: A-L?fr?. {j 1 .i .A {Sar?rafz?iltCa . L38 Aim/Le; a Bishop 1 n4 r? A ..- . .P, All?? M. . - ?0 (?1333M ?1,5 gr:- at. 5: 1'3ny . .I?u 31351:: 1-: r! mac-J'REITMr. Tele. Miss Miss Gandym .. . - -I. Y, DeLoach--__ Mohr--. 11?; shop uI i ahan Conrad. Fe} a Rossenwlt? Sun Evan AT IWFORMATION CONTAINED UNCLASSIFIED 1? EJ- Tc mg (7.5mm 35 34> 1 fora/93 1 ?n .LJL-I a! Li? Elna .. :1.?ng {Is i1 .1 :3 L54nad 5cm; 5 A . a ?1511! E: I.) I. (33.106 J.- ru- 14?, CI, 3 53:11.11 A 21:1! .4 A: '5 List19.94.11Ir? Appruvcdz Specie}. Ageant in- Charge 34.; ?kw. UNIQD STATES DEPARTMENT OF FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION Los Angeles, California In Re ly, Please Refer to me 150- October ll, 1968 ?1341; I?ii?oemrrow 4 11353,, ?73? its Meg] Br E??gz?jg? UNKNOWN THREAT AGAINST THE LIFE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGNN YORBA LINDA, CALIFORNIA OCTOBER 7, 1968 so At 11:42 PM, October 7, 1968, _I; Placentia, California, telephonically advised the os nge es Office of the FBI of a threat against the life b6 of Governor Ronald Reagan. b7c explained that he had been drinking with an unknown male, during the evening of October 7, 1968, at the Yorba Linda Inn Bar, Yorba Linda, California. During a conversation, the unknown male stated "I'm here because Reagan will be here tomorrow and tomorrow will be Reagan's last day." Nothing further, regarding Governor Reagan, was mentioned by the unknown male. ESQ that the unknown male admitted he was a transient;' urnished no information regarding his residence. the unknown male as white, 35 years old, medium build, and a prominent nose which appeared to have been broken. stated the unknown male wore a black and white chec e: sport coat. Lieutenant Barney McKown, Orange County Sheriff's Office, Santa Ana, California, was advised of the above information at PM on October 7, 1968, by Special Agent James G. Keenan.? Lieutenant McKown advised that he had no indication that Governor Reagan planned to visit Orange County in the near future. Special Agent Leon J. GOpadze, Secret Service, Los Angeles was advised of the above information, at 9:30 AM on October 8, 1968, by Special Agent Melvin L. Flohr, Los Angeles Office of the FBI. This document contains neither recommendations nor conclusions of the FBI. It is the property of the FBI and is loaned to your agency; it and its contents are not to be distributed outside your agency. Ronald Reagan_543 NO further investigation is being fiducted in this matter. we a 32.2% ?7 Tolson a! 53! MAKEDIO OCT 241958 I 75W 1! DeLocch Mohr Bishop Casper Callahan Conrad Felt Gale Rosen a Su llivun Tove! ?55; Trotter Tele. Room 0 Holmes Gundy sac, Sacramento 10/24/68 _Director, EBI Fig} 3mm Ir. mmarms. mom cerium JJ 5 Director 13.951312!) Washington errw er egg; Governor Renal . - . 147' $431522 A 2" J, 2 221??; (?La-Lt" x? 1'4 ?0?11 142. final if, . km: hay-u. ?Megan's-1mmb7C Eff 42? ?our" I "i?n ?1""er i 3 Ronald Reagar2 I 23"? 2. A -. .1119- PI. .2 L- .. 3A h. ?l a. .H 7 W??wf ?lthy 4 1 0- WM JUN: iv MOMS: t- 'Jl?i mt. (mun "r I by. .di-u. mama Mu 1mm; WY 1 {a??liw f/Japhwl ?Cy I I r- 1?1 (f (KILLS C. JWLJ 4- 65' MC. (haw: [fl Q/m 7955 ?j alw?f?o faii?t?waw" 5 Lam? . (W ?i'dhilw . . I .- .M u. --.. .-L. I . . A .7 ..-A - A- V: . ?:54 as?? f: . .zrz- swarm T'I'nx?? . I 4':er 2? ALL INFORMATION Lam" IS UNCLASSIFIED 290m: mum u. 8 $1 gm .55; 5549 any . an" .m Emmi 01:: ms my): . IS .1550 NFOR rW? iR?J.11!!nulgll. I K: A . CABLEGRAM TO LEGAT HONG KONG :if; ?3 FROM DIRECTOR FBI 73W 7 {Wu .5509 as A3 a- 3 VISIT 0F GOVERNOR REAGAN To HONG KONG AND MANILA, SEPTEMBER ONE NINE SIX NINE. STATE DEPARTMENT ADVISED GOVERNOR RONALD EEAGAN HAS BEEN DEEIGNATED AS SPECIAL REPRESENTATIVE To INAEGURATE THE U.S. CULTURAL CENTER IN MANILA, PHILIPPINE ISLANDS. HIS ITINERARY IS AS FOLLOWS: SEPTEMBER FIVE - SEPTEMBER ANDERSON AIR FORCE BASE, GUAM AND HONG SEPTEMBER NINE SEPTEMBER ELEVEN MIDWAY AND SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA. INSURE ANY INFORMATION RECEIVED INDICATING A THREAT TO PHYSICALLY HARM OR EMBARRASS GOVERNOR REAGAN IS GIVEN IMMEDIATE LOCAL To STATE DEPARTMENT, SECRET ?Bishop ?33; 53mm REC a see note, page 7? i, i l, Foreigi?nEIN sop Hnit ?ro te Ehru ?o?r review) 6:353? BPMfave! ale Room Ronald Reagan-626 Tolson DeLoach Mohr ?olmes 5g (Emma TELETYPE UNIT hm . '69 CABLEGRAM T0 HONG KONG RE: VISIT 0F GOVERNOR REAGAN TO HDHG KONG AND MANILA, SEPTEMBER 1969 SUCH INFORMATION SHOULD ALSO BE ruminant) 1'0 In: BUREAU BY CABLE IN FORM SUITABLE FOR DISSEMINATIOH. INCLUDING OF PERSONS T0 WHOM DISSEMINATION MADE WITH ADMINISTRATIVE.DAIAI IN THE LAST PARAGRAPH. NOTE: Above information received from Bert Bennington, Acting Chief, Division of Protective Security, State Department via Bureau liaison. RonaklReagan-627 1" ?7 - - Mr. Mur?l!? 9/4/69 TELETYPE COOS. GENT lbylA TELEI EJE 3'9. TO SAC HONOLULU 1 .w i Ear; SACRAMENTO VMV EA SR-zm 554qu ED FROM DIRECTOR FBI 93 ?5 45,193 VISIT 0F GOVERNOR REAGAN TO HONG KONG AND MANILA, SEPTEMBER ONE NINE NINE. STATE DEPARTMENT ADVISED GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN HAS uhp? BEEN DESIGNATED AS SPECIAL REPRESENTATIVE T0 INAUGURATE. U.s. CULTURAL CENTER IN MANILA, PHILIPPINE ISLANDS. HIS ITINERARY IS AS FOLLOWS: SEPTEMBER FIVE - SEPTEMBER SEVEN ANDERSON AIR FORCE BASE, GUAM, AND HONG. SEPTEMBER NINE SEPTEMBER ELEVEN MIDWAY AND SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA. RECIPIENTS INSURE ANY INFORMATION RECEIVED INDICATING A THREAT TO PHYSICALLY HARM OR EMEARRASS GOVERNOR REAGAN IS GIVEN IMMEDIATE DOCAL DISSEMINATION TO STATE DEPARTMENT, SECRET SERVICE AND OTHER LOCAL AUTHORITIES. SUCH INFORMATION SHOULD ALSO BE FURNISHED BUREAU BY TELETYPE IN FORM SUITABLE Tolson DeLoOch Mohr Bishop Casper Callahan Conrad FOR DISSEMINATION INCLUDING IDENTITEESOF PERSONS T0 WHOM 4;}Jj Felt Gale BPM: mea. 3 ?7 ."Emusw? 3,4 ?01518n -- ?g ?f?v -. 1" gg?e??s Erf if." .5. ?g Pf 3? girls Ronald Reagan-628 I MAIL TELETYPE UNIT I TELETYPE T0 SAC HONOLULU SACRAMENTO RE: VISIT OF GOVERNOR REAGAN TO AND MANILA, SEPTEMBER, 1969 DISSEMINAIION WAS MADE WITH IN THE LAST PARAGRAPH. NOTE: AboVe information received from Bert Bennington, Acting Chief, Division of Protective Security, State Department, via Bureau liaison. RonaklReagan-629 .. . a 12?: ?aw?J f: '90it?. 3'5 I in". 3,41Lrs?am?: .. . - r, (J LJF'wwr MI4.1 AI: INFORMATEON CONTAINED E73. Em Ts DECLASSTETED I 3-1153322 NITEL 9&35a72 GKF 0/4} . - . ($153,135 5. a2, ACTTEG DTEECTOE (DOMESTIC EIVTSTONT .. A. . 3; 319:? 5:29 :?caim . DACMFFEFFG .TTETTETEE g; A FROM SAN 3E: 35: J?Q?ai ?A?iri . - - - H. - Age; TEE: PR Es on: STA Ga Verna)? Pam/T AT THIRTY-SIX Fame? SEPTEMBER NINE EEN TEE EGEALE s: CUSTOMS CALIEonwiag ADVISED THAT BEETEE THE 0F NINETEEN SEVEETY :3 SET FORTH HEREAFTER, MADE THE FOLLOWING STATEHEET DURING A PHILOSOPHY CLASS AT IMPERIAL VALLEY COLLEGE9 EL CALIFORNIA: RONNIE BABY OR TRICKY DICK NEXON GE- DHERE I CAN GET NEAR THEM, THEY ARE DEAD. I DISH THEY YWOQ i EOULE coEE Eowm HERE. THEY GET OUT EUETHEE STATED HE To-eo_ T3 PARK, FLORIDA, BUT wAs ADD THAT IF MC GOVERN .. .YW-L?m?y?wmOTHERS COULD EECTTEY THE EED 513453.:- MEQUER STATED THAT HE INFGR ARRESTEE FDR HIE WHICH 3TB PAGE DME w; gum?M, 4._.Ah FILED Agar-a; a 5:521972 E. . 63': ?Wynn-,1 3. - Mme-rm w? GE TWO SD JARS WEAVER ADVISED THAT HE BELIEVES TO BE CAPABLE OF CARRYIIG OUT HIS THREAT AND BELIEVES HIM TO owm A ?36 TWISMUCI as HAS MADE SEVERAL REIERENCES To SUCH WE APSE.) 03E TEN SEPTEMBER NINETEEN BARBARI FINN, SECRETARY, U080 SECRET SAN 015809 WAS ADVISED BY THOMAS J. SUMMERS9 JR09 AGENT WITH THE FBI, 0? THE ABOVE INFORMATION AND AI ONE SI SERVICE AGENT JOHM KEEFE wAs ADVISED BY SUMMERS OF THE IMPERTIL LAW ENFORCEMENT RECORDS REVEAL N0 INFORMATIUN YEENTIFIABLE WITH CAPTAIN RICHARD RAMIREZQ IMPERIAL COUNTY OFFICE, EL CENTRO, CALIFORNIA9 WAS ADVISED OF THE THREAT BY SPECIAL AGENT SUMMERS AT ONE PoMo SEPTEMBER NINETEEPI SEVENTY TWO. Is DESCRIEEI MALE ADULT, DATE CF b6 EBEEH IFIVE FEET TEN INCHES, ONE SEVENTY POUNDS, SHWnInwn IEMCTM HA1: . ECCTAL SECURITY ACCOUNT NUMBER ,37' END LIAIKEE I?Iii; - rmwumn.w.w Ro?n'ald Reagan-631 . i . PAGE THREE SD 174- my CALEXICO, CALIFORNIA. OCUPATION: STUDENT Ibe IMPERIAL VALLEY CGLLEGE, EL CENTR09 CALIFORNIA. . b7c ADMINISTBAIIVII MAKES REFERENCE TO INDIVIDUAL POSSIBLY T0 RONALD REAGAN, IT IS SUGGESTED SACRAMENTO CONTACT AUTHORITIESO N0 LHM IS BEING SUBMITTED. EM) FBI WA RDR Ronald Reagan?632 f, /h o?of?? i .u Jane 7, 1977 QETS IDE SOURCE C3 Honorable Ronal? Reagan Suite 812 3.0960 Wilshiro Boulevard @031 Harrow 6615111 11% Los Angeles, California 90024 if?: mars 313611581319? 15632 i: r1113 553 ?ear Mr. Reagan: BM 3? . 759 5 4.5?93 I have had the oyportunity to see a copy of your radio commentary entitleo and thank you for bring- ing the important subject of terrorism to the attention of yoar listeners. It to encouraging to have your support and my associates and I appreciate your bringing your views on thia matter to the attention of the public. We also thank you for your remarks concerning the indictment of former Special Agent John Kearney. For your information, Mr. James L. HoGovern. President of the Society of Former Special Agents of the FBI, Inc., has furnishe? me a copy of a letter he has sank to former Special Agents and others advising that a fun? has been set up to help defray the legai exoensea of employees and ex~employees against whom prosecutive action has been initiated. Contributions can be made to the Agents? Legal Defense Fun?. Security Rational Bank, 2000 Street, N.W., washington, D. C. 30036. Any questions you might have shonlo be directed to Mr. McGovern at 2689 Canna Ridge Circle. W1, Atlanta, Georgia 30345. MAKER 2.4 /00:I?ii Sincerely yours, I i 4/ .- M: :31? meL 3 JUN 1o 1977 WV Dp.ADlnv._. . i Clarence M. Ke11ey Idm. Serv. Dir?QCt-E??novm ai Legal . I I Grim. Plan. Los Angeles Eric-1053138 Fin. 8: Bea, Mani. Springfield (80?301013.0 m. a: . ervs Lgur Reuralrtel 5 24 77. Rec. M9 .411 Public Am. 0311.1: onJm.g; . Add?:ss per prior correspondence. RonaklReagan- -938 C>?if55 Crim. Inv. Fin. 8- Pers. Training .- Public Affs. Off._ Te?ephone Rm. UNIT 7? . "Wm?wi -- 'v Assoc. lime?my is FD-36 (Rev. 7-27-76) ?1 5" Eff 355Agni; mum?mute: TRANSMIT VIA: PRECEDENCE: - J. CLASSIFICATION: in if j: Teletype :1 Immediate [3 TOP SECRET Facsimile :11 Priority [3 SECRET {1191 . W. Airtel [j Routine CONFIDENTIAL i a: 2 CLEAR 1 ?5-755 I WP: . Date 6/15/77 I 1 E'uiq'u hr 5T0: DIRECTOR, FBI 1 17"? A, ATTN: Inspector HOMER A. BOYNTON, Public Affairs Office 4? FROM: SAC, SPIRNGFIELD (80-301) SUBJECT: FAVORABLE COMMENTARY CONCERNING THE FBI ReSIairtel tofBu, 5/24/77; Director KELLEY's let to the Honorable RONALD 6/7/77. Enclosed for the Bureau and Los Angeles is a copy of an additional favorable commentary made by Mr. RONALD REAGAN concerning the FBI. On 6/14/77 enclosed commentary was monitored by the Springfield Division on Springfield, Illinois. Above being furnished to the Bureau and Los Angeles for information. . Jim: was $133 i m: 313519? mseeyws 40511003 . REC 76 ?1 em \v 1,238 Bureau (Encl l) Los Angeles (Encl 1) (Info) 1 - Springfield (80?301) JWM/pme (4) 1 Ronald Reagan-939 .'tt @pm?wlmm ransml 6 (Number) (Time) er GPO 1977 - 225-539 arenas .. (Reprint of a Radio Program entitled Comment ary by Ronald Reagan.) gi?f~ Some weeks ago, on this program, I told of the retired F. B. I. agent who openings, and so forth in order to get a line on the revolutionary Weatherman organization. All of this took place several years ago before the agent, John Kearney, had retired. It seems that Mr. Kearney had done nothing that wasn' standard operating procedure at this time. And certainly, the best interests of our peeple and the nation called for knowing, in advance, what activities were being planned by the Weatherman activists. It is hard to understand how the Justice Department thinks the interest of the nation will be served by proceeding with this after?the-fact prosecution of a man who served his country and his fellow citizens honorably and well. The Attorney General, himself, has expressed sorrow about the case, which makes one wonder why he doesn't drop the whole thing. He has even.dec1ared that John Kearney will face ruin even if he's found innocent, because his entire life savings will be used up in his defense against the charges. This charging of an F. B. I. agent with a crime for carrying out orders has reduced -- to zero the morale of every agent. The Bureau, a proud service with a unique record, is being treated as if it were some kind of "secret police?, guilty of harassing and persecuting the law?abiding. Personally, I don' know of any governmental agency more entitled to the respect and gratitude of the American people. It has guarded against sabotage in times of ear, carried on?a tireless crusade against organized crime and aided local law enforcement in every way possible. How, in a climate of fear, mistrust and hysteria, not only the Bureau, but police intelligence of every kind, has been attacked as somehow threatening us _with a police state. It is in this climate that former agent John Kearney is being prosecuted. When I spoke of this before, I closed the broadcast expressing the hope that.a committee to come to the aid of John Kearney would be formed so I. could contribute to his defense fund. Well, that hope has been realized and there is such a connittee. Former United States Senator James Buckley, former United States Ambassador Clare Booth Luce and former Secretary of the Treasury William Simon are writing letters seizing for help to finance the "Citizen' a Legal Defense Fund for the Contributions should be sent to the Committee, Suite 608, 95 Madison Avenue; New York City 10016. I'll repeat that address in a few seconds, so be ready. The monies received will be turned over to the Special Agents' legal fund of the Society of Former Agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation which will assist Kearney in the forthcoming trial. Now I said I'd repeat that address. It is, "Citizen's Legal Defense Fund for the Suite 608, 95 Madison Avenue, New York City 10016. I know this is something I haven't done before, but in a time when dozens of government agencies are snooping into every facet of our lives without restraint of any kind, it seems to me there is a great injustice in bounding an agency whose sewcalled snooping is aimed at our protection. may. resonance densities. Ronald Reagan 940. 9 P551: 7/ FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION DELETED PAGE INFORMATION SHEET Civil Action# O7?cv?3240 Total Deleted Page(s) 2 94 Page 6 Referral/Direct; Page 7 Referral/Direct; Page 8 Referral/Direct; Page 9 Referral/Direct; Page 10 Referral/Direct; Page 11 Referral/Direct; Page 16 Referral/Direct; Page 17 Referral/Direct; Page 22 Duplicate; Page 23 Duplicate; Page 25 Referral/Direct; Page 26 Referral/Direct; Page 28 Referral/Direct; Page 29 Referral/Direct; Page 40 Duplicate; Page 41 Duplicate; Page 42 Duplicate; Page 43 Duplicate; Page 44 Duplicate; Page 45 Referral/Direct; Page 46 Referral/Direct; Page 47 Referral/Direct; Page 48 Referral/Direct; Page 49 Referral/Direct; Page 50 Referral/Direct; Page 51 Referral/Direct; Page 52 Referral/Direct; Page 53 Referral/Direct; Page 56 Duplicate; Page 57 Duplicate; Page 60 Referral/Direct; Page 61 Referral/Direct; Page 65 Duplicate; Page 66 Duplicate; Page 71 Duplicate; Page 72 Referral/Direct; Page 73 Referral/Direct; Page 76 Duplicate; Page 77 Duplicate; Page 80 Duplicate; Page 81 Duplicate; Page 82 Referral/Direct; Page 83 Referral/Direct; Page 84 Referral/Direct; Page 88 Referral/Direct; Page 89 Referral/Direct; Page 90 Referral/Direct; Page 93 Duplicate; Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Duplicate; Duplicate; bl; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Duplicate; Duplicate; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; bl; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; bl; bl; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; bl; b1; bl; b1; bl; b1; bl; b1; bl; b1; bl; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Deleted Page(s) No Duplication Fee For this Page 11? 99991.9 99 99999. 3131193991 WI 5095l9 91 9999 9, 59999919 5:?99999 9991 999 1999 999199 -99 99999 9999999 9L 9?99 99919~999999r a?f39 999L959 ruh9h999 99 9999. 9R 999, 9 9 ERET 8999199 99919999 RR 1:99 993199 99999T999T 999 9999 99 99999 59999 ?99 9 1 T139991 r: .9 {49999 99 99L9991H..R91LE 999999 19, 1999, 9T 2999.99499 999 91999 9199 99 9999999999999999 991_999 999 999-99999 9999999wn99 . ?3 "??qnigWH PREQENTL 111111111111 11111111 111111 1111111111 1111111111 1?10 991??: 9??92995991999? 919mm 99999 99999, 1 91,. 529,9 91141. :9??74 99199 9999999999 1999 9999 3999 BY $999199 9 9999991991 f99R9999999: :99 LBS., sn?f? H919. H933L1995S, 909 ?$9999999,3" 9099 99L999999l1 I ?999_; 1 91999 99 999199 99 99L999999. 9199 3:99 5999999999 99 9199'99 999999 9999199 99999919 99999199 99.:59.351 9'3? RR 1A )lC?C?m x=h~R? a/3n/51 ERIORITY FBI TOFO LEGAL ATTACHE LONDON PRIORITY ELEGAL ATTACHE PARIS PRIORITYI (0 ET ATTACHE ROME PRIORITYI NET REQUESTS ALL PERTINENT INTELLIGENCE INFORMATION Hm THIS VISIT BE FURNISHED IF ANY INFORMATION COMES TO 550/5350 cvan/L31. 1' I Hm PAGE TUO DE HQ DUNE I A YOUR FORMARD SAME TO FBIHQ FOR TRANSMITTAL T0 1 01 EDDI- BT 4-528 . . . mt) 3M) My CHANGED TO My Met/7x r00~33319b~ 195 ma?muW 813w") m" CHANGED TO NOV 101983 ow) 401} 4-528 . I . Imam Iqb? m; ?'lgq Sigj?c? ??90 -a 33345 ?lqt .q CHANGED TO ?BBlenqg _?q3 NOV 1 01983 and? Fall 00.! 1% 1 f. . PP RUEHFB TEngm-gt? Db RU HSE AASS 2821995 19 23:: NR I I- A. CSISCCZ 0 81 II: g; Cec.rr.gm.__ FM UNITED TATES SECRET SERVICE (INTELLIGENCE DIV) I Em?mww j: TO DIRECT FBI (ATTN: CRIMINAL INVESTIGATIVE DIVISION) fimtmf S'u' BT 1.33C?hone?ma 5; Secfy CITE 4455 5? SUBJECT: NOTIFICATION OF ANTICIPATED PRESIDENTIAL /7 TRAVEL. Di 0er THE VICE PRESIDENT IS SCHEDULE TO I mass- ACHU SETT . 127:: ?z FOR SPECIFIC ITINERARY AND INFORMATION REGARDING THIS VISIT, LIAISON SHOULD BE MADE WITH THE BOSTON FIELD OFFICE. Km 530E010198 WW SUBJECT: ti: f; 4. ?v 0-73 (Rev. 10.26-73) MESSAGE RELAY VIA TELETYPE gm CLASSIFIC- con I A PRECEDENCE RI ORI TY . FM DIRECTOR FBI T0 Legal Attache, MexiCo City Commission i Department or Energy Department of Treasury Attn: U. S. Customs [3 White House Situation Room i: Attn: National Security Counc? E: Department of Treasury Department of theAir Force A Attn: Bureau of Alcohol (AFOSI) - Tobacco Firearms U-Department of the Army Naval Investigative Service Ej Commandant"U COast Gufrd National Security Agency (ATTN: Director. Defense Intelligence Agency Director CIA Department ofTransportation Attn: Director of Security Drug Enforcement Administration General ?Services Administration ?4 (WASHDC area. Specify Office) (O?'ler' Areas, sgecify . ., U. S. Secret" Service (PIDI Attnf Executive Protective. Service S. Postal S?rvice Federal Aviation Administration Federal Protective Service [3 Secretary of State Attn: Chief Postal Attn: Director Bureau of Inspector 7 Intelligence Research Attn: VISA Office (SERVICE ALSO AVAILABLE TO GOVERNMENT AGENCIES LISTED. SCONTACT nun? A m?rnme A A Room 709 /0(3 Attorney General Deputy AG Attn: Emergency Programs Center Assistant AG, Civil Rights Div. Assistant AG, Criminal Div. Atm: Internal Security SectiOn Attn: General Crimes Section Assistant AG for Administration-u 1: Atari Security's; Administrative;- Services Staff [Immigration 81 Naturalization Service ROOM 5096/6 ORI GINATOR jg ERAL BUREAU commumcmoms CENTER c3 337%?? NW 2 1 1981 no NOT FILE WITHOUT COM PREPARATION OF FORM WHICH CONSISTS OF A PREPRINTED YELLOW. .01 re assuring all necessary editing changes have been made. 1 ?3 1. Minor editing changes shall be made on the xerox as follows: using a lead pencil ONLY draw single line throutg . 7 . . Elisa: 0.73 Only incoming teletype messages which require transmission relay may be prepared for transmisSion using form 0-73. Use of form 0-73 1s restricted to incoming beletypje messages received within the last 3 days which require Irans3 mission relay; all other teletype mes-sages must be prepared using form 0-93. 1 1 f1 - 3 Additions such as notes and administrative data for a Speci?c addressee are not allowed. If a note or adminis- . tratiVe' data 18 r?qdired for a particular addressee a separate 0-73 form mast be prepared. . . The message will be transmitted just as it appears. The person approving the message is solely responsible forComplete appropriate boxes. d',ate classi?cation 81 precedence. 2.5 31;; 32: ?'tm ?.111 List addresses immediately follovVing the or place a check mark in the appropr?t?irexesgg if Type or PRINT the subject 1n the space provided. if: f: Print or type originator? name, room number and telephone extension. - if. 13:; a Wit: 31.. 11:1- .- Indicate approval for transmission by initialing the Approved By? box can 1.in; 12:} PREPARATION OF MESSAGE TO BE TRANSMITTED .2. 2: . Xerox 1 Copy of 1ncoming teletype message. A notation shall be made on the original incoming teletype cOpy made for relay to SACS LEGATS) GOVERNMENT AGENCIES) .7 .- 7 the first and last lines of the heading and connect theSe lines from top right to. bottom left forming. a ?Z,f1gure 3 (33 (DO NOT OBLITERATE THE HEADING. Use horizontal lines to delete sentences or words. Printed changes of- a! ?l word or two to the text of the message may be made; however, changes to the existing text involving more than a - - word or two neceSsitate the originator to initiate a new message using fOrm 0-93. Administrative data or notes may be typed immediately following the text and will be transmitted to all addressees. When using the 0-73 form to disseminate information to field of?ces Legal Attaches and other Government agencies simultaneously, the bext, notes and administrative data must be identical for all addressees. 4-528 (00622;:wa We CHANGED TU )Oqt [qy BISYXLI NOV101983 DOJ 4-528 7 . . 100?32319w19y FSII DOJ 4?528 . . (De?asamqu Wm an-?qunq-? gag/M - WW3 CHANGED TO NOV 101983 - ?6 32? My?? 3/33? CHANGED TO MAR 1952 A 0.73 (Rev. 10-11-78)? ?7 FM DIRECTOR FBI To FBTI i The President A E3 TheVice President 4? WhiteHouse Situation Room Attn:: National Security Council A Department of the Air Force (AFOSI) Easement-0f the?Aan Investigatiye Sewic? - Commandant U. S. Coast Guard 7 National Security Agency - -Eirector,' Defense Intelligence Agency - - -Director CIA EU Secret Service (PID) Attn: ExeCutive Protective Service Postal Service I Chief Postal . Ins?pedt'?r (ATTN. Washington_Field:Office DDrug'Enforeement Administration .. I (Other :Areas, Specify I (SERVICE ALSO AVAILABLE GOVERNMENT AGENCIES NOT LISTED. [j .. COMMUNICATIONS CENTER FOR ADDRESSING INFORMATION) :1 Department of Treasury Department of Transportation EAttn: General General'Svervices Administration 7' . J, 1 Crimes Section (WASHDC DTAssmtant?fG??I? - dm1f1?18trat10n Secretary of State MESSAGE RELAY VIA TELETYPP: i . - CLASSIFICATION 12/23/81 UNCLAS 2 PRIORITY . Attorney Genera1 -- Deputy AG Attn: Emergency Programs Center Nuclear Regulatory Commission Department of Energy Attn: U. S. Customs Department of Treasury I: 1v. :1 Attn: Bureau of Alcohol - WT 1g Tobacco 8: Firearms AsSistant Criminal Div. 1: Attn- Internal . Attn: {Director of?Sejcurityu 1, ?Security Section Federal Aviation Administration - Federal Protective Service Director Bureau of Intelligence Research SCA- VISA Office Room 709- 8A2 Attn: Attn: SUBJECT .J- VISIT .0ng, TO WASHINGTON 1372117331" 12/27/81. TEIJE DO NOT FILE WITHOUT COMMUNICATIONS STAMP .DEC 3 0 1983 . USE OF FORM 0-73 1 Only incoming teletype messages which require transmission relay may be prepared for transmission using forth 0-7 3 of form 0-73 is restricted to incoming teletype messages received within the last 3 days which require trans- JW mission relay; all other teletype mes-sages must be prepaEd using form 0-93. 2. Additicins' such as no?tesan?d administrative data for a Speci?c addressee areniot allowed. If a note or adminis-- *1 tratwedata is ;rei1i1jire7d"fdr?a particulataddressee a-separate 0-73 form must be prepared- . - 3. The message will be transmitted just as it appears. The person approving the message is soiely responSIble fo assuring all necessary editing changes have been made. . . -.. OF FORM WHICH Cossisrs OF A PREPRINTED YELLOW, . Complete appropriate boxes date, class1?cation precedence. 1 List addresses immediately followmg the or place a check mark' 1n the approp?a'tb boxes. Type or PRINT the subject in the space provided '7 .4. Print or type originator? name, room number and telephone eansion. . 5 Indicate apprOval for transmissiOn by initialing the ?Approved By? box. PREPARATION OF MESSAGE TO BE TRANSMITTED xerox 1 copy of incommg teletype message. A notation shall be made on the Original 1ncom1ng teletype copy- . {made foi relay to SACS (OR GOVERNMENT AGENCIES) . 1: ?7 . 2_?Minor editing changes shall be made on the xerox as follows. using a lead pencil ONLY draw Single. tine through {the first and last lines of the heading and connect these lines from top right to bottom left formmg a figure. .. .. (130 NOT OBLITERATE THE HEADING. Use horizontal lines to delete sentences or words Pr1nted changes of a 1 . word. or two to the text- _of; the message may be made; however, changes to the. existing text _i_n?volv ving moresthan a . word or two necessitate the originator to initiate a new message using form 0-93.71. 1 l? 7 . 3 Administrative data or notes may be typed immediately following the teXt and will be transmitted to all addressees When _using the 0-7.3 form to disseminate information to field of?ces,- Legal Attaches. and other Government agenmes - simultaneously, the t?xt, notes and administrative data must be identical for all addressees. . 1; weanmay: . . sew-v12". 3 .115?; 1 3/?f (E??dx Sh 3-3131?er ?7 .- . and? . Tu? ?tr ?1 WASHINGTON FIELD OFFICE Tagxif IQIAL 55% . . . ?2 .. vakvzca, M136 in. II a I 15) Exec AD Inv. Exec AD Adm. Exec AD LES Asst. Din: Adm. Servs. Crim. Inv. Idem. Intell. Laboratory Legal Coon. Plan. Insp. Rec. Mgnt. Tech. Sorvs. . Training )qu A?s. on. - Ielephone Rm. \recm's Sec?y Honorable Ronaldcgeagan The President The White House Washington. D.C. Dear Mr. President: In what must be a very trying tir' ;ox you and Mrs. Reagan, I want you to be assured that the FBI is sparing no effort to develop all possible information in this country, run all leads supplied by other law enforcement and intelligence agencies and conduct aggressive investigations in any area affecting your safety and the safety of those around you. We are working closely with the Secret Setvice, CIA, and all other agencies dealing with the current Libyan threat. I hope you know that you have the loyalty and support of every man and woman in the Bureau. with best wishes, Sincerely, William H. Webster \xx Director I WHW:mfd 2., x/Vi7r/ ,k?F *5 W131 1932 -- s" MA <3 EHFB TELEIYFELHHT DE HUEHSE @114 2182215 1 Grim. :11v. ZNR BEENBZ 3b 5 12 1AA. Wt? . 1 TWP LKAU Inspect-fan 1817122 JAN 82 EML abovaiory PM US SECRET SERVICE HQS (comm DIV) mEmNm__? DIRECTOR FBI WASHDC NTEJIAIED 3T FEDEEII, 4 UNCLAS CITE No. @114 Director's Sec'y THE FOLLOW MESSAGE RECEIVED FROM WASHINGTON FIELD OFFICE AND IS BEING RELAYED TO YOU FOR YOUR QUOTE I E11882 A. a FM WASHINGTON FIELD OFFICE FILE: Io FEDERAL BUREAU or INVESTIGATION NASHINGTON FIELD ATTN: SPECIAL AGENT IN CHARGE VCSIT 3?Eu? If 1/25/82. 13?? - ElfExe?. Exec. AD-inv. RPS. '1 1:370 5! 7 REAGAN IS SCHEDULED TO ARRIVE AT DULLES INTERNATIONAL AIRRORT, d? 3 AMERICAN AIRLINES, 278, AT 4:46 PM ON 1/20/82. THE FAIRFAX HOTEL, 2100- ASSACHUSETTS AVENUE, N.W., WASHINGTON, D.C. WILL SERVE AS THE OFFICIAL RESIDENCE DURING THIS VISIT. SPECIAL AGENT HAS BEEN ASSIGNED AS THE LEAD ADVGANCE AGENT AND WILL COORDINATE ALL SECURITY ARRANGEMENTS. SPECIAL AGENT WILL COORDINATE ALL INTELLIGENCE MATTERS. IT IS REQUESTED THAT A REPRESENTATIVE OF YOUR OFFICE ESTABLISH LIAISON WITH SPECIAL AGENT b2 b'?C THE ABOVE NAMED SPECIAL AGENTS CAN BE CONTACTED AT THE WASHINGTON FIELD OFFICE, U.S. SECRET SERVICE, TELEPHONE NUMBER UNQUOTE ET @114 Fl. 0-73 (Rev. 10-26-78) PRECEDENCE . To A cpl/i 01061118. kc k0? The Pres dent .. The Vice President White House Situation Room' .1 Attn: National Security Council Department of the Air Force (AFOSD Department of the Army I Naval Investigative {Service gIComma-ndana U. s. Coast-Guard [:Natibnalisecurity' Agency 800)): - Ci Director, Defense Intelligence . I A Agency I - Director CIA ?1:le Secret Service 1 Service S. Postal Service I Attn: Chief Postal 9: Inspector 553'?. Houlk 0mg Attnz' ExeCutive PrOteetive I Nuclear Regulatory Commission I: Department of Energy Department of Treasury Attn: U. S. Customs Department of Treasury Attn: Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco Firearms Department'of Transportation Attn: Director of Security . . Drug Enforcement Administration [:I-General services Administration (WASHDC area, Specify office) (Other I'Areas, specify . I ?aws? f. Federal ?Aviation Administration Federal Protective Service [jis'eere?tar'yi of State D_Attn: Director Bureau of I Intelligence Research Attn' SCA- VISA Office _IRoom 709- SA2 7? lmmigration . . . II I Naturalization Service I int?: APPR '?numnn' ROOM Attorney General Deputy AG Attn: Emergency Programs Center Assistant AG, Civil Rights Div. Assistant AG, ,5 Criminal Div. Attn: Internal (If SeIcuri 57 Section Attn: General Crim a Section i- "'iAnh Securlty I'-r *Administrative 1. Only incoming teletype messages which require transmission relay may be prepared fer transmission using form 0?73. I PREPARATION OF FORM WHICH CONSISTS OF A PREPRINTED YELLOW. 1 2 .1 L13: 14. 5 NOT OBLITERATE THE HEADING. Use horizontal lines to delete sentences or Words. 1 3 Administrative data or notes may be typed immediately following the text and will be transmitted to all addressees, 4 ..W11en using. the 0-73 ferm to disseminate information to field of?ces, Legal Attaches and other Government agenc1es data is required for a particular addressee a separate 0?73 form must be prepared. _?The message will be transmitted just as it appears11112131311113?? 11111111311101: D131- USE-0F FORM10-73: FEB 11 5-5 1111 73? Use of form 0-73 is restricted to incoming teletype messages received within the last 3 days which require trans- mission relay; allI other teletype messages must be prepared using form 0-93. - Additions Such as notes and administrative data for a speci?c addressee are not allowed. If a note or adminis- The person approving the message is solely responsible fOr assuring all necessary editing changes have been made. Complete approprlate boxes. date, classifiCation 81 preCedence. - ,1 L1st addresses immediat?ly following the or place a check mark 1n the appro?a?e bhzes. .- 1 1 I 1 Type or PRINT the subject 1n the space provided. . Hm g? 1 71:; I Print or type originator? name, room number and telephone extension. E111 12:: 2:20 ?Indicate approval for transmission by initialing the ?Approved By? box. 1:11; :24; OF MESSAGE TRANSMITTED - an I 1 .. .I 1.I. Xerox 1 copy of meoming teletype message A notation shall be made on the ong?mm?ng tatetype copy - I made for relay to SACS LEGATS) GOVERNMENT 1? 21- rMinor Ie'diting changes shall be made on the xerox as follows: using a lead pencil ONLY draw smgle line through '3'Iw0rd or two to the text of the message may be made; however, changes to the existing text involving more than a I-word or two necessitate the originator to initiate a new message using form 0-93. 1 simultaneously, the text notes and administrative data must be identical for all addressees. Printed changes of a 1 1 ausr DATE 2/12/82 "7 CLASSIFICATION PRECEDENCE TY FM DIRECTOR FBI T0 LEGAL ATTACHE HONG KONG PRIORITY LEGAL ATTACHE MANILA PRIORITY The President [3 The Vice President White House Situation Room Attn: National Security Council Department of the Air Force (AFOSI) Department of the Army Naval Investigative Service [3 Commandant, U. S. Coast Guard [3 National Security Agency (ATTN: 800)) Director, Defense Intelligence Agency Cl Director CIA l: U. S. Secret Service (PID) Attn: Executive Protective Service S. Postal Service El Attn: Chief Postal Inapector Nuclear Regulatory Commission Department of Energy - Department of Treasury Attn: U. S. Customs Department of Treasury Attn: Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco Firearms Department of Transportation [3 Attn: Drug Enforcement Administration General Services Administration (WASHDC area, Specify office) Director of Security (Other Areas, specify Federal AVIation Administration Federal Protective Service Secretary of State Attn: Director Bureau of Intelligence Research SCA - VISA Office Room 709 - SA2 Attn: (SERVICE ALSO AVAILABLE TO GOVERNMENT AGENCIES NOT LISTED. {1 CONTACT COMMUNICATIONS CENTER FOR ADDRESSING INFORMATION) SUBJECT: . J1, I SEE ATTACHED APPROVED BY OR GINATOR can? ROOM mm ., A wh'; 4; 137? 'l b7C DO NOT FILE WITHOUT COMMUNICATIONS STAMP Attorney General Deputy AG Attn: Emergency Programs Center Assistant AG. Civil Rights Div. :3 Assistant AG, Criminal Div. E) Attn: Internal Security Section Attn: General Crimes Section [3 Assistant AG for Admin is tratio Attn: Security 8; Administrative Services Staff llmmigration NamralizatiOn Service 51iEL-ll" . liilthl liSEi'aCE DH. USE OF FORM 0-73 . . . I . ii?. Only incoming teletype messages which require transmissmn relay may be preparerf??' ti-Ensmisstidh :usinggorm 0-73. Use of form 0-73 is restricted to incoming teletype messages received within the last 3 days which require trans- mission relay; all other teletype messages must'be prepared using form 0?93. Additions Such as notes and administrative data for a Speci?c addressee are not allowed. If a note or adminis? trative data is required for a particular addressee a separate 0-73 form must be prepared. The message will be transmitted just as it appears. The person approving the message is solely responsible for assuring all necessary editing changes have been made. PREPARATION OF FORM WHICH CONSISTS OF A PREPRINTED YELLOW. 00-- 1. Complete appropriate boxes. date, classi?cation precedence. 2. List addresses immediately following the or place a check mark' 1n the appropriategoxg. 3. Type or PRINT the subject in the space provided. -. 1 .. 4. Print or type originator? name, room number and telephone extension. 7' 5. Indicate approval for transmission by initialing the ?Approved By? box. ii?? '22? PREPARATION OF MESSAGE TO BE TRANSMITTED 1g . ?09 "l 1. Xerox 1 copy of incoming teletype message. A notation shall be made on the original incomilig teletype ?1 copy made for relay to SACS (OR LEGATS) (OR GOVERNMENT AGENCIES) 2. Minor editing changes shall be made on the xerox as follows: using a lead pencil ONLY draw single line through the first and last lines of the heading and connect these lines from top right to bottom left forming a figure. (DO NOT OBLITERATE THE HEADING.) Use horizontal lines to delete sentences or words. Printed changes of a word or two to the text of the message may be made; however, changes to the existing text involving more than a word or two necessitate the originator to initiate a new message using form 0-93. 3. Administrative data or notes may be typed immediately following the text and will be transmitted to all addressees. 4. When using the 0-73 form to disseminate information to field of?ces, Legal Attaches and other Government agencies simultaneously, the text, notes and administrative data must be identical for all addressees. '1 FN DIRECTOR FBI LEGAL ATTACHE LONDON ':bl ECONFIMTIAL i 9 LEGAL ATTACHE SHOULD ESTABLISH CONTACT NITH APPR PR ATE - REPRESENTATIVES TO OBTAIN EXACT ITINERARY- IN ADDITION1 mfjw/ b?C m, b7C FED BALBUBEAU VESIIG COMMUNICAEEOFNIB (96377} 1 Feaiem DO NOT FILE COMMUNECATEONS STAMP Famed: OVQBA (7-19.77) DEPARTMENTOFJUSTICE 3? 2O 16 I4 12 FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION . COMMUNICATION MESSAGE FORM 6 PAGE 3 CONTINUATION SHEET Ha DUES LEGAL ATTACHE SHOULD PROVIDE APPROPRIATE REPRESENTATIVE INFORMATION REGARDING ANY INDIVIDUALS OR ORGANIZATIONS KNOUN TO YOUR OFFICE THAT MAY CONSTITUTE A THREAT OR BE OF INTEREST TO UNITED STATES SECRET SERVICE DURING INSTANT TRAVEL. CLASSIFIED CONFIDENTIAL BY SAIC1 LIAISON DIVISION1 UNITED STATES SECRET SERVICE - ALL PROTIONS CARRY THE CLASSIFICATION OF THE OVERALL DOCUMENT. DECLAS . ET Do TYPE PAST mas UNE DO NOT TYPE MESSAGE BELOW THIS UNE 4~538 - . 5 100??)991016 9:0 . bawloqnm Blf?xl 31" CHANGED TO 3.2% 3 ?942NOV101983 3. ?The Presudent The Vice President Attn' National Secunty 1. Council U. S.,,Secret 19:25): I Protective; Service Servme Attn: Chief Postal Inapector. .1- 314;; Department of Energy Department of Treasu Attn: .38. :Cu-s?tomsy Department of Treasury Attn' Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco. 8; ?Flrearms Ass1stant AG 4 I i Cnm?mal?q?iv Department of 'liransportatlon .Director of?Secunty 1" 7 Drug Enforcement 1 -.Generq1 SerV1ces1Admu1mstrat10n?d (WASHDC area, Bpemfy off: e) . . Federal Protectlve Servrce Secregsary of State Attn: Director Bnreau' of .mAttn. SCAM VISA force Asmal?n? i; Rcomx709 .SAZ SUBJECT VISIT oF A..- r. I Only 1ncom1ng teletype messag :11 who, requu' 0111A PREPRINTED YELLOW 117:; sling-h liflessifigcatipn . 81113199. . .. mg ,he or place ?21 "(She I, 3., Type '01: PRINT the subJect 1n the spaee prov1ded 1'1 1. -- 4. Print or type orlgmator 3 name. room number and telephone exbensmn 5 Indicabe approval for. transm1sf Ion. by 1n1t1almg the ?Approved*By box . ?1 aEligialw sing . . '1 THE HEADING Use horlzontal lmes to delete se. Q5: words. bed ang 1 1:51,? i "y When usmg the 0-73 form .. s1multane0usl the bext, notes and data m?t'be ?'dentlcal forka addressees. 51', 1 "Vb FD - a. 1241 3 3 UNIT . DE RUEHSE @544 ?3 '32 ZNR 9514352 MAR 82 Fm us SECRET SERVICE HQS WASH ?51,113 IR OR FBI . gf?gg BT (12? 2 .-AD dr? L. 33. AD-mv. . Exec AD Asst. Dir; Adm. 83mm Grim. lnv. ldent. Inspection mic-El. Laboratory Legal O?.ofCong. Public Affs. .. Rec.Mgn1. Tech. Saws. Trei ning 35183th6 Rm. UNCLAS CITE @544 Wamtm?md 4. THE FOLLOWING MESSAGE RECEIVED FROM WASHINGTON FIELD OFFICE IS BEING an I RELAYED FOR YOUR . . 5 I . r/f g? g; QUOTE 2 I 5:9 ISZWFO [3924251? 959382 r: 3 I FM - WASHINGTON FIELD OFFICE 115 616. 52 7 MAR 10 1982 50% REUMEAU 0F INVESTIGATION T0 WASHINGTON FIELD OFFICE 3.3.1.1.. H8518 91 51:; I CHARGE I. I. A - as . sky/15m: VISIT 0F T0 WAS TOMHM 4g? FROM MARCH 8, 1982 THR- MARCH 1:5, 1982. IS SCHEDULED TO ARRIVE AT DULLES AIRPORT AT 5:46 PM ON MARCH 8, 1982.H THE WHITE HOUSE WILL SERVE AS THE RESIDENCE DURING THIS VISIT. . if? 13;? SPECIAL AGENT HAS BEEN ASSIGNED AS THE LEAD ADVANCE AGENT AND WILL COORDINATE ALL SECURITY ARRANGEMENTS. SPECIAL AGENT WILL COORDINATE ALL INTELLIGENCE MATTERS.0 IT IS REQUESTED THAT A REPRESENTATIVE OF YOUR OFFICE ESTABLISH LIAISON WITH SPECIAL AGENT THE ABOVE NAMED SPECIAL AGENTS CAN BE CONTACTED AT THE WASHINGTON FIELD OFFICE, U. S. SECRET SERVICE, TELEPHONE NUMBER WASHINGTON FIELD OFFICE UNQUOTE ET @544 Vans?; .7 m_ y" mm . gammy Adm-a?, ?4 b2 Nuclear Regulatory Commission Attorney General I Department of Energy - A ,1 - - 1' 9' Deputy AG Department of Treasury 1 Attn Emecrgency Ci Attn'. U. I 7 Programs enter .1 Council A . A . 9 DAsmstant 7 epa me" 0 ?as? A g. ?Civil Ri?ghts D1v._ A Attn: Bureau of Alcohol 1 . 7 . Tobacco 8; Firearms (:l-Assmtant AG, . Criniinal Div. Attnii. Internai Ii-zDepartmentfrofI' the Air Force 1-, General Serviceg~Adm1nistrat1on (WASHDC area, specify Ioffice.)' - D1rector CIA 51:31; ?1 .U S"'Secret Service (P 1 753?: i 9" a . Att Executive Protectiv Federal Aviation. Administration Federal Protective Service - ?Secretary of State Attn: Director Bureau of Intelhgence?Sz Research Attn. VISA bff'ice Room 799 SAZ Service A (SERVICE - SAIBJECT ?53 ?yipieynsm (MUMCAO IWESTIG data feta SpeleiC addte?aee ?gartlcular addressee a separate 0-7 3 farm must be prepared FORM. ?43310911431 913113.111"; . 2 List addresses 1mmed1ately folloyvmg the 01' place a check mark __111 the apprOpnatB-fboxeSm 3 Type 01' PRINT the subject- 1n the space provided. . 7 n? 4. P1int 01 type ongmatorg?s? name room number and telephone extensmn 11% 111113131 11111111111113; . .2133; 11.. 0-73 (Rev. 10- 26 11-23) .54 . DATE PRECEDENCE . a/ar/aa. ROUTINE . FM DIRECTOR FBI I 1: Ab LEGAL ATTACHE PARIS RQUTINE. AL: ATTACHE ROME ROUTINE . [j The President The Vice President Nuclear Regulatory Commission Department of Energy I Attorney General Depii'ty AG White House Situation Room Department Treasury SI I-II -Attni' Emergency mAttn National Security El Attn' U31 Customs Programs 08111131 Council . Department of Treasn?ry Ej Department of the Air Force [3 Attn: Burea1I1I of- Alcohol ?2 .1 . 18 1V.- (AFOSI) I Tobacco 82. Firearms v. Department Of the Amy I: Department of TranspoIrtatiOn {5:12:11} ternal g; is 1'1 .I Naval Investlgative Service Attnz' Director of Security Security Section 3 Commandant U. S. Coast Guard IliljDrugI Enforcement . 7? Attn General I I [j National Sec11rity Agency I a II: GeneralI Services . ?Cnmes :S?'ction 7' SIOCD area, spemfy office) ?9 a [:FAseustant AG for Director, Defense Intelhgence ?1 . I 5'3: Agency wt - . -At't?i 1s 81 - (Other Areas, specify .1 - Director CIA . .. .Secret Service I. I i erV1ces Attn. Executive Protective . Federal Aviation .1: .. 1Iqmmigratmn 81 .gz 1 Service: IEFederal Protective Service 1' aturahzation eI ce- POStal Serv1ce arr?? El Sebretary of State . I153: Attn: ChiefI Postal I I Attn: Director Bureau of ?5 ,r .13. [3,13% . Inspecjzor Intelligence 81 Research I 1 Cl Attn. SCA- VISA Office I 4.1, - A. I Room 709- 8A2 (SERVICE ALSC AVAILABLE TQ GOVERNMENT AGENCIES NOT {j .. CONTACT 9.0M UNICATIONS CENTER FOR ADDRESSING INFORMATION) I SUBJECT seam Log ROOM 1131 EXT -, .. r. Eggspuss-r01?. FORM 0?739 MEG 5 ?mail. E2 . . ow Only incoming teletype messa hich require transmission relay may be prepared for transmission using form 0- 73. Use of form 0-73 is restricted to?incoming teletype. meSsages receiVed within the last 3 days which require trans- mission relay; all other teletype messages must be prepared using- form 0-93. MAR 513 a 21w6 0 2. Additions such as notes and administrative data for a speci?c addressee are not alloWed. If a note or adminis- . I "trative data is required _for a?fi?a?iticular addressee a separate 0-73 form must be prepared. 9 w- . 3. The message will be transmitted just as it appears. The person approving the message is solely responsible for assuring all necessary editing changes have been made. . PREPARATION OF FORM WHICH CONSISTS OF A PREPRINTED YELLOW m: :1 Complete appropriate boxes date, classi?cation precedence $2 L: as; ?List addresses immediately followmg the or place a cheek mark in the :3 ?53; Type or PRINT the Subject in the space provided. Egg fi?gji Print or. type originator? _s name, room number and telephone extensionb ?rat; Wig; Indicate approval for transmission by initialing the ?Approved By1?be_x. $933 _w go?; PREPARATION OF MESSAGE To BE TRANSMITTED . if :r 1.- Xerox 1 copy of incoming t?eletype message. A notation shall be made on the origixa?lzincoming teletypefl cepy- made for relay to SACS LEGATS) GOVERNMENT AGENCIES) 2. 'Minor editing changes shall be made on the xerox as follows: using a lead pencrl ONLY draw single line thr'oiagh the first and last lines of the heading and connect these lines from top rightato bottom left forming a (DO NOT OBLITERATE THE HEADING Use horizontal lines to delete sentences or words? Printed changes of a ?word or two to the text of the message may be made; however, changes to the existing text involvmg more than a Word 0r ttvo neceSSitate the originator to initiate a new message usmg 'form 0-93. 3. ?Administrative data or notes may be typed immediately followmg the text and will be transmitted To all addressees 4. When nSing the 0-73?-?fonn to disseminate information to field of?ces; I?iegal Attaches and other Government agencies simultaneously,- the text, mites and administrative dataimust be identical for all addresSees. . 79;; . wall. ?1 - j; i. ?1 31:4; . -. i 0-73 (rt-av. 10-26-78) 1-91 DATE 2/12/82 PRECEDENCE . .. FM DIRECTOR FBI ??The President The Vice President House Situation Room Attn: National Security Council Department of the Air Force (AFOSI) Department of the Army LEGAL ATTACHE HONG KONG PRIORITY Nuclear Regulatory Commission Department of Energy Department of Treasury Attn: U. S. Customs Department Of Treasury Attn: Bureau of Alcohol -. Tobacco 82 Firearms . Department of Transportation I WI /7 Attorney General C3 Deputy AC. Attn: Emergency Programs Center I- Assistant AG, Civil Rights Div. As s1stant AG, Criminal Div. Naval Investigative "Service 4- -:Attn Director of Securitj'} I ?zz-31311011 . Commandant U. Coast Guard 11:] Drug Enforcement Administratlon 1 Attn General I7 National Security Agency 1 General ServiCes Administration I I . Crimes Section II (ATTN: 800)) area, Specify office) I i" AG for EDirector, Defense intelligence Adm1n1strat1on Agency - - 1 . Areas .. I Am secumty 8" Director CIA . I I-II- II I 3.. II S. Secret Service (PID) I :3 IeIrvlees a Attn: Executive Protective :1 Federal Av1at10n~Adm1nistration I 5- It: I Imm1grat1on . Service Federal Protective Service '4 if Niamrahzatlon S. Postal service I Secretary of State I I 3 1 Attn: Chief Postal i if? Attin: Director Bureau of Inspector . . Intelligence?z Research If? :1 Attn: SCA VISA Offiee 1 1 . Room 709 SA2 . A 1. (SERVICE ALSO AVAILABLE TO GOVERNMENT AGENCIES NOT LISTED [j . - 1.1.1 i f? .1 9? CONTACT COMMUNICATIONS CENTER FOR ADDRESSING INFORMATION) {If SUBJECT: . SEE ATTACHEDI ?1390/ 24 fl APPROVED BY We b7C - 3' Ii 2.1.5? FEB 1 331992 DO NOT FILE COMMUNICATIONS STAMP ROOM -m .1 . . .. pg; 17' 19139 DOJ .15 . E31 11111115111116 ENCE owF513 23 If?, usE OF FORM 0.Only incoming teletype messages which require transmission relay may be prepared for transmission using form 0-73. aI ~25: 1. Use of form 0-73 is restricted to incoming teletype messages received Within the last 3 days which require trans- mission relay; all other teletype messages must be prepared usmg?i?orm 0?93. '33:;va 2. Additions such as nobas and administrative data for a speci?c addressee are not allowed. If a note or adminis- trative data is required for a partiCular addressee a separate 0?73 form must be prepared. rgoving the mesSage is solely responsible for 3. The message will be tranSmitbed just as it appears. The perso assuring all necessary editing changes have been made. 1 . . - - 1.3. PREPARATION OF FORM WHICH CONSISITS OF A PREPRINTED YELLOW. 7 1 Complete appropriate boxes: Idabe,cla331?cation 82 precedence. 15.7; 7 2. List addresses immediately followmg the or place a check mark 1n the appropriate 11%. FYI: 1 CD 3. Type or PRINT the subject 1n the space provided. ft? 1m 4. Print or type Originator? name, room number and telephone extension. 1; i: :1 5.1ndicabe approval for transmission by initialing the ?Approved By? box. Ii; "'13 . '2 a: PREPARATION OF MESSAGE TO BE TRANSMITTED . ggI1. Xerox 1 copy of incoming teletype message. AI notation shall be made on original 1nco?1ngxteletype copy I made for relay to SAICIS LEIGATS) GOVERNMENT AGENCIES) .2. Minor editing ?IchanIgeIs shall be made on the xerox as Ifollows: using a lead pfencil ONLY Idr-aw Single ?line through the first and last lines of the heading and connect these lines from top right to botbom? leIIfIt forming a? ?figure. (DO NOT OBLITERATE THE HEADIING. Use horizontal lines to delete sent?nces or words. Printed changes of a Word or two to the text of the message may be made; however, changes to the existing text involving more than a . word or two necessitate the originator to 1111t1abe a new message using form 01-93. 3. Administrative dIaItIa or notes may be typed immedlately following the text and. will be transmitted to all addressees 4. When using the 0-73 form to disseminate information to field of?ces, 'Legal Attaches and other Government agencies s1mu1taneously, the bext notes and administrative data must be identiCal for all addressees. ?er I 4?528 . . IOO 8851(96?229/ CHANGED TO NOV 101983 %u)l (gar 4-528 . . 100* 389mm CHANGED T0 (03 ?3733/ NR Sign; NOV ?1 0 1983 IOO $329 939 CHANGEI T0 (09? {Suf?x NOV 1 0 1983 And a DATE 3/17/82 i FM DIRECTOR 11131 :1 The President T1}e Vice President White Hones Situation Room ?Attn: National Security Council De?partinentof'the Air Force (AFosn [3 Department of the Army Naval Investigative Service Commandant U. S. Coast Guard, 1:]NationalSecur1ty Agency -. (ATTN: I Director Defense Intelligence 4, Agency I I Director CIA I :l U. S. Secret service (PID) - Attn: Executive Protective Service I I: .S. Postal Service Attn: Chief Postal 1H ATTACHE LONDON PRIORITY Nuclear Regulatory Commission Department of Energy Department of Treasury Attn: U. S. Customs Department of Treasury Attn: Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco 81 Firearms Department of TranSportation Attn: Director of Security 1' Drug Enforcement Administration I: General Services Administration area, Specify office) I I Federal Aviation Administration Federal Protective Service . Secretary of State Attn: Director Bureau of PRIORITY Attorney General 5 Deputy AG [:jAttn: Emergency . Programs Center Assistant AG, Civil'Rights Div. Assistant AG, Criminal Div. Attn: Internal Security Section 3 Attn: General Crimes Section Assistant AG for i 11 Administration .l:i Attn:Secur1ty 81 IAdministrative Services StafIf Immigration 81 Naturalization Service 1? 1' .1 19.. gm 1 1 Inspector . j; -. I I . A [:j]zittn . H- i Intelligence Research . A- SCA- VISA Office Room 709- SA2 (SERVICE ALSO AVAILABLE GOVERNMENT NOT LISTED. CONTACT COMMUNICATIONS CENTER FOR ADDRESSING. INFORMATION) SUBJECT"imi?ti 1.31:" I - I -. . Midi SEE ATTACHED . GIAIATQEE, R9014 EXT 3 :1 11111218 1982 - 12:71:: - nan 3? (NEW A 11111 1 a. 1111:; DO NOT FILE WITHOUT COMMUNICATIONS STAMP 31/ cos-5 - . . USE OF FORM 0-73 [919/ 1?1. Only incoming teletype messages which require transmission relay may be prepared fer transmissi 11 using 0-73. Use of form 0?73 is restricted to 1ncoming teletype messages received within the last 3Pda?sE1iIliipcr?the trans- . mission relay; all other teletype messages must be prepared using form 2. .AddlItions such as notes and administrative data for a speci?c addr9ssee are not allowed If a note or adminis- 'rtrative djata is required for Ia particular addressee Ia separate 0?73 form must be pr?pareIdB} 11' 1 9 rm 3. The message will be transmitted just as it appears. The person approving the meSsagewis solely responsible for II assuring all necessary editing changes have been made. . PREPARATION OF FORM WHICH CONSISTS OF A PREPRINTED YELLOW. .. . . 53-11 . i I. appropriate boxes: date, clas31ficat10nI81 precedenceList addresses immediately followmg?the Ol? place a check mark 111 the approprla'teg??xgi 3. Type or PRINT the sub] ect 1n the space provided. i :g '2 4. Print or type originator? name, room number and telephone extension. 3.1.31: .- .21: S: .5. Indicate approval for transmission by initialing the ?Approved By? box.. is @311. I 07?; .11 PREPARATION oF MESSAGE TO BE TRANSMITTED EE g: I IXerox 1 copy of incoming teletype message. A notation shall be made on the original incoming teletype co?py made for relay. to SACS LEGATS) GOVERNMENT AGENCIES) 2I- Mlnor editing changes shall be niade on the xerox as follows: using a lead pencil ONLY draw single line through the first and last lines of the heading and connect these lines from top right to bottom left forming a ?figure. .1 (DO NOT THE HEADING. Use horizontal lines to delete sentences or Words. Printed changes of- a word or two to the text of the message may be made; hOWeveIr, changes to the existing text involving more than a i\iiriird or two necess1tate the originator to initiate a new meSSage using form 0-93. 3.Adm1n1strat1ve data or notes may be typed imrhediat?ly following the text and will be transmitted to all addressees. 4. Wlien using the 04-73 fomi to disseminate information to field of?ces, Legal Attaches and other Government. agencies . s1mu1taneously, the text, notes and administrative data must be identical for all addresseesin. .7. (M gleam?4+? . 3/25/62 I A IMMEDIATE FM DIRECTOR FBI T0 LEGAL ATTACHE LEGAL ATTACHE IMMEDIATE PRKIJMH 3/25/52 scab b7c I - PRESIDENTIAL TRAVEL FOLDER - ROOM SURE - LIAISON UNIT - ROOM INTD ?wm 4.4} J: 5" .41 04:? ?rf? rs" mas-Id. Sup-Inmaunq-._ 55 MAR 29 7982 gum..- my? Hank's? 15383 I I . IOO CHANGED TO (0.32? 1137351- IQSSY NOV 1 01983 Om) 4'01: TI 0? . ?LMxec. 10.111111Exec. AU-lnv. PP RUEHFB ?if? 9? ,1 A (.01.: DE RUEHSE @695 11161211111 1111.91 fdm?m ZNR . 1? idem. 5 Inspewon 1611171112 APR 82 FEuEm?uggfhun 1:11:11. 80 11 F154 us SECRET SERVICE HOS WASH DC OEWSUW) 1919:2131. 5 .F 011.11: 0R FBI EDERAL 81:1113231113. YB Tech.8ervs. Training UNCLAS CITE $695 Tgfephcme?m. Brewer's Sanjy THE FOLLOWING MESSAGE RECEIVED FROM THE OFFICE AND we .1 1 IS BEING RELAYED FOR YOUR ?14 Mm Eff/f 1521/3 OUOTE &7 1 1: 794?,0 TAOUFO 171171251 1141582 M7 ZV/zmWASHINGTON FIEEO OFFICE 115- 45511. '52 A 20 ?382 ?u (/13ij1 60W TO FEDERAL BUREAU OF 0 819, UASHIUOTOM F1 OFFICE ATTN: SP A1. ACEMT 1M CHARGE ?tjy/ b7C SUBJECT 1, To UASHIMGTOM, O. C., FROM THRU APRIL 189119820 a . IS SCHEDULED TO ARRIVE AT ROCKVILLE, MARYLAND AT 1 ?2:99 PM ow APRIL 15, 1982. THE HOUSE WILL SERVE AS THE OFFICIAC *9 RESIDENCE DURING THIS VISIT. t' SPECIAL AGENT HAS BEEN ASSIGNED AS THE LEAD ADVANCE AGENT AND WILL COORDINATE ALL SECURITY ARRANGEMENTS. SPECIAL AGENT WILL COORDINATE MATTERS. IT IS A REPRESENTATIVE OF YOUR OFFICE ESTABLISH LIAISON WITH SPECIAL AGENT b2 b7C THE ABOVE NAMED SPECIAL AGENTS CAN BE CONTACTED AT THE WASHINGTON FIELD u. s. SECRET SERVICE, TELEPHONE WASHINGTON FIELD OFFICE - UNQUOTE ST @593 U53 A . UNCLAS IMMEDIATE UF BAEDE HQ HUBER IELESSZ APR BE JU . 1 FM DIRECTOR FBI TO FBI UASHINGTON FIELD OFFICE IMMEDIATE FBI BALTIMORE IMMEDIATE BT I A UNCLAS f/ +9 - b7C VISIT OF p. c.1 FROM APRIL IRBE THRU APRIL l?w IREE- REBUTELCAL TO UASHINGTON FIELD OFFICE AND BALTIMORE OFFICE APRIL IE1 1952. BY TELETYPE DATED APRIL IE1 13821 UNITED STATES SECRET SERVICE FURNISHED THE FOLLONING INFORMATION. IS SCHEDULED TO ARRIVE AT MARYLAND1 AT Ei?? P-M- ON APRIL 151 1362. THE UHITE HOUSE MILL SERVE AS THE OFFICIAL RESIDENCE DURING THIS VISIT. SPECIAL AGENT HAS BEEN ASSIGNED AS THE LEAD ADVANCE AGENT AND WILL COORDINATE ALL SECURITY ARRANGEMENTS- SPECIAL AGENT MILL COORDINATE ALL NW Luna/.52 5qu TRAUFI ROOM SURE I a as APR 20 1982 AUO mvesn ATION cam a 1;:ng . at a .. PAGE TUO DE HQ DEER UNCLAS INTELLIGENCE MATTERS- EACH OFFICE SHOULD ESTABLISH CONTACT WITH UASHINGTON FIELD FOR LIAISON PURPOSES AND DETERMINING THE EXACT ITINERARY- IN ADDITION1 PROVIDE MITH APPROPRIATE INFORMATION REGARDING ANY INDIVIDUALS OR ORGANIZATIONS KNOUN TO YOUR OFFICE THAT MAY CONSTITUTE A THREAT OR BE OF INTEREST TO DURING INSTANT TRAVEL. BT 0-73 (Rev. 10-26-7811PRECEDENCE '7 DATE 1 CLAS TION was/112 0- A PRIORITY FM DIRECTOR FBI TO LEGAL ATTACHE PARIS PRIORITY 1 1 5'31 If" The President Nuclear Regulatory Commission Attorney General The Vice President Department of Energy I I II Deputy AG 1 White House Situation Room I Department of Treasury Attn: Emergency Attn: National Security - Attn: U, S.- Customs Programs Center Council Department of Treasury :3 C3 Department of the Air Force Attn: Bureau a Alcohol ng ts w' (AFOSI) Tobacco Firearms Assistant AG, Department of the Army . Department of Transportation CrimAfil DIiIYt.emal 1 Naval' Investigative Service A?ttnI: Director of Security I . [3 Security Section U. S. Coast Guard 1 El Drug Enforcement Aamimstratlon 1- W1 .. 1.1::1 Attn: General National Security Agency I General Services . Crimes Section I I (ATTN: 800)) I I (WASHDC area, specify oIfEice) 1 Assmtant AG for I Clairector,I Defense Intelligence AdmAmstraStlon 361103ecur1 [3 Director CIA . . . ., I1 I 11* II?lOtlrerAreas. specify Secret Service (PID) - . I A Serv1ces Staf AttnzI. Exe cutiv Protective . Federal Aviation 1 1. 1: 1 I Immigration Service I I Federal Protective Service ?1332? Servme S. Postal Service II Secretary of State? II \1 Attn Ch1ef Postal 7 Attn: Director Bureau Inspector 1 . I 1 . I, Intelligence 81 Research I I E3 Attn: VIISAI Office I If A Awe? 1 1.1 A. 15 Room 709- 8A2 (SERVICE ALSO AVAILABLE TO GOVERNMENT AGENCIES NET LISTED. ti CONTACT COMMUNICATIONS CENTER FOR ADDRESSING INFORMATION) SUBJECT. SEIE ATTACHED .J. ORIGINATQR I ROOM I . TELE EXT. I If 1:3: I i; 1ST "331} seat: 1/7? we . FBIVDOJ USE ore FORM 0.73 II ..- Only incoming teletype messages which require transmission relay may be prepared for transmission using form 0-73. Use of form 0-73 is restricted to incom1ng teletype messages received within the: Lest 3 days which require trans- mission relay; all other teletype messages must be prepared using form 0-93 Additions such as notes and administrative data for a speci?c addressee are not allowed. If a note or adminis- I. trative data 18 required for a particular addressee a separate 0-73 form must be prepared. .. I I M) 3. The message will be transmitted just as it appears. The person approving the message is solel?reppo?ble for assuring all necessary editing changes have been made. Him 71?: I'm" . rm 2:3 PREPARATION OF FORM WHICH CONSISTS OF A PREPRINTED YELLOW. ?2 MI Egg Complete appropriate boxes: date, classi?cation 81 precedence if; :3 I List addresses immediater following the or place a check mark in the appropriate boxes?r?" m1 :5 3 Type or PRINT the subject in the Space provided. - .. It: 4. Print or type originator? 8 name, room number and telephone extension. i 5. Indicate approval for transmission by initialing the ?Approved By? box. PREPARATION OF MESSAGE To . 1. 2. es? Xerox I copy of 1ncoming taletype message. A notatIOn shall be made On the original inasming teletype copy made for relay to SACS LEGATS) GOVERNMENT AGENCIES) Minor editing changes shall be made on the xerox as using a lead pencil ONLY draw single line through I ?the first and last lines of the heading and cennect these lines from top right to bottom left forming a ??ghts. (DO NOT THE HEADINGI. Use horizontal lines to delete sentences or words. Printed changes of a word or two to the text of the message may be made; however, changes to the existing text involving more than a werd or two necessitate the originator to mitiate a new mesSage usin for-m 0?93. I I Administrative data or notes may be typed immediately following the text and will be transmitted to all addressees- When us1ng the 0-73 form to disseminate information to field of?ces, Legal Attaches and other Government agencies ,simultaneously,?the text, notes and administratiVe data must be identical for all addressees. 4?528 . 6 . Md Jib/76 ?332? CHANGED To ?max gm 1389 14145 Memorandum . N: a i; . T0 - DIRECTOR, FBI Date -4/30/82 x75 - Fm? SAC, WFO (185-1095) (C) 5 Subjecti __Vi_ISit 9f I To Washington, D. C., from March 8,1982' . Thru MarCh 10,1982 bm' sf ij? Re Director teletype captioned above& and dated 8 March 3, 1982. Liaison-by WFO with U.S. Secret Service Special Agent I established regarding captioned matter. No indications occurred of a threatening nature against subject. bx; WFO placing matter in RUC status. Ky CD-rBureau IHWFO (3) 3 . 4-528 . . . . . ?We? ?0 3 jig? CHANGED TO . W27 JUL 1939 [4/0 MK 4-523 . . Ioo?3gazqco?? ado - (051- BIQOY BMW NOV 1.01983 OM) Um!- I 31/ DO.) 4.523 my?ji/V? (73/41 CHANGED 1,933 KM 4-528 . . (gadoqucia smax -QW we? 5-528? . 9 @068;qu 6915 CHANGED T0 ('09 406x Baoaxl . mv~101983 ow] Am? T) 0?93 4-26-7813) DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE {if A . . . FEDERAL BUREAU OF . .2 COMMUNICATION MESSAGE FORM PAGE 1 OF if?? DATE SSIHCATION PRECEDENCE ?3 - PRIORITY .5 . . 4 1 START HERE FM DIRECTOR FBI 20_ To LEGAL ATTACHE 222 $613234? 2 2 I 2/ 3/2 22:; 2:21: Av: AC3: 22:22:22: A22: W: i APPROVED BY TED BY DATE TELE EXT. 7/12/PRESIDE IAL TRAVEL FOLDER ROOM - 5322:. 2 - 52:21.2 - . 47 .2 1' ??5?gria/7?f?5f: 1' I - LIAISON UNIT ROOM Imam INT 1270 I ta .. 1.122223 (0 I 03 2-00? 2.2222329 I DO NOT FILE WITHOUT COMMUNICATIONS STAMP 4-523 A . . 100*- 33?Qlcuo aqg baJOqu? CHANGED 35?0? {~qu :0 LEG-7 (Rev. 7 7-80) by emorvndul L. :4 M9) To ?Dir tor,? FBI Date 7/21/82 From eg lAttache, OTTAWA 62?0?737 b1 amt?; I: I: 3 Kim/d A 4:44 A4444) 'Referenoe: But 61 7/ 19/82. Dissemination, as outlined below, was made on dates indicated; C1 Pertinent information from, re tel - Name and Location of Agency Date Furnished b1 I: I: 7/21/82 4/54 3442/44 43w NOT MEWIRE'conad?tf?h :5 301982 3 (3 Bureau 2 Ottawa (1 66-135) (4) 4-528 . . $340911? 3313K - 252 CHANGED T0 ?3:913? NOV 1 04983 %u31 0.933152%. 09 0 COMMUNECAWON MESSAGE PG T: OF 3 I CLASSFF PRECEDENCE .i a/La/aa IMMEDIRTE HQ HUBER 1216562 AUG 52 FM DIRECTOR FBI T0 FBI YORK xi? LEGAL ATTACHE OTTAMA IMMEDIATE A 22?frTYPE PAST Th?? MERGE V7 - PRESIDENTIAL ROOM - 4i van - Hde1 .NTD DO NOT FILE WITHOUT COMMUNECATIONS STAMP Lag MD) WW: mggm? mug LEN-1E I APPROVED BY DRAFIED DATE ROOM TE '3 - 3/12/62 SD35 i, 5; \m 13; \0 b7C DOJ LEG-7 (Rev. 7-7430) r? Memorandum To Director, FBI Date 8/13/82 lit/ii: I 7 b1 1 '1 Legal Attache, 62?0?737 Subject 27Reference Butel 8/12/82 . Dissemination, as outlined below, was made on dates indicated. copies of Pertinent information from re tel - Name and Location of Agency Date Furnished l: I: 8/13/82 bl i - ,7 Adam" I. '3 :3 x0 if?) My; 7: in XX- Bureau 4' NOT RLCO n_ 18 1982 2 Ottawa (1 RJT: dig/?$33? . i SEP 1519 . 0-93 (Rev . 4-26-78) 2 4 FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION 53:1,. COMMU Ame ESSAGE FORM ?bib AGE OF A: PRECEDENCE A IMMEDIATE HQ H62 L7l5072 SEP 52 . fig/EM FM DIRECTOR FBI To TO FBI BALTIMORE IMMEDIATEA LEGAL ATTACHE PARIS LEW 'tom any?. .w .maiwapxnsuzm 20:1 /yg ?1 . APPROVED BY DRAFT DATE ROOM mm" A I i I - PRES DENTIAL TRA ROOM .A I 16 SEP 21198%7c 1 .. I LIAISON UNIT ROOM ?mm CENT SEN 1321' DO WITHOUT - .. . .. .. . ?Ev. u?wn-AM-vuaa' 7- ?"hrgs?Ingv. 4-26-78) .3. *5 . EEDERALBUREAUOPINVESTIGATION 09,0. 1 .. COMMUNICATION MESSAGE FORM 6 I .7. PAGE OF i DATE ION . PRECEDENCE A PRIORITY Sag-Ii" 7 PERERRPP NY BE Fm DIRECTOR FBI w- - FBI LOS ANGELES PRIORITY jg]; YORK PRIORITY 5575* ATTACHE LONDON PRIORIIY 1 ATTACHE BONN PRIORITY r; L, l} E5 ATTACHE BERN PRIORITY ATTACHE A:Ll??j_ 1'21 b1 APPROVED BY DATE ROOM TELE 6% {r ?gl?l I . I .- PRESIDENTIAL TRAVEL FOLDER Room maf??" fig?? 1' . 1. - ?361 1989 011% DO NOT FILE WITHOUT COMMUNICATIONS STAMP FBVDOJ 6 9 OCT1-3 19821 0-93 (Rev. 179% 80 I COMMEI ICATION MESSAGE FORM 0} n1 CLASSIFICATION PRECEDENCE I IMMEDIATE EM DIRECTOR FBI Io FBI LOS ANGELES IMMEDIATE NEW YORK IMMEDIATE 14__ LEGAL ATTACHE BONN IMMEDIATE LEGAL ATTACHE BERN IMMEDIATE LEGAL ATTACHE LONDON LEGAL ATTACHE ROME ?t?II/r A . I 7; ISMNE QTTM r. '9 A a NEE 6 REFERENCE BUREAU bl TO LOS ANGELE81 NEH Y0RK1 LEGA ATTACHES BERN AND ROME: DATED JCJJ CHIS LINE I ARPREDVED BY DRAFJED 5* PRESIDENTIAL TRAIVEL QOLDER TELE EXT. .. DATE ROOM 3/24/63 SURE ROOM . {3594/0 ZEMWJIO IO SEP 28 B82 b7C I 'j?vII INTD . I DO NOT FILE WITHOUT COMMUNICATIONS STAMP 0?93 (Rev. 4?26-78) DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE . FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION FM TO 14 12 IO PAGE OF MESSAGE FORM . DATE CLASSIFICATION CW I$Flanmoo LA LA NYEDE Ha IMME DIATE 3:54:01 52 35p 52 FM DIRECTOR FBI TO FBI LOS ANGELES IMMEDIATE FBI NEU YORK IMMEDIATE ATTACHE LONDON IMMEDIATE ATTACHE BONN IMMEDIATE ATTACHE BERN IMMEDIATE ATTACHE ROME IMMEDIATE SECTION OF WEE PAST MINE In: TELE EXT. BY BY 1 DATE ROOM g?gf?mH 3/24/52 snaL - PRESIDENTIAL TRAVEL FOLDER ROOM - 5095 HEJHEJH I -LIAISON UNIT ROOM - INTD 0 1-. Hui?Wm. .4. b7C DO NOT FILE WITHOUT COMMUNICATIONS STAMP FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION DELETED PAGE INFORMATION SHEET Civil Action# O7?cv?3240 Total Deleted Page(s) 2 128 Page 5 bl; Page 6 Referral/Direct; Page 7 Referral/Direct; Page 8 Referral/Direct; Page 9 Referral/Direct; Page 10 Referral/Direct; Page 11 Referral/Direct; Page 12 Referral/Direct; Page 13 Referral/Direct; Page 14 Referral/Direct; Page 15 Referral/Direct; Page 16 Referral/Direct; Page 18 Referral/Direct; Page 19 Referral/Direct; Page 22 Duplicate; Page 23 Duplicate; Page 26 Referral/Direct; Page 27 Referral/Direct; Page 29 Referral/Direct; Page 30 Referral/Direct; Page 40 Referral/Direct; Page 41 Referral/Direct; Page 45 Referral/Direct; Page 48 Referral/Direct; Page 49 Referral/Direct; Page 52 Referral/Direct; Page 53 Referral/Direct; Page 56 Duplicate; Page 57 Duplicate; Page 58 Duplicate; Page 59 Referral/Direct; Page 62 Referral/Direct; Page 63 Referral/Direct; Page 66 Duplicate; Page 67 Duplicate; Page 69 Referral/Direct; Page 72 Referral/Direct; Page 73 Referral/Direct; Page 76 Duplicate; Page 77 Duplicate; Page 85 b1; Page 86 Referral/Direct; Page 87 Referral/Direct; Page 112 b1; Page 113 Referral/Direct; Page 114 Referral/Direct; Page 115 Referral/Direct; Page 116 Referral/Direct; Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page 117 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 153 157 158 159 160 161 163 164 165 166 167 168 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; b1; b1; b1; b1; Duplicate; Duplicate; Duplicate; Duplicate; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; b1; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; b1; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; Referral/Direct; b1; b1; b1; b1; b1; b1; b1; b1; b1; b1; b1; b1; b1; b1; b1; Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page Page 185 186 187 190 191 192 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 207 208 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 b1; b1; b1; b1; b1; b1; b1; b1; b1; b1; b1; b1; b1; b1; b1; b1; b1; b1; b1; b1; b1; b1; b1; b1; b1; b1; Deleted Page(s) No Duplication Fee For this Page