Page Eight THE SUMMER DAILY Thnursdoy, August 9, 197. Officials disclaim informer By BRIAN B. KING Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (A) - G e r a I d Martin Zelmanowitz says that three years ago he spent almost two months here in a "safe -house" as the Justice Depart- ment supposedly rebuilt his back- ground into a safe "cover" for his future. Zelmanowitz was back in Wash- ington recently, hiding out in a motel with his wife and her par- ents becsuse, he says, the cover- turned out to be "nothing more than a typed sheet of paper." The Justice Department appar- ently keeps him at arm's length, and refuses comment on his case. But he has found friends' among the staff of the Senate permanent investigations s u b- committee, which is drawing from his knowledge of organiz- ed-crime figures and operations in the late 1960s. THE COMMITTEE arranged recently to have his U.S. marshal bodyguard restored four days af- ter he testified at its public hearings. The Justice Depart- ment had pulled off the guard a couple of weeks earlier. The department, he says, has cautioned him that it feels his testifying publicly - as he did July 13 - could harm its in- formers' program. He doesn't want to do that but he's had a bad experience with it and so makes no secret of it. Zelmanowitz, during his career in the '60s as a courier and se- curities dealer for organized crime, was convicted three times on charges related to stolen or fraudulent stocks and bonds. His final arrest, in 1968 in Miami, -began the process of turning him into an informer. IN 1970, he was the main gov- ernment witness in New Jersey at the extortion trial of Angelo "Gyp" DeCarlo, a reputed lead- er of a Mafia crime family. The trial brought out the briefly no- torious "DeCarlo tapes," hours of wiretapped conversations b e - tween crime figures and others, discussing past murders, beatings and other crimes. DeCarlo re- cently was paroled. Zelmanowitz has told the com- mittee - which is attempting to corroborate his testimony - that U.S. attorneys promised him re- location in a place of his choice, new identifications for him and his family, and a new past his- tory and subsistence, "since I would not be working but spend- ing all of my productive tsme" with federal agents. Immunity from prosecution for other admitted offenses also was promised, he said. He also ex- pected a pending case against the Internal Revenue Service to be resolved, freeing him from a lien and the IRS from his suit. HE SAID he decided to testify, "relying on the government pro- mise." After indictments were hand- ed down against DeCarlo and others in the extortion case, Zel- manowitz said, a man from the Justice Department's unit for re- location of informers sat down to prepare the list that outlined this cover: A birth certificate would be created and placed in the city hall of records of a place t h e department chose. His real school records would be collect- ed, from the first grade in Brook- lyn through two years at C i t y College of New York, and be converted into new records with his cover name and replaced in different schools. AN EMPLOYMENT history Oth- er than "brief jobs and organ- ized crime" and a military back- ground other than "undesirable discharge, U.S. Marine Corps" would be fabricated. New Social Security and military-identifica- tion cards, driver's license, pass- port and other papers would be made up. Meanwhile, his meetings with the IRS turned into more inter- rogations and no settlement, he said. Fir six months, his family "liv- ed on the road in motels around the country and I was living in a U.S. Post Office building in Newark" until the move to the so-called safe house here. He said he was told no future tax assessments would be levied against him. HE LEFT Washington with a new Social Security card, a new driver's license, an Army Re- serve ID card, no resolution of his tax case and the name "Pau Maris" to take with him to San Francisco. Zelmanowitz said he was not given the promised help in find- ing a job - or a resume to take to "40 different companies and employment agencies in the Bair area" he went to, seeking work.. All he had in his typed-out back- ground was "13 years as a cryp- tographer cryptanalyst" - an in- telligence codes, analyst. Eventually he found a job with an insurance company and then joined a garment-manufacturing firm on the financial skids. He said he began at no pay and within six months purchased a 50 per cent interest in it or $5,000. In the proces of finding specu- lative capital for the business, he linked up with Creative Capital Cosp. of New York City, headed by Milton Stewart. Creative Cap- ital ended up making large in- vestments and temporary loans to the then Alvin Duskin Co., bur- dened with its $1.3 million in in- herited debt. IN A YEAR, the firm had $6.5 million in sales, Zelmanowitz says, and had gained a good re- putation as a source of junior sportswear, with more and more money flowing in from Stewart, now chairman of the firm and leader of a six-man Creative Cap- ital Corp. contingent on its sev- en-man board. Zelmanowitz said he eventually erased all the debt of what be- came, when Duskin left, the Paul Maris Co. This spring, Stewart fired Zel- manowitz as president of Paul Maris Co., claiming financial ir- responsibility, Zelmanowitz saidl the reason was greed as the firm turned over a volime if $10 million. HE TESTIFIED that his stock was taken by Creative Capital to repay old debts, auctioned and bought by it, to produce 100 per cent ownership of Paul Maris Co. Zelmanowitz sued for breach of contract. Stewart hired a private detective to research Zelmano- witz's background. The detective, Zelmanowitz said, found no birth records; no high school or college records where they were supposed to be. and no service records. "Paul Maris, 37, born in Phil. adelphia, a student at Baldwtn Wallace College, Army, Reserve" - that Justice Departnnt cov- er existed only in department fil- es. "There was absolutely no{ back-up to these records," Zel- manowitz told the committee. THEN, ACCORDING to Zel- manowitz, who had told the Jus- tice Department about the detec- tive, Stewart contatced a former FBI agent-friend and asked him for aid in finding out who "Paul' Maris" realy was. The unname. former agent blew Zelmanowitz' cover, he said, and a No.v Jer- sey police department clinched i by matching photographs of Zel- manowitz and "Maris." The detective already had founl a crack in the blank wall - the four new Social Security numb- ers given as part of the cover ran consecutively for 37-year- old Zelmanowitz, his wife and her parents, who are in their mid- 60s. "I could have claimed I went to Harvard, was a general in the Army and vice president of Gen- eral Motors, for the validity of all of these records," Zelmano- witz said. STEWART FILED with the California courts what he found, as part of his response to Zel- manowitz's suit. A newspaper picked it up from the public re- cord. And Zelmanowitz was rip- ped out of his life as "a decent and respected member of t h e community .. . a clean, healthy and happy life . . . in a state of minimum fear of disclosure." The Justice Department t o I d Zelmanowitz,. he says, that it would ask Stewart not to disclose his identity and allow him a chance to relocate. Zelmanowitz says this was never done. His cover blown, he found the IRS back on his doorstep, pro- ceeding to enforce the original 1969 lien. "They seized my home in Son- oma, Calif., and my apartment in San Francisco; told my wife and I that we could not enter these places any longer; took all of our furniture and possessions and virtually left us penniless." The IRS called him in for talks to resolve the case. He says he found that three IRS agents ne claims to have bribed in New Jersey in the 1960s had been as- signed to review and resolve the lien. Three years before, he had told IRS internal investigators and the Justice Department about his bribes of men he calls "friends or organized crime a New Jersey." He would not publicly identify the men but told the committee. AN INTERNAL Revenie Serv- ice spokesman confirmed t h a t Zelmonawitz told its investigators in 1969-70 that he had bribed IRS agents. A subsequent investiga- tion did not turn up sufficient evidence to support the allega- tions, the spokesman said. Zelmanowitz's statement that the agents he allegedly bribed were asigned to handle his re- opened lien case "came as news to us and we are looking into that," the spokesman said. Subcommittee counsel Howard Feldman, meanwhile, says the panel probably will hold hearings next month on the results of its investigation of Zelmanowitz's stories. Asked it the prime source was still in the motel: Feldman would only say he is "accesible" and "in the country." HE SAID his top interest is the disclosures of bank involve- ment in foreign manipulation of stolen securities, rather than the allegation of bribing IRS agents. ORIENTATION STUDENTS! AVOID LONG LINES THIS FALL! A $1.00 deposit with Ann Arbor Bank will open a checking or savings account for you NOW. PLAN AHEAD: A few minutes spent NOW will help you avoid the mob scene created by 5000 new students hitting campus (and the banks) in September. Ann Arbor Bank offers 0 The most campus locations (4). * Extended hours: 9 'til 6 p.m. weekdays, until noon on Saturdays. * MONEY MACHINE-a way to get cash at ANY- T I M E! And ANYONE qualifies to use M o n e y Machine. DROP INTO ANY ANN ARBOR BANK LOCATION TODAY-or mail in our coupon: -------------------- Yes, I want to open an Ann Arbor Bank * checking and/or Q savings account. " NAME__ ___ ___ _ _ MR I IO:QikSart S ADDRESS. -__ +r Ann Arbor Bank. Ann Arbor, Mi 48107 U .I®r~ r+ ~r ~ e araw a 'U' offers first class in teachers' u nions The University is offering what is believed to be the first course in the country dealing with the unionization of teachers this fall. According to the School of Educa- tion the program offers master's, educational specialist, doctor of education and doctor of philos- ophy degrees. The curriculum was designed at the request of and in con- sultation with several existing teacher organizations. It is aimed at "developing greater skills and understanding of the process and content of collective negotiations in education; the educational process and the organization, ad- ministration and financing of school systems; the role of teach- er organizations and teacher leaders in the processes of edu- cational change." The courses will also focus on organizational behavior, group dynamics, interpersonal behavior, and industrial relations. Further information about the new degree program may be obtained from the advisors, Prof. Hyman Kornbluh and Associate Dean Frederick Bertolaet. They also serve as co-directors of the School of Education's National Study of Collective Negotiations in Education. CORECTION The ad which appeared in yesterday's Daily for Univer- sity Musical Society was in error. The Viola Farber Dance Company performance will be held Thursday, August 16, not Tonight. T1he Dailty regrets the error