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 5 of 5)
On April 2, 1998, he walked into an FBI building in downtown Washington. Flynn greeted him in the lobby. Had the others arrived yet? he asked as she led him to a first-floor conference room. She said they had not. As the door clicked shut behind him, she delivered unexpected news. “I told him we had resolved the matter, but not to his liking,” Flynn recalls. A man in a white shirt and tie—a Justice Department official, Groat later concluded—told him: “We decided not to negotiate with you. We indicted you instead.” Then the man turned and left.
Groat was arrested and held in the room for five hours. Flynn and two other agents remained with him, he says. His car keys were taken away. “One of the FBI agents said, ‘It probably wouldn’t do much good to ask you questions, would it?’ And I said, ‘No, it wouldn’t.’” After being strip-searched, fingerprinted and handcuffed, he says, he was driven to the Federal District Court building and locked in a cell. Held there for two days, he was strip-searched again in front of eight people, including a female officer, shackled and outfitted with a stun belt. “My eyes were covered with a pair of goggles, the lenses masked over with duct tape,” he says. He was moved by van, with a police escort, to a waiting helicopter.
After a short ride, he was taken to a windowless room that would be his home for the next six months. He was never told where he was, but he was told he was being treated as an “extreme risk” prisoner. The lights in his cell were kept on 24/7, and a ceiling-mounted camera monitored him all the time.<
Robert Tucker, a federal public defender in Washington, was assigned to Groat’s case. When Tucker wanted to visit his client, he was picked up in a van with blacked-out windows and taken to him. Tucker, too, never learned where Groat was being held.
A few days before Groat’s arrest, a federal grand jury in Washington had handed down a sealed indictment accusing him of transmitting, or trying to transmit, information on “the targeting and compromise of cryptographic systems” of unnamed foreign countries—a reference to his distributing his letter to the consulates. The formal charge was espionage, which carries a possible penalty of death. He was also charged with extortion, another reference to his approach to the consulates; the indictment accused him of attempting to reveal “activities and methods to foreign governments” unless the CIA “paid the defendant for his silence in excess of five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000).”
As a trial date approached, prosecutors offered Groat a plea agreement. Although they were not pressing for the death penalty, Groat faced the prospect of life in prison if a jury convicted him of espionage. Reluctantly, he agreed to plead guilty to extortion if the government would drop the spying charges. “I had no choice,” he says. “I was threatened with 40 years to life if I didn’t take the deal.” Groat also agreed to testify fully in the CIA and FBI counterintelligence investigations, and he subsequently confessed that he sent the letters about the bugged computers.
On September 25, 1998, Groat stood before Judge Thomas F. Hogan of the Federal District Court in Washington and entered his guilty plea. He was sentenced to five years.
The question of where Groat would serve his time was complicated by what a federal Bureau of Prisons official referred to as his “special abilities.” While still in solitary, he wrote to a friend: “The marshals are treating me like I'm a cross between MacGyver, Houdini and Rambo.” But in the end, he was sent to the minimum-security wing of the federal prison camp in Cumberland, Maryland. “My skills, after all, were not for escaping,” Groat notes. “They were for entering places.”
There Groat was assigned to a case manager, who introduced herself as Aleta. Given her new client’s reputation, she put him in solitary the first night. But officials gradually noticed she and Groat spent a lot of time talking to each other. As a result, he was transferred to the federal prison in Terre Haute, Indiana, after two years, but the two corresponded often.
In March 2002, Groat was released a month short of four years, his sentence reduced for good behavior. Aleta was waiting for him at the prison gate, and they were married that December. Today, Doug and Aleta Groat live on 80 acres in the South. He prefers not to disclose his location any more specifically than that. He has not told his neighbors or friends about his previous life as a spy; he works the land and tries to forget the past.
When he looks back, Groat tries to focus on the good parts. “I loved the work at CIA. I’d come back from an op and couldn’t wait for what happens next,” he says. “I thought the work was good for the country. I was saddened by the way I was treated by the agency, because I tried to do my job.”
The CIA was unwilling to talk about Douglas Groat or anything connected with his case. Asked whether it has a team that goes around the globe breaking into foreign embassies and stealing codes, a spokesperson provided a five-word statement: “The CIA declined to comment.”
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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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