Related Link: Philadelphia’s
Famous Cases
Early Years
The FBI has had agents stationed in Philadelphia since
its earliest days as an organization.
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Grover Bergdoll
|
Special Agent Harry T. Donaghy, one of the original
Secret Service investigators to join the Bureau, took
the oath of office in Philadelphia at the end of June
1908 and so was one of the first agents of the special
agent force created by Attorney General Bonaparte on
July 26, 1908. By 1911, the office was located in the
U.S. Post Office Building on 9th and Market Streets.
Philadelphia remained a small office during the Bureau’s
first nine years, but with America’s entry into
World War I, it grew in size and responsibility along
with the Bureau itself. Philadelphia agents pursued
hundreds of investigations under the new Espionage
Act; sought draft evaders like Grover Bergdoll, a fugitive
who Philadelphia agents chased for two decades; tracked
terrorists in the months following the war; and successfully
handled a wide range of other investigative responsibilities.
1920s and 1930s
The early 1920s were a time of reform for the Bureau,
and the Philadelphia Division by extension, as a result
of budget cuts, criticism from the Palmer Raids, and
the policies of a new administration. In a drastic
reorganization of Bureau field forces, the number of
field offices was reduced from more than 125 to nine.
The Philadelphia office was closed, and its responsibilities
were given to the Baltimore Division.
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Special
Agent In Charge Walter Chapin Foster
|
Within months, though, the Philadelphia Division was
reopened under Special Agent in Charge Walter Chapin
Foster, who served from November 1920 to May 1925 before
being transferred to Pittsburgh to serve in a similar
capacity.
In 1924, J. Edgar Hoover became Director of the Bureau
of Investigation and began a series of reforms to strengthen
the organization, including a more forceful supervision
of field offices. The story is told, for example, of
a Philadelphia agent who was for years allowed to split
time between doing his job and tending to his cranberry
bog in New Jersey. A more demanding Hoover made him
chose between the two.
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Lenore Houston
|
In November 1924, Lenore Houston, an employee in Philadelphia,
became the first and only female special agent hired
by Director Hoover. While serving in the Philadelphia
office, Miss Houston received excellent performance
ratings and was earning $3,100 a year by April 1927.
She resigned in 1928, shortly after being transferred
to the Washington Field Office.
During this time, the Philadelphia office also joined
in the nationwide battle against a growing wave of
gangsters. In early 1935, for example—in cooperation
with postal inspectors, Philadelphia police, and New
York agents and police—Philadelphia special agents
tracked Walter Legenza, a member of the notorious Tri-State
Gang, to a hospital bed where he was recuperating from
injuries likely sustained from a previous shoot-out
with police. Legenza was arrested for murder and mail
theft.
Professional support personnel were becoming more
important in the Division’s activities during
this period. By the early 1930s, clerical functions
of the Philadelphia Division were performed by three
stenographers, who took dictation from special agents,
indexed reports, and filed correspondence, ensuring
a clear record of the Division’s work.
By 1937, there were approximately 17 special agents
working in the Philadelphia Division, including in
its resident agencies in Harrisburg and Scranton.
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Stenographers pool, 1944 |
The office moved several times in the 1930s. At one
point, it was located at 735 South 12th Street in the
Philadelphia Saving Fund Society building, but moved
soon after. Sometime in 1934 or early 1935, the office
relocated to the Liberty Trust Building at Broad and
Arch Streets. In June 1940, the Division moved to the
fourth floor of the new U.S. Courthouse at 9th and
Chestnut Streets.
By 1942, the Philadelphia Division had a total of
74 special agents, who were organized into accounting,
security, and investigative squads. Programs and social
functions promoted camaraderie among its employees,
and an office newspaper called the “Philadelphia
Scrapple” was published. This organizational
strength would be needed as another World War brought
new challenges and greatly increased the office’s
workload.
World War II and the early Cold War
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The
Philadelphia Division |
The outbreak of World War II in Europe in 1939 led
to great changes in the Bureau and in Philadelphia.
As a port city, Philadelphia’s national security
work was crucial to homeland security. The Philadelphia
office provided security surveys for area manufacturing
plants, investigated hundreds of sabotage cases, detained
known enemy aliens in the area, investigated German-American
Bund members suspected of espionage, and pursued a
wide range of other criminal and security matters.
In one espionage case late in the war, Philadelphia
agents arrested Pablo Meso Legarreta and Emilio Ipes
Cazaux Hernandes, Spanish seamen who had been smuggling
espionage messages to German spies in Spain.
The Division continued to focus on national security
into the Cold War years. During the summer of 1948,
the Philadelphia office found itself at the intersection
of American politics and Soviet intelligence as it
surveilled several persons known to have worked with
the OGPU (the KGB’s predecessor) who were also
influential advisors in Henry Wallace’s campaign
for president. The Progressive Party held their convention
in Philadelphia that summer in order to nominate Wallace,
who had no connection to Soviet intelligence, but whose
inner circle of advisors had at least three known Soviet
agents—Martha Dodd Stern, Alfred Stern, and John
Abt.
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Harry Gold
|
Philadelphia also played a significant role in the
investigations of Soviet spies Klaus Fuchs and Julius
Rosenberg, providing the key link between the two.
Leads from Special Agent Robert Lamphere’s interview
of Klaus Fuchs in London led the Bureau to Harry Gold,
a chemist living in Philadelphia. Philadelphia agents
arrested Gold in May 1950 and connected him to a Soviet
courier named David Greenglass. Greenglass, the brother
of Ethel Rosenberg, had been a courier for Julius Rosenberg’s
spy ring, collecting stolen secrets and transferring
them to Rosenberg. Philadelphia personnel also provided
translation assistance for the broader espionage investigation.
1950s and 1960s
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Special Agent
Terry
R. Anderson
|
Organized crime and growing domestic unrest became
major concerns of the Philadelphia Division in the
1960s. Under the FBI’s
Top
Hoodlum program, for
example, personnel gathered and analyzed criminal intelligence
about the Bruno organized crime family.
Meanwhile, traditional criminal investigations continued
in Philadelphia. Automobile theft, extortion, the theft
of interstate shipments, and a wide variety of other
federal crimes were all pursued.
On May 17, 1966, one kidnapping case turned tragic
as Special Agent Terry R. Anderson of the Philadelphia
Division was shot and killed while searching for a
kidnap victim in rugged mountain terrain near Shade
Gap, Pennsylvania. William Hollenbaugh, also known
as the "Mountain Man," had abducted a 17-year-old
girl and held her captive for seven days. Hollenbaugh
killed Anderson while he and another agent were pursuing
the fugitive. Through Anderson’s sacrifice and
the heroism of his partner, the victim was rescued,
and Hollenbaugh was killed.
1970s and 1980s
The Philadelphia Division faced significant challenges
in the early 1970s when it had to deal with the burglary
of one of its resident agencies in 1971 and the changing
national political climate after the death of J. Edgar
Hoover in 1972 and the emerging Watergate scandal.
The burglary of the resident agency had taken place
on the night of March 8, 1971. A radical group called “Citizens'
Committee to Investigate the FBI" broke into the
office in Media and stole a wide array of domestic
security documents that had not been properly secured.
Some of the documents mentioned “Cointelpro”,
or Counterintelligence Programs—a series of programs
aimed to disrupt some of the more radical groups of
the 1950s and 1960s. The leaking of those documents
to the news media and politicians and the subsequent
criticism, both inside and outside the Bureau, led
to a significant reevaluation of FBI domestic security
policy.
In September 1973, the Division settled into a new
facility in the William J. Green Federal Building at
600 Arch Street. From there it pursued serious color
of law and political corruption cases, investigating
Philadelphia police officers for alleged civil rights
violations in 1977 and Philadelphia councilmen for
extortion in 1986. The office also broke new investigative
ground, investigating Norman Mark Allen of Honesdale,
Pennsylvania, for communicating false information regarding
consumer product tampering. Allen was the first person
in the U.S. to be prosecuted for this crime and pled
guilty in 1986.
Organized crime became a Bureau priority in 1978,
and Philadelphia stepped up its work in this field.
Using new laws like the 1970 Racketeer Influenced Corrupt
Organizations (RICO) Act, agents targeted organized
crime leaders like Nicodemo “Little Nicky” Scarfo.
Agents arrested Scarfo in January 1986 along with 17
members of his criminal family. In the coming years,
more charges were filed against Scarfo, and additional
members of his operation were arrested. Scarfo was
convicted of many of the crimes uncovered by the Philadelphia
Division, and his organization suffered significant
damage.
The Mafia wasn’t the only criminal enterprise
pursued by Philadelphia agents. In 1996, for instance,
a long-term, seven-city undercover operation worked
jointly with the Drug Enforcement Administration came
to fruition. Named ZORRO II, it targeted numerous Colombian
and Mexican drug traffickers operating in the United
States. Through the operation, more than 400 kilos
of cocaine were seized, as well as half a pound of
crack cocaine and approximately $700,000 in cash and
property. Arrests and seizures took place in Los Angeles,
New York, Miami, Newark, Philadelphia, Richmond, and
the District of Columbia.
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Special Agent Charles
Leo Reed
|
In another undercover drug investigation, Philadelphia
lost a second agent. In March 1996, Special Agent Charles
Leo Reed met Jonathan M. Cramer, a reputed Philadelphia
drug dealer who was attempting to purchase cocaine.
The meeting took place in Agent Reed's car, which was
parked in a hotel parking lot near the Philadelphia
waterfront. Something went wrong, a gun battle ensued,
and Agent Reed and Cramer shot and killed each other.
Post 9/11
The terrorist attacks of 9/11 led to major changes
within the FBI, including the Philadelphia Division,
as preventing future strikes became the Bureau’s
overriding priority.
Created in 1985, Philadelphia’s multi-agency
Joint Terrorism Task Force has become an even more
important resource in running down terrorism leads,
vetting threats, and developing intelligence; following
9/11, additional anti-terror task forces were formed
in Philadelphia and in various resident agencies. In
2003, a Field Intelligence Group was also created to
better collect and utilize intelligence in the office’s
jurisdiction and to share it nationwide.
In May 2007, the Philadelphia Joint Terrorism Task
Force and other authorities in both Pennsylvania and
New Jersey disrupted a potentially disastrous terrorism
plot by six
men who were allegedly planning to attack soldiers
at the U.S. Army base at Fort Dix in New Jersey.
Philadelphia has also played a key role in the Bureau’s
growing Art Theft program, thanks to the expertise
of one of its agents. In one investigation, for example,
the office helped solve the theft of millions of dollars
worth of historical artifacts from the Philadelphia
Historical Society; in another, it recovered three
stolen Norman Rockwell originals. The division also
pursued public corruption matters, successfully developing
a case against Joseph Mazzatesta and Bureau of Prison
officials at the Allenwood federal penitentiary. Mazzatesta
had been bribing several prison officials to betray
prisoners who cooperated with law enforcement against
the Mafia.
Like the FBI itself, the Philadelphia Division has
proudly helped protect local communities and the nation
for a century. For more information on Philadelphia
and the Bureau over the years, please visit the FBI
History website and the Philadelphia
Famous Cases webpage.