The CIA Burglar Who Went Rogue
Douglas Groat thought he understood the risks of his job—until he took on his own employer
- By David Wise
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2012, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 5)
That is why by 1955, and probably earlier, the CIA created a special unit to perform what the agency calls “surreptitious entries.” This unit was so secret that few people inside CIA headquarters knew it existed; it wasn’t even listed in the CIA's classified telephone book. Officially it was named the Special Operations Division, but the handful of agency officers selected for it called it the Shop.
In Doug Groat’s time there, in the 1980s and early ’90s, the Shop occupied a nondescript one-story building just south of a shopping mall in the Washington suburb of Springfield, Virginia. The building was part of a government complex surrounded by a chain-link fence; the pebbled glass in the windows let in light but allowed no view in or out. The men and women of the Shop made up a team of specialists: lock pickers, safecrackers, photographers, electronics wizards and code experts. One team member was a master at disabling alarm systems, another at flaps and seals. Their mission, put simply, was to travel the world and break into other countries’ embassies to steal codes, and it was extraordinarily dangerous. They did not have the protection of diplomatic cover; if caught, they might face imprisonment or execution. The CIA, they assumed, would claim it knew nothing about them. “It was generally understood, from talking to the other guys,” Groat recalls. “Nobody ever said it in so many words.”
Groat started working at the Shop in 1982 and became the CIA’s top burglar and premier lock picker. He planned or participated in 60 missions in Europe, Africa, South America and the Middle East. He received several $5,000 awards for successful entry missions—a significant sum for someone earning less than $40,000 a year at the time—as well as an award from the CIA’s Clandestine Service and another from the NSA. In several instances, as in the operation in the Middle East capital, he led the entry team. But that operation was Groat’s last. The simple fact that a cleaning lady had unexpectedly shown up for work set off a chain of events that pit him against his employer. The operations of the Shop, as described by Groat, other former members of the Shop and other intelligence professionals, illustrate the lengths to which the CIA went to steal other nations’ secrets. What happened to Groat illustrates the measures the agency took to protect secrets of its own.
Groat would seem an excellent candidate for the job of stealing codes. Six-foot-three, handsome and articulate, he is a former Green Beret trained in scuba diving, underwater explosives, parachuting, survival and evasion; he knows how to build homemade pistols, shotguns, silencers, booby traps and bombs. He also speaks Mandarin Chinese. He says he relished his work at the Shop—both for the opportunity to serve his country and for the adrenaline rush that came with the risks.
He grew up in Scotia, New York, near Albany. He joined the Army in 1967, before marrying his high-school sweetheart, and served as a captain in the Special Forces. He left after four years and worked in a series of law-enforcement jobs. As a police officer in Glenville, New York, Groat displayed a streak of unyielding resolve: He ticketed fire engines when he believed they were breaking the law. “The trucks would run with lights flashing even when they were not responding to a fire. They were checking the hydrants,” he says. “I warned them, ‘Do it again and I’ll ticket you.’ They did and I did.” After he ticketed the fire chief, Groat was fired. He sued and won his job back—and then, having made his point, quit to become a deputy U.S. marshal in Phoenix.
By then Groat and his wife had a daughter and a son. In 1980, he joined the CIA and moved his family to Great Falls, Virginia. At age 33, he was sent off to the Farm, the CIA's training base near Williamsburg, to learn the black arts of espionage. Two years later, after testing well for hand coordination and the capacity to pay painstaking attention to detail, he was accepted for the Shop.
In training there he demonstrated an exceptional talent for picking locks, so the CIA sent him to vocational courses in opening both locks and safes. As a result, the CIA’s top burglar was also a bonded locksmith, member number 13526 of the Associated Locksmiths of America. He was also a duly certified member of the Safe and Vault Technicians Association.
Although Hollywood films show burglars with an ear glued to a safe to listen for the tumblers, Groat says it doesn't work that way. “You feel the tumblers. In your fingers,” he says. “There are three to four wheels in a typical safe combination lock. As you turn the dial you can feel it as you hit each wheel, because there’s extra tension on the dial. Then you manipulate one wheel at a time until the drop lever inside falls into the open position and the safe is unlocked.”
After training came the real thing. “It was exhilarating,” Groat recalls of his first mission, targeting a South American embassy in Northern Europe. When he traveled to a target, he used an alias and carried phony ID—”pocket litter,” as it is known in the trade. His fake identities were backstopped, meaning that if anyone called to check with the real companies listed on his cards, someone would vouch for him as an employee. He also was given bank and credit cards in an alias to pay his travel expenses.
Because Groat’s work was so sensitive, he had to conceal it. Although his wife understood the nature of his work, for years his children did not. “I didn’t know where my father worked until I was in high school, in the ninth or tenth grade,” says Groat's son, Shawn. “My sister typed a report on special paper that dissolved in water, although we didn’t know it. My father realized what she was doing and said, ‘You can’t use that paper.’ Then he ate the paper.
“He then sat us down and said, ‘I don’t work for the State Department. I work for the CIA.’” The State Department had been his cover story to explain his frequent travels to friends, relatives and neighbors. He said he inspected security at U.S. embassies.
Groat would not talk about which countries’ codes he and his colleagues stole. Other intelligence sources said that in 1989, he led an extraordinary mission to Nepal to steal a code machine from the East German Embassy there—the CIA and the NSA, which worked closely with the Shop, wanted the device so badly that Groat was told to go in, grab the safe containing the code machine and get out. Never mind the rule about leaving no trace; in this case it would be immediately obvious that a very large object was missing.
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Comments (21)
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Excellent article, very well written. However, its tone is much too sympathetic to Groat. Look online, and you'll find an NPR interview that came out at the same time as this article: in it, Groat claims that the operation that almost went bad had no proper preparation because his supervisors wanted to save the money to give themselves big fat bonuses. That sounds much too simplistic and juvenile; no wonder the article's author left it out! Also, online you'll find more info from 1998, when Groat was tried and convicted. At that time, his former colleagues at the police department where he worked during his pre-spying days, spoke up about his highly controversial style. Apparently he's the kind of person who makes enemies wherever he goes. The fact the he told foreign embassies that they had been bugged, and the fact that he tried to extort the agency by threatening to "consult" for foreign countries, is ample proof of his poor judgment. No wonder he was let go. He may have been highly skilled at breaking and entering, but his abrasive style and poor judgment were a ticking bomb.
Posted by Diego Mamani on November 27,2012 | 05:13 PM
I applaud Groat the Cop handing traffic tickets --after a warning ---to fire trucks that were obviously grossly abusing their privileges, but I dont applaud Groat the Burglar-- 60 criminal burglaries for the CIA! He got what he deserved ironically at the hands of his own smelly bureacrat buddies. Anyone working crime whether for a government or not belongs in jail. Let us abolish the CIA mafia and the other costly spy agencies addicted to crime. Until we do, the world will righty despise Uncle Sam! Read more: http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history-archaeology/The-CIA-Burglar-Who-Went-Rogue-169800816.html#ixzz2CQC69hmt
Posted by randy f dubrovnik on November 16,2012 | 04:16 PM
nov. 7, 2012 Your article speaks volumnes about the effectiveness of an Inspector General that is SUBORDINATE/REPORTS TO a government agency that he/she is investigating. While Hitz, the inspector general for CIA said "His grievances had some justification in fact." and further he " ... urged that steps be taken to avoid a repeat of the problems Groat had encountered and that "we expected this not to happen again." it does not appear the CIA took Hitz's urging seriously. Instead the CIA gave Groat a desk at a CIA building in Tysons Corner ... but no work to do. Does this smell like something the CIA didn't want others to smell? peace, jbk
Posted by jbk on November 7,2012 | 05:50 PM
To be succinct, I am incredulous that this story is really true. It reads like a James Bond movie. It also reads like a Smithsonian Sidd Finch story, Sidd Finch being the phenom Sports Illustrated for a April 1st issue back in the 1960s. Is this Doug Groat Dick Groat's brother? Was the author a Duke or Pittsburgh Pirate fan? Come on: 'fess up, Smithsonian.
Posted by Jeff Stivenson on November 5,2012 | 05:20 PM
Here is an article from 1998 that has a different perspective: http://www.nytimes.com/1998/04/12/us/a-straight-arrow-policeman-turns-loose-cannon-at-cia.html?pagewanted=all&src=pm
Posted by Kyle B on November 4,2012 | 10:35 AM
Is Smithsonian turning into Fox News? I didn't like the tone of this article and have decided to let my subscription lapse.
Posted by Leanne Thomassen on October 24,2012 | 05:01 PM
Let me this straight. He gave traffic tickets to fire trucks when he was a cop? How did he ever get hired at the CIA? It was obvious then he he used bad judgment. Oh yeah, like when he mailed and dropped off letters to foreign govenment representatives.
Posted by Brian Nolan on October 17,2012 | 03:57 PM
Dear Editor: i read the the above article with some comprehension. The CIA as other military organization assume that the superior is always right. Following rules is one thing, being right is another. It is unbelievable that such a person like Mr. Groat who risked his life many times for decades for our country received such a "thank you" and nightmares followed when he suggested comment following an inappropriate action. He would receive red carpet treatment if he would approached one of antagonistic country embassy. My understanding that in the Israeli army encourage soldiers to suggest any improvement and changes if that benefit their function. Wouldn't be a great improvement if we would follow similar practice in our government run institutions? Sincerely Dr. Robert O Fisch
Posted by Dr. Robert O Fisch on October 16,2012 | 06:21 PM
"The people who put their lives on the line for our country are nothing but ants, to be stepped on if necessary, to some bureaucrats that run our intelligence services." Of course they are. If they ever get caught, the agency will disavow any knowledge of the person and leave them to rot. They are at once the most valued yet easily disposed of asset.
Posted by Joel Helgeson on October 16,2012 | 01:33 PM
Christianic terrorism. No wonder the whole world hates Americans.
Posted by Fred on October 15,2012 | 04:30 PM
There comes a time when judgment matters. You lose a political battle in big dangerous organizations, you take the money and run. You fight a system built on deception and violence and you invite getting burnt.
Posted by SixSixSix on October 10,2012 | 03:12 AM
I'm glad to see that through their heroic efforts our fine Justice Department has clearly communicated to other desperate and discarded members of the intelligence community that they should just defect instead of wasting time trying to get any real justice.
Posted by Charles Finley on October 9,2012 | 01:43 AM
I'm sure he was supremely frustrated with that mission. But, come on, he seriously thought extorting money from the agency was a good idea? Like another poster said, he should write a book, provided all the NDAs don't prevent it or get him into more trouble.
Posted by BangBangBang on October 9,2012 | 10:41 PM
"and the British secretly read Nazi communications after acquiring a copy of a German Enigma cipher machine from Polish intelligence. " Sad to see this canard repeated here. Having an Enigma machine wasn't the key to breaking the code - the British codebreakers did some exceptional heavy lifting, both manually and with the computer they invented. Making it sound like it was just a bit of petty thievery seriously understates the intellectual horsepower required.
Posted by Robert Roe on October 9,2012 | 09:45 PM
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