CIA IN THE PEACEFUL TOWN
OF LEWES
A CIA report, noted in the
Wilmingtom News Journal on June 11, 1975, states that the
Lewes Police Agency has
received from the CIA, gratuties, for being helpful to the agency.
The tiny police force of Lewes would hardly seem qualified to
receive a high level international intrigue message of such, but it
did.
The reason was that former
CIA Director, Richard Helms, has been raveling back and forth
between Lewes and Washington, D.C. recently to answer to congress
probers about illegal spying
and assassination plots.
During his years as CIA
director, Helms, would escape the battles of Washington to a summer
cottage here , Wit's End,
at 1303 Cedar Avenue, which is owned by his wife, Cynthia Retcliff
McKelvie. The 'gift' was , according to the report, given to the
Lewes police for their assistance when it was thought that Helms
life was in danger. Chief Louis Fisher, Lewes Police Department,
said that if Helms life was in danger he did not know anything about
it andtold us that a few year ago the department was asked “to keep
an eye on the cottage when Helms was in town” by an agent of the
CIA
and his men were instructed
to drive by the cottage, time to time, to see if it was OK. Not a
great
urgency was noticed. Most
of the time we only knew he was here when we saw his car in the
drive.
Just what the gift was is
another question. Fisher told of a walkie-talkie they sent once but
it would not work on the Lewes system and was returned. Fisher and
City Manager, Ron Donovan, were guest once at the CIA in
Washington for a tour, maybe that was the gift.
A case of government
intrigue gone by unnoticed by the peaceful beach town of Lewes.
Source: Sussex Bureau,
Wilmington News Journal , Wednesday, June 11, 1975, abstact by
Harrison H ., November 11, 2017
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