Sunday, Mo r6 2, 1969 THE MICHIGAN.DAILY Pon *Fie * y : I : 7 Whatever happened to Agent Smith? By ROGER RAPOPORT and LARRY KIRSHBAUM ON A MAP of world espion- age, Ann Arbor doesn't ever rate a pin. The most reknown- ed undercover mission locally was the nation's first recorded panty raid in 1952. And t h e N most zealous spies have beer underpaid pizza delivery boys collecting $10.00 from police fo ratting on pot parties. But this fall, a 21-year-old senior named Leonard Smith officially employed as a nighi "clerk" for the Federal Bureat of Investigation in Detroit, tried to carry out an incredible plan for subverting student activism in Ann Arbor. His proposed ven- ture was titled "Operation text- book", spelled out on a two. page xeroxed document under a Central Intelligence Agency let- a terhead. In three phases, "Operation Textbook" called for (1) organ- izing a conservative student al- liance to "permeate every facet of the student activist life" with covert agency support; (2) us- ing FBI contacts to keep "New Left organizations and. stud- ent radical groups in internal disruption from within;" and, (3) the actual interruption, de- struction, and intervention in New Left affairs," under "Agency supervision." 4 TO CARRY OUT Phase I he tried to lure several old friends into collaboration with prom- ises of free rent and future gov- ernment jobs. Frightened, one of his confidants exposed t h e plan to University President Robben Fleming and an embar- rassed FBI had to fumble for an explanation: that Smith "was acting on his own." Smith, of course, resigned from the FBI but was not pro- secuted,, for/ impersonating a CIA or FBI agent. Investigation shows it is like- ly that Smith enjoyed the tacit and perhaps the direct approv- al of the FBI on the plot (al- though there is no way to prove that the CIA was in on the plan and the "Operation Textbook" document c o u l d have been a forgery). Despite the FBI's denials it seems incredible that the FBI (an agency which has fired a clerk because his girlfriend slept on his couch overnight) was ignorant of Smith's activi- ties while in their employ. Cur- iously, even Smith's father, a 'r 20 year veteran of the Detroit police force and a former vice president of the detective asso- ciation, was aware of the con- servative student group and en- couraged it. LEN SMITH has always been , an enigma to his friends. His blond hair and boyish frame create an impression of earn- est adolescence. A journalism major (with a C average), he belonged to the Evans Scholar fraternity. Len Smith's passion, however, 4 was espionage. He soaked up James Bond novals, sometimes wore sunglasses and an ascot, and dangled cigarettes from his mouth. Last February he became a full-time night-shift clerk -in Detroit with the hope of attend- ing special-agent training school after graduation. The FBI refuses to discuss his duties, except to confirm that he was a clerk. The bureau's De- troit director, Paul Stoddard, says: "A clerking experience is like becoming a mason; you t learn how to lay the bricks." APPARENTLY A GOOD ap- prentice, Len Smith quickly as- sumed responsibilities which took him outside the office. He reportedly carried an unregis- tered concealed weapon and an official FBI identification pac- ket that included a government vehicle operator's license. He also had access to the entire De- troit headquarters in the Fed- eral Bldg. Chris Frizell, '70, one of Smith's more steady dates re- calls an evening last spring E when Len took her upstairs to the ninth floor there for a royal tour. She saw director S t o d- dard's office, the well-stocked gun vault, the card files on rad- icals, even the exclusive and un- listed eleventh floor of the " ' building where the communi- cations equipment is kept. In the presence of another agent, Jim Sturgis, Len de- scribed an exciting mission earlier that evening where they had stalked a top-ten criminal. BY THE END of the summer, he landed a big "back-to- school" assignment, which ar- rived in an unmarked envelope. Inside, a two-page document with a CIA letterhead spelled out the three-phase "Operation Textbook" plan, but he says that he received verbal instructions to set up the student alliance. In early August, he began telling close friends he was "now working for the CIA under the FBI cover." This admission was not a case of indiscretion. Len had made a conscious decision to try to build the Conservative Student Alliance from a base of close friends. The first man he tap- cruiting other members - and this is where the organization foundered. One evening, John and Len drove downtown to the FBI office and made calls to three other students whom they hoped would join the battle against SDS. But of the three, only one girl expressed luke- warm interest. TO MAKE MATTERS worse, Len tried to bring another close friend into the management group-and this eventually blew the cover on the whole opera- tion. The person he contacted was an old Michigan girl friend named Ellen Heyboer, a tall, radiant brunette. A German major, she had been spending the summer before her senior year visiting Europe. On August 13, the very evening of her re- turn after several sleepless nights of travel, Len came over to give her the sales pitch and CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY Washington, D.C. 20505 SUBJECT: Operation Textbook. PHASE I: To initiate, centralize and strengthen a con- servative yet political autonomous student organiza- tion. This organization should permeate every facet of the student activist life. The steering committee of the organization may be aware of Government support but this knowledge must not filter down into the main body of the group. Agency money will be used to support this organization. Agency person- nel must limit their action to a strictly organiza- tional nature. PHASE II: New Left Organizations and Student radical groups must be kept in internal disruption from within. Decentralization of these groups is evident and must be encouraged and fostered. This will be accomplished from within by Bureau contacts. The Bureau will be completely responsible for all Phase II projects. PHASE III: Actual interruption, destruction and inter- vention in New Left affairs. This Phase will be ac- complished only when Phase I is strongly under- way and Phase II is in progress. All Phase III projects will be accomplished solely by Agency supervision. nance graduate study and get her a job in Germany after graduation. To appease her lib- eral instincts, he said the con- servative student alliance coe have wide political range except "we wouldn't like to see you protest the war in Vietnam." By the end of this perform- ance, Ellen was dazed, as if the friendly encyclopedia salesman had suddenly turned out to be the Boston Strangler. And yet she didn't have the nerve to resist even when he told her: "Things happen to people who slow things up. The CIA doesn't look favorably upon people who mess things up, just because they are slow or uncooperative." And on that inconclusive note, he left. UNFORTUNATELY, Len had made a key oversight which did not become apparent until they both returned to Ann Arbor in late August: the three-page Operation Textbook document remained upstairs in her drawer. Len should never have given the CIA letter to an unwilling partner; having done so, he was frantic to get it back; even to the neglect of his fledgling or- ganization. Ellen, meanwhile had become -too preoccupied with her cam- pus activities to pay him much heed, but she unwittingly joined him in a tug of war. One eve- ning he sent John Bologna to bring her back to their apart- ment for a tongue lashing. She scoffed at the importance of the document and then demanded to be taken home after hearing a tape recorder click. Late for work, he strapped on his gun before dropping her off at the sorority and going to his midnight job at the De- troit FBI. Another time he in- vited her to lunch and shoved thick CIA application across te table; she refused to put down her yogurt container and look at it.' But the game began to wear away Ellen's patience. Then on the night of September 19 the implications of "Operation Text- book" suddenly dawned. Ellen learned the local SDS chapter was in shambles, in line with Phase II of "Operation Text- book." She felt obliged to tell some- one. As she recalls: "I didn't want to break Len's trust, on the other hand, I was starting to boil. I was cracking up." Not surprisingly, she turned to her 21-year-old fiance, E. . Know- les, who conveniently was a member of the student govern- ment council (SGC) A tough, volatile personality wrapped up in a soft southern accent, Knowles was not, like Ellen, hesitant to act. On the next afternoon, a Friday, he re- peated the story to his close friends, SGC vice-president Bob Neff and to Will Smith (no re- lation to Len), a rugged ex- Michigan lineman who was then the university's assistant di- retor of student organizations. THAT NIGHT Ellen went home and retrieved the docu- ment; on Saturday afternoon Will Smith arranged a meeting with President Fleming for 8 p.m. that evening. Present in Fleming's study that night were emissaries Knowles, Neff and Will Smith. Robben Fleming is a good listener. A labor mediator, by profession, he likes to stake out all the points of an issue before hazarding an opinion. But after reading "Operation Textbook" and hearing the accompanying story, he was incredulous. "Where did you guys get this stuff," he exclaimed pointing to the document. "This sound like a Keystone Cops plot," Instinc- tively recognizing the "psycho- logical" pressure on Ellen, he asked to meet with her Monday morning and to contact Len Smith for an immediate ex- planation. Then began a tumultuous few days as the principals spun like spokes on a wheel faster and faster around without coming any closer together. Fleming could not locate Len, whose phone was unlisted, so he had to send a registered letter to the apartment asking for an ap- pointment. Len, despite the fact that he was now calling every half hour, could not find Ellen, who was shielded by her room- mates, E. 0. Knowles and Bob Neff vainly tried to track Len down at an incorrect address. But on Wednesday, Septem- ber 25, Len received Fleming's letter after his creative writing class. He now realized that the story was out, and followed Fleming's demand for an ap- pointment the next day. He did not know how much Fleming knew (or where the document was) so he made one last frantic stab at finding El- len shortly after dinner. Contacting a mutual friend, he learned that Ellen was hid- ing out at E. 0. Knowles' apart- ment that evening. Knowles still anxious to find Len, had left her there alone, but promised to check in regularly. SHORTLY BEFORE nine, she heard a mysterious knock, then a few minutes later the phone rang. It was Len, calling from his apartment. Did she have the document? No, Fleming had it, Len was stunned and furious. "You're in big trouble, El, this isn't going .to end tomorrow, next week, or next month," he told her. To Ellen alone in the apart- ment, the words were ominous. -Fortunately, she did not have to worry long. Knowles checked in soon after and raced back to calm her down. Len's threat could hardly be taken seriously; it was a reflex spasm of anger and frustration. Even before Ellen hung up on him in disgust and fear, Len changed his tune: "You know when this thing is over Een, you are going to look like a fool. Wait until I tell them that this thing is all a hoax." IT WAS hardly that. Imme- diately after hanging up, Len notified the FBI in Detroit that the document was out. Then, he and roommate Bologna set out burning all the remaining evidence. Bologna says: " 11 papers with a CIA letterhead (there were several) were fed to the garbage disposal. Then he drove out Carpenter Road (past the 1-94 freeway) and burned the remaining papers in an open field." The documents included two copies of the post-office safe and combination number plus President Fleming Ellen Heyboer some confidential FBI reports. THE NEXT DAY Len went to see the Ann Arbor FBI and to tell Fleming "it was all a joke." The president didn't laugh: "If it was a joke, it was a joke in very bad judgment." On Friday evening, the two drove to Len's home where, says Bologna, Mr. Smith was- highly agitated. "When we got to the house, the first thing his parents did was, "Where is the gun?" Len handed it to them and they put it away. "'Boy you really blew this one,' Len's father said." Afterwards John drove Len down to the Detroit FBI where the latter stayed for two hours. The FBI says it officially ac- cepted his resignation on that, date-September 27. But on Monday, September 30, Len and Detroit agent Jim Sturgis were seen together in- vestigating the bombing of the Ann Arbor CIA office, which had taken place toe previous night.; THE EXPLOSION was ap- parently fresh in Len's mind when he broke his lease and dropped out of the University the same week. He told both landlord and academic counselor that there had been "bomb threats" on his life. (Bologna, who moved back into the Evans Scholars House, was not aware " of them.) Before leaving Ann Arbor, Len made a final try at camouflage. While sadly admitting "I blew the job," he asked several friends to substantiate a cover story: "If anyone asks tell them I was simply a file clerk with the FBI. A lot of trouble could come from this if it gets. out." Despite the fact that bits and snatches of the story have cir- culated widely in Ann Arbor, the whole story has not yet come out. One reason is that the CIA and FBI maintain anti-press information offices. As in "Mis- sion Impossible" they "disavow any knowledge" of "Operation Textbook." LAUGHES A CIA spokesman: "We don't have agents on col- lege campuses, your imagina- tion must be running away from you." And the FBI's Washing- ton bureau will only confirm that Len was a "clerk" from February 1 to September 27, 1968. Len's old boss, Detroit FBI director Paul Stoddard refuses to discuss the case. He even denies existence of the FBI's unlisted eleventh floor commun- ication's center which Len showed off to friends. "There are ten floors in the Federal Bldg.," Stoddard insisted. However, Stoddard and Ann Arbor agent Ray Coglin felt obliged to offer President Flem- ing a private explanation of Smith's activities the same day he was out investigating t h e CIA bombing with FBI agent Jim Sturgis. "They kept repeating the FBI Is 'much too professional' to be involved in these shenanigans," says Fleming. "They maintained that if he did any thing 1 i k e this he did it strictly on his own." BUT FLEMING SAYS he was uncohvinced. He told them: "I think you should go back to your office and starting think- ing -about what you are going, to say when this story comes out in print. If you deny it no one is going to believe you. If you admit it you are going to be in a very embarrassing posi- tion." Like a witness taking the fifth amendment, the FBI has stuck to its "clerk" story in the face ' of overwhelming evidence to the contrary. For civil service pur- poses. Len might have been identified as a clerk, but he was clearly given duties beyond shuffling papers. As Stoddard himself sought to reassure Pre- sident Fleming, no clerk would, have access to confidential doc- uments. BY THE SAME logic, no clerk would carry an unregistered concealed weapon; flash an of- ficial FBI identification a n d government vehicle license; give grandiose tours; make long-dis- tance calls on official govern- ment business from the office or use the duplicating equipment to run off the first-page preamble. The link with the CIA is not clearcut. But, John Bologna did see several other documents with CIA Washington letter- heads and a healthy quantity of two kinds of CIA stationery. Even the CIA spokesman concedes: "We don't hand our stationery out by the bushel," As a young man planning a career with the FBI, Len was aware of the three-year and $1000 penalty for impersonating a federal officer. "In all my ac- tivities, I was acting under or- ders from the FBI and the CIA. That's all I can say," he says. There is further proof that the FBI cannot pretend ignorance of Len's activities. On Septem- See WHATEVER, Page 10 E. 0. Knowles r _ ped, in fact, was a Sohn Bolog- na a mild mannered economics major from Detroit. After a summer Evans Schola- outing in Ann Arbor, he popped the question: Would Bologna become acting head of the CSA? The latter, skeptical at first, could hardly afford to pass up the opportunity, even though it meant moving out of the Evans Scholar House and giving up a full scholarship. LEN OFFERED to pay Bolog- na for his aid and to finance an apartment that they would share as a base. "We'll have all the money you want," Len as- sured him, explaining that the subsidies would be funneled through a safe-deposit box at the post office. (A few weeks later Lenwould shell out near- ly $400 so that they could move into the Woodland Hills apart- ments, a plush Tudor-style complex south of the campus. In the waning summer days, the two partners eagerly com- menced work: At Len Smith's modest white-frame house in Detroit they hammered out a one-page preamble for the Con- servative S t u d e n t s Alliance, pledging the organization "in opposition to the radicalism which thrives on and manifests itself in demonstration and dis- order." FOR THE MOMENT, the4 operation became a family af- fair: Mrs. Smith battered out the preamble on an old type- writer and Mr. Smith suggested speakers. He also promised to ask a friend at the Detroit Press Club (columnist Al Blanchard of the Detroit News) to cover the alliance's first meeting. In early August, heartened by the support, John and Len dropped of copies of their pre- amble at the homes of poten- tial speakers, two conservative state legislators. It was now time to begin re- what was by now a three-page document: the Conservative Al- liance preamble and the two- page "Operation Textbook" plan, on CIA letterhead. Ellen, "in a zombie state" took the docu- ment and filed it in her drawer. Had Ellen been awake she would have simply said no. Un- like John Bologna she was an active campus leader who as president of the Panhellenic As- sociation had no time for the conservative group. Yet she had known and dated Len since high school in Detroit. So she did not slam the door imme- diately. ONCE ENCOURAGED, Len was very hard to discourage. The following Saturday night, he tried a whole bag of tricks to convince her to join the cause, but failed. First he gave her the grand tour of the FBI of- fices (including a peek at the FBI files on prominent Ann Ar- bor activist_.Eric Chester), then he wined and dined her at Ar- thur's discotheque. During one interlude, he dis- appeared briefly and returned with a sheaf of confidential documents, including a thick dossier on the Peace and Free- dom Party convention that had nominated Eldridge Cleaver for President that afternoon. 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