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 3 of 5)
According to two CIA sources, the agency and the NSA had collected three decades’ worth of encrypted East German communications traffic; the machine would allow them to read it and, if the Soviets and the other Warsaw Pact countries were linked in a common system, perhaps to decrypt Soviet traffic as well.
The CIA station in Katmandu arranged for an official ceremony to be held more than an hour away from the capital and for all foreign diplomats to be invited. The agency knew the East Germans could not refuse to attend. That would leave Groat’s team about three hours to work. Posing as tourists, they arrived in Katmandu two days before the mission and slipped into a safe house. On the appointed day, they left the safe house wearing disguises crafted by a CIA specialist—whole-face latex masks that transformed them into Nepalese, with darker skin and jet-black hair. At the embassy, Groat popped the front door open with a small pry bar. Inside, the intruders peeled off their stifling masks and with a bolt-cutter removed a padlock barring the way to the embassy's security area. Once in the code room, Groat and two teammates strained to lift the safe from the floorboards and wrestled it down the stairs and out to a waiting van.
They drove the safe to the American Embassy, where it was opened—and found to contain no code machine. Based on faulty intelligence, the CIA had sent its break-in team on a Himalayan goose chase.
In planning an operation, Groat says, he would normally reconnoiter the target personally. But he was told there was no budget to send him before his 1990 mission to the Middle East capital, so he had to rely on assurances from the local CIA station. Although the team accomplished its mission and returned to the Shop within two days, Groat was enraged at what he believed was sloppy advance work.
“It was a near miss, very scary,” he says. “I had to complain. It could have been disastrous for the U.S. government and the officers involved.”
Not to worry, Groat’s boss told him; he would personally tell the official who supervised the Shop what had happened. Groat says his boss warned him that if he went outside channels and briefed the supervisor on his own, “it would end my career.” He went to the supervisor anyway. “I told [him] if we had been caught our agent would be killed,” he says. “He said he didn’t care. That it was an aberration and wouldn’t happen again.” Groat did not back down; in fact, he escalated matters by taking his complaint to the CIA inspector general. The IG at the time was Frederick P. Hitz, who now teaches law at the University of Virginia. Hitz recalls that his office investigated the matter.
“On the issue that preparations for that entry had not been properly made, we did find there was merit in his complaint,” Hitz says. “His grievances had some justification in fact. He felt there was sloppiness that endangered himself and his crew, the safety of the men for whom he was responsible. We felt there was some reason for his being upset at the way his operation was prepared.”
Given the tensions rising between Groat and his managers, the IG also recommended that Groat be transferred to another unit. Hitz says he is fairly certain that he also urged that steps be taken to avoid a repeat of the problems Groat had encountered and that “we expected this not to happen again.” But the recommendation that Groat be transferred created a problem: There was no other unit like the Shop. Groat says he was given a desk at a CIA building in Tysons Corner, in Northern Virginia, but no work to do—for 14 months. In October 1992, he says, he was moved to another office in Northern Virginia but still given no duties. He worked out at a gym in a nearby CIA building and went home by 11 a.m.
By then Groat was at the end of his rope. “I was under more and more pressure” to quit, he says. “I was being pushed out and I was looking at losing my retirement.” He called the inspector general, “and he told me to find another job because I wasn't going to get my job [at the Shop] back.”
The way Groat saw it, he had risked his life for nearly a decade to perform some of his country’s most demanding, valuable and risky work. He was the best at what he did, and yet that didn’t seem to matter; some bureaucrats had forced him out of the Shop for speaking out.
So he decided to run his own operation. Against the CIA.
In September 1992, Groat sent three anonymous letters to the ambassador of an Asian country revealing an operation he had participated in about a year and a half earlier to bug computers in an embassy the country maintained in Scandinavia. “It was a last-ditch effort to get the agency to pay attention,” Groat says. Clearly, he knew he was taking a terrible risk. At least one letter was intercepted and turned over to the CIA. But one or more may have gotten through, because the bugs suddenly went silent.
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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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