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| Special Agent in Charge Robert Hicks (1944-1945) |
A week after the U.S. entered World War II—on December 15, 1941—the Norfolk Division opened for business under the leadership of Special Agent in Charge Charles E. Hennrich.
Given the Bureau's central role in homeland
security during the war and the presence of the
Hampton Roads naval facility in the Norfolk Division,
the new office initially concentrated on national
security issues. That included not only countering
sabotage and espionage, but also addressing more
mundane war-related matters like Selective Service
violations, desertion, and theft of government property.
It was the significant number of these cases that convinced FBI Headquarters to keep the office open following the end of the war in August 1945. And with the onset of the Cold War, the division continued its national security work. Like other offices, though, the division also pursued serious violent and white-collar crimes. In 1949, for example, Norfolk investigators responded to the sexual assault and murder of a 6-year-old. A man named Lawrence Markham was quickly identified, captured, and convicted for the crime. Throughout such investigations, whether national security or criminal in nature, the division worked closely with U.S. naval personnel and state and local law enforcement agencies within its jurisdiction.
1950s and 1960s
Although there were many important cases in the
division through the 1950s and early 1960s, several
fugitive matters stood out. In 1959, agents arrested
John Roe Priester in Accomack after tracking him
through densely wooded terrain and marsh land. A
local citizen had noticed Priester's identification
order in a local post office and alerted us. Not
long after that, Director Hoover commended the division
for its work in the capture of a number of other
fugitives wanted for robbery.
Fugitives weren't the only crime problem
facing the Norfolk Division—federal crimes
committed by naval personnel also kept the office
busy. In
a 1960 case, for instance, the division worked with
the FBI's office in Detroit to investigate
the possible bribery of a government inspector at
the naval base. And in 1964, Norfolk agents arrested
an enlisted naval man for the assault of his wife
and the murder of her lover.
Bank robberies were an ongoing concern in the
1960s. In 1965, Norfolk agents arrested several
naval enlisted personnel for bank robberies in North
Carolina. In this and similar cases, the Bureau
was ably assisted by U.S. Navy law enforcement personnel.
Norfolk investigators made key arrests in violent
bank robberies during the next two years. By 1969,
the division's work against such criminals was having
an impact. In January, FBI Headquarters commended
Norfolk agents for their success in substantially
reducing bank robberies in the division's territory.
During 1966, the Norfolk area had experienced 18
bank robberies. The next year, there had been 10
fewer, and in 1968, there were only seven bank robberies.
All seven bank robbery investigations in 1968 resulted
in the identification of the responsible subjects.
The growing activity of the Ku Klux Klan (KKK)
in the area also had a major impact on the division's
work. In 1966, the Norfolk special agent in charge
informed FBI Headquarters that his workload had
increased from 850 to 1,102 cases over the course
of a year, largely due to increased Klan activity
in his jurisdiction. In one of many successful investigations,
Norfolk agents arrested a local KKK member, who
was later sentenced to prison for destruction of
government property. The man had let the air out
of a tire on a Bureau car at the scene of an FBI
surveillance of a KKK meeting. Norfolk's close monitoring
of the Klan's activities had clearly struck
a nerve.
1970s
Throughout the 1970s, the investigation of espionage, organized gambling rings, and wanted fugitives remained priorities.
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| Richard McCoy |
In March 1974, for example, Norfolk agents arrested Carl Dante Napoli— a member of the Confederate Angels, a motorcycle gang from Richmond, Virginia. Napoli, a fugitive wanted for murder, was located and arrested at a funeral home where 50 members of the gang had gathered to mourn the death of one of their own, who was killed in a shoot-out with a rival gang. That same year, Norfolk agents captured Ten Most
Wanted Fugitive Melvin Walker. Walker had escaped from the federal penitentiary at Lewisburg, Pennsylvania in August 1974 along with
Richard McCoy. McCoy had been serving a 45-year sentence for hijacking a commercial airliner and then bailing out over Provo, Utah with a half-million dollars in ransom money. A few months later, McCoy fired on agents who were attempting to arrest him and was killed with return fire. He was thought by some to be the
elusive hijacker D.B. Cooper, but subsequent investigation has shown that he was not.
Changes in FBI policy and practice—especially
the cultivation of long-term undercover operations—were
as important in Norfolk as they were across the
Bureau. In Operation SEAWALL, division personnel
and Norfolk Police Department officers targeted
organized crime in the area. Undercover investigators
made 175 drug buys during the case, leading to 13
federal indictments. Another 46 subjects were also
indicted on local charges, and more than $16 million
in stolen property was recovered, including late-model
luxury automobiles, motor homes, boats, and motorcycles.
Investigators also obtained confessions to two murders
and a bank robbery. A 1978 white-collar sting operation
was a success as well, resulting in the arrest of
19 people on procurement fraud and bribery charges.
1980s and 1990s
Major drug enterprises, organized crime, espionage, and white-collar and violent crimes were a major focus of the Norfolk Division in the next two decades.
In 1980, for instance, the division participated in a joint federal/state task force that targeted narcotics trafficking in southeastern Virginia. The investigation eventually involved more than a dozen federal, state, and local agencies and produced dozens of convictions.
Another major case for the division during this time was UNIRAC—short for union racketeering. This organized crime investigation rooted out corruption along East Coast waterfronts. Norfolk agents pursued corruption at Hampton Roads, one of the largest seaports in the United States. In the end, the UNIRAC cases yielded more than 100 convictions from New York to Miami.
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| John Walker |
Espionage remained a key concern as well. In 1985,
Norfolk agents identified and arrested an intelligence
specialist named John Walker who sought to enter
into a clandestine relationship with the Soviet
Union. The Norfolk Division soon found itself deeply
involved in the investigation of one of the most
damaging spy rings in U.S. history. Walker had revealed
U.S. naval cryptographic secrets for decades before
his former wife's anger at his attempt to recruit
his daughter prompted her to contact the FBI.
White-collar and violent crime continued to provide significant cases for the division. An investigation with the Naval Investigative Service and the Internal Revenue Service into allegations of fraud by officials working on a contract to install non-tactical computer systems aboard U.S. Navy ships led to the December 1989 conviction of three men. The potential value of the contract was estimated at $1 billion. In a major property theft case, the Norfolk Division recovered 11 stolen government-owned jet engines and hundreds of other parts valued at over $6 million. The division also assisted local police on a number of murder and fugitive cases in the 1980s.
In 1990, Norfolk agents participated in an investigation that resulted in a major organized crime takedown in the Hampton Roads area. The case led to the seizure of a number of pizza parlors, an Italian restaurant, and beverage company. Mobsters like Pietro Cottone, Baptista Pirrone, and Salvatore Cottone were convicted.
Less than a decade later, the division followed
up with other noteworthy criminal enterprise cases.
One investigation conducted by the Norfolk Division's
Safe Streets Task Force—which was created
in the early 1990s and includes detectives from
the Portsmouth
Police Department and other law enforcement and
prosecutorial officials—involved Richard Thomas Stitt
and his gang. Stitt and 12 co-defendants, known
as "the Miami Boys," were charged in 1998 with various narcotics, criminal enterprise, murder, and firearms violations. They used violence and execution-style murders to gain control of rival drug territories and silence other gang members accused of cooperating with law enforcement. Stitt was the first federal defendant from Virginia sentenced to death in more than seven decades on account of the severity of his crimes. In 1999, the division probed another organized criminal enterprise—the Renegade Outlaw Motorcycle Club—resulting in dozens of arrests and seizures of weapons, explosives, and drugs.
Post 9/11
On the morning of 9/11, Special Agent in Charge Michael E. Varnum held his first all-hands meeting, one day after he had taken charge. The gathered agents and professional support staff knew their responsibilities had immediately changed—that preventing terrorist attacks was now the overriding priority for them and for the entire Bureau.
In response, the Norfolk Division stood up the
Tidewater Joint Terrorism Task Force in December
2001 and its Field Intelligence Group (FIG) in September
2003. The task force brought together area law enforcement
and intelligence partners from federal, state, local,
and military agencies to investigate terrorism leads,
share information, support special events, and proactively
identify threats that might impact the Norfolk area
and the nation. The FIG supports both this national
security work and the office's criminal responsibilities,
analyzing and sharing intelligence and making sure
that the division remains aware of and responsive
to national information collection and analysis
needs.
Even with the focus on terrorism, the Norfolk
Division continues to investigate a wide variety
of criminal threats. In 2003, for example, the division
broke up a "phishing" operation that
attempted to trick Internet users into revealing
personal information. One of the intended victims,
however, was a Norfolk agent who specialized in
cyber crime. The division quickly identified the
perpetrators and arrested them.
As the FBI enters its second century, the Norfolk Division continues to build on a history of innovation and dedication as it works to protect southeastern Virginia and the nation as a whole
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