Terminal Compromise by Winn Schwartau (my reading book .txt) š
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guarded mazes held the clues to the locations of an incredible
array of computing power, some of the worldās best analytical
tools, test equipment, forensic labs, communications facilities
and a staff of experts in hundreds of technical specialties
required to investigate crimes that landed in their jurisdiction.
The most sensitive work was performed underground, protected by
the solid bedrock of Manhattan island. Eavesdropping was impos-
sible, almost, and operational privacy was guaranteed. Personal
privacy was another matter, though. Most of the office staff
worked out in an open office floorplan. The walls between the
guard stations and banks of elevators consisted solely of bullet-
proof floor to ceiling triple pane glass. Unnerving at first, no
privacy.
There was a self-imposed class structure between the ābugsā,
those who worked in the subterranean chambers and the āair-headsā
who worked where the daylight shone. There was near total sepa-
ration between the two groups out of necessity; maintain isola-
tion between those with differing need-to-know criteria. The
most visible form of self-imposed isolation, and unintended
competitiveness was that each camp spent Happy Hour at different
bars. A line that was rarely crossed.
Unlike the mechanism of the Corporate Ladder, where the higher
floors are reserved for upper, top, elite management, the power
brokers, at the FBI the farther down into the ground you worked,
the more important you were. To the āairheadsā, ābugsā tried to
see how low they could sink in their acquisition of power while
rising up on the Government pay scale.
On level 5, descending from street level 1, Tyrone sat on the
edge of his large Government issue executive desk to answer his
ringing phone. It was Washington, Bob Burnsen, his Washington
based superior and family friend for years.
āNo, really. Thanks,ā Ty smiled. āBob, weāve been through this
before. Itās all very flattering, but no. Iām afraid not. And
you know why. Weāve been through this all . . .ā He was being
cut off by his boss, so he shut up and listened.
āBob . . .Bob . . .Bob,ā Tyrone was laughing as he tried to
interrupt the other end of the conversation. āOK, Iāll give it
some more thought, but donāt get your hopes up. Itās just not in
my cards.ā He listened again.
āBob, Iāll speak to Arlene again, but she feels the same way I
do. Weāre both quite content and frankly, I donāt need the
headaches.ā He looked around the room as he cocked the earpiece
away from his head. He was hearing the same argument again.
āBob, I said I would. Iāll call you next week.ā He paused.
āRight. If you donāt hear from me, youāll call me. I understand.
Right. OK, Bob. All right, you too. Goodbye.ā
He hung up the phone in disbelief. They just wonāt leave me
alone. Let me be! He clasped his hands in mock prayer at the
ceiling.
*Tyrone Duncan joined the FBI in 1968, immediately after graduat-
ing cum laude from Harvard Law. Statistically the odds were
against him ever being accepted into the elite National Police
Force. The virtually autonomous empire that J. Edgar Hoover had
created over 60 years and 12 presidents ago was very selective
about whom it admitted. Tyrone Duncan was black.
His distinguished pre-law training had him prepared to follow
into his fatherās footsteps, as a partner with one of Bostonās
most prestigious law firms. Tyrone was a member of one of the
very few rich and influential black families in the North East.
His family was labeled āLiberalā when one wasnāt ashamed of the
moniker.
Then came Selma. At 19, he participated in several of the
marches in the South and it was then that he first hand saw
prejudice. But it was more than prejudice, though. It was hate,
it was ignorance and fear. It was so much more than prejudice.
It was one of the last vestiges left over from a society con-
quered over a century ago; one that wouldnāt let go of its mis-
guided myopic traditions.
Fear and hate are contagious. Fueled by the oppressive heat and
humidity, decades of racial conflict, several āJew Boy Nigger
Loversā were killed that summer in Alabama. The murder of the
civil rights workers made front page news. The country was out-
raged, at the murders most assuredly, but national outrage turned
quickly to divisional disgust when local residents dismissed the
crime as a prank, or even congratulated the perpetrators for
their actions.
The FBI was not called in to Alabama to solve murders, per se;
murder is not a federal crime. They were to solve the crime
because the murderers had violated the victimsā civil rights.
Tyrone thought that that approach was real slick, a nice legal
side step to get what you want. Put the lawyers on the case.
When he asked the FBI if they could use a hand, the local over-
worked, understaffed agents graciously accepted his offer and
Tyrone spent the remainder of the summer filing papers and per-
forming other mundane tasks while learning a great deal.
On the plane back to Boston, Tyrone Duncan decided that his
despite his fatherās urging, after law school he would join the
FBI.
Tyrone Duncan, graduate cum laude, GPA 3.87, Harvard Law School,
passed the Massachussettes Bar on the first try and sailed
through the written and physical tests for FBI admission. He was
over 100 pounds lighter than his current weight. His background
check was unassailable except for his familyās prominent liberal
bent. He had every basic qualification needed to become an FBI
Agent. He was turned down.
Thurman Duncan, his prominent lawyer father was beside himself,
blaming it on Hoover personally. But Tyrone decided to āinvesti-
gateā and determine who or what was pulling the strings. He
called FBI personnel and asked why he had been rejected. They
mumbled something about āexperience baseā and āfitting the moldā.
That was when he realized that he was turned down solely because
he was black. Tyrone was not about to let a racial issue stand
in his way.
He located a couple of the agents with whom he had worked during
the last summer. After the pleasantries, Tyrone told them that
he was applying for a position as an assistant DA in Boston.
Would they mind writing a letter . . .
Tyrone Duncan was right on time at the office of the FBI Person-
nel Director. Amazing, Tyrone thought, the resemblance to Hoov-
er. The four letters of recommendation, which read more like
votes for sainthood were a little overdone, but, they were on FBI
stationary. Tyrone asked the Personnel Director if they would
reconsider his application, and that if necessary, he would
whitewash his skin.
The following day Tyrone received a call. Oh, it was a big mix-
up. We misfiled someone elseās charts in your files and, well,
you understand, Iām sure. It happens all the time. Weāre sorry
for any inconvenience. Would you be available to come in on
Monday? Welcome to the FBI.
Tyrone paid his dues early. Got shot at some, chased long haired
left wing hippie radicals who blew up gas stations in 17 states
for some unfathomable reason, and then of course, he collected
dirt on imaginary enemies to feed the Hoover Nixon paranoia. He
tried, fairly successfully to stay away from that last kind of
work. In Tyroneās not so humble opinion, there were a whole lot
more better things for FBI agents to be doing than worry about
George McGovernās toilet habits or if some left wing high school
kids and their radical newspaper were imaginarily linked to the
Kremlin. Ah, but that was politics.
Three weeks after J. Edgar Hoover died, Tyrone Duncan was promot-
ed to Section Chief in the New York City office. A prestigious
position. This was his first promotion in 8 years at the bureau.
It was one that leaped over 4 intermediate levels. The Hoover
era was gone.
After hanging up the phone with Bob Bernsen, Tyrone sat behind
his desk going over his morning reports. No planes hijacked, no
new counterfeiting rings and nary a kidnapping. What dogged him
though was the flurry of blackmail and extortion claims. He re-
read the digested version put out by Washington headquarters that
was faxed to him in the early hours, ready for his A.M. perusal.
The apparent facts confounded his years of experience. Over 100
people, many of them highly placed leaders of American industry
had called their respective regional FBI offices for help. A call
into the FBI is handled in a procedural manner. The agent who
takes the call can identify the source of the call with a readout
on his special phone; a service that the FBI had had for years
but was only recently becoming available to the public. Thus, if
the caller had significant information, but refused to identify
himself, the agent
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