Jack Anderson (columnist)

Jack Northman Anderson (October 19, 1922 – December 17, 2005) was an American newspaper columnist, syndicated by United Features Syndicate, considered one of the founders of modern investigative journalism. Anderson won the 1972 Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting for his investigation on secret U.S. policy decision-making between the United States and Pakistan during the Indo-Pakistani War of 1971. In addition to his newspaper career, Anderson also had a national radio show on the Mutual Broadcasting System, acted as Washington bureau chief of Parade magazine, and was a commentator on ABC-TV's Good Morning America for nine years.[1]

Jack Anderson
Anderson circa 1973
Born
Jack Northman Anderson

(1922-10-19)October 19, 1922
DiedDecember 17, 2005(2005-12-17) (aged 83)
OccupationInvestigative journalist
AwardsPulitzer Prize

Among the exposés Anderson reported were the Nixon administration's investigation and harassment of John Lennon during its fight to deport Lennon; the continuing activities of fugitive Nazi officials in South America; and the savings and loan crisis. He revealed the history of a CIA plot to assassinate Fidel Castro[2] and was credited for breaking the story of the Iran–Contra affair under President Reagan. He said that the scoop was "spiked" because the story had become too close to President Ronald Reagan.[3]

Early life and career

Anderson was born in Long Beach, California, to Orlando and Agnes (née Mortensen) Anderson, devout members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints of Swedish and Danish descent. He grew up with his family in Salt Lake City, Utah. After high school, he served two years as a missionary for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the church's Southern States Mission.[4]

Anderson's aptitude for journalism appeared at the early age of 12 when he began writing the Boy Scouts Column for The Deseret News. He published his first articles in his local newspaper, The Murray Eagle. He edited his high school newspaper, The Granitian. He joined The Salt Lake Tribune in 1940, where his muckraking exploits included infiltrating polygamous Mormon fundamentalist sects. In 1944, he joined the United States Merchant Marine and served on cargo ships that went to New Guinea and India.[5] In the spring of 1945, he resigned from the Merchant Marine, and became a war correspondent stationed in Chungking, China.[5] Shortly after World War II ended, he was drafted into the United States Army, and served until the fall of 1946 as an armed forces newsman and radio broadcaster.[5] While in the Army, Anderson worked on the Shanghai edition of Stars and Stripes, produced by troops and XMHA, the Armed Forces' radio station.[6][5] After his stint in the Army, Anderson was hired by Drew Pearson for the staff of his column, the "Merry-Go-Round". When Pearson died in 1969, Anderson inherited responsibility for this column and gave his own name to it – Washington Merry-go-Round.[7] In its heyday, Anderson's column was the most influential and widely read in the U.S.; published in nearly a thousand newspapers, he reached an audience of 40 million people.[8] He co-founded Citizens Against Government Waste with J. Peter Grace in 1984.[9]

Muckraker

Anderson feuded with FBI director J. Edgar Hoover in the 1950s, when he exposed the scope of the Mafia, a threat that Hoover had long downplayed. Hoover's retaliation and continual harassment lasted into the 1970s.[10] Hoover once described Anderson as "lower than the regurgitated filth of vultures."[11]

Anderson told his staff, "Let's do to Hoover what he does to others,"[12] and he instructed them to go through Hoover's garbage, a tactic the FBI used in its surveillance of political dissidents.[13][14] Anderson's revelations about Hoover tipped the attitudes of the public and the press towards the FBI director.[15]

Anderson grew close to Senator Joseph McCarthy, and the two exchanged information from sources.[16] When Pearson went after McCarthy, Anderson reluctantly followed at first, then actively assisted with the eventual downfall of his onetime friend.[17][18]

In the mid-1960s Anderson exposed the corruption of Senator Thomas J. Dodd and unearthed a memo by an ITT executive admitting the company made large donations to Richard Nixon's campaign to so that Nixon would stymie anti-trust prosecution. His reporting on Nixon-ITT corruption earned him a place on the Master list of Nixon's political opponents.[19] Anderson collaborated with Pearson on The Case Against Congress, published in 1968.[20]

According to the Family Jewels Central Intelligence Agency documents, in 1971, during the Indo-Pakistani War, the director of the CIA, Richard Helms, had a wiretap put on Anderson's phones.[21]

Other topics that Anderson covered included organized crime, the John F. Kennedy assassination, Ted Kennedy's role in the drowning death of a staffer at the Chappaquiddick incident, the Watergate scandal, the 1970 meeting between Elvis Presley and President Nixon,[22] fugitive Nazis, the white supremacist organization the Liberty Lobby and other far-right organizations, the death of Howard Hughes, the ABSCAM public corruption investigation, the investigation into fugitive financier Robert Vesco, the Iran-Contra scandal, and the activities of numerous Washington agencies, elected officials, and bureaucrats.[1]

Retractions

Anderson's column occasionally published erroneous information for which he issued retractions. During the 1972 presidential race, Anderson retracted a story accusing Democratic vice-presidential nominee Thomas Eagleton of multiple drunk driving arrests. But Eagleton's campaign was already severely damaged, and he was dropped from the ticket.[23]

Targeted for assassination

In 1972 Anderson was the target of an assassination plot conceived by senior White House staff. Two Nixon administration conspirators admitted under oath that they plotted to poison Anderson on orders from senior White House aide Charles Colson.[24]

White House "plumbers" G. Gordon Liddy and E. Howard Hunt met with a CIA operative to discuss the possibilities, including drugging Anderson with LSD, poisoning his aspirin bottle, or staging a fatal mugging.[25] The plot was aborted when the plotters were arrested for the Watergate break-in. Nixon had long been angry with Anderson. He blamed the fallout from Anderson's election-eve story about a secret loan from Howard Hughes to Nixon's brother[16] for Nixon's loss of the 1960 presidential election.

Project Mudhen

Beginning in February 1972, Anderson was the subject of a CIA project called Project Mudhen (also referred to as Operation Mudhen) aiming to find the sources of his articles.[26][27][28] Over the course of three months, ending April 12, 1972, the CIA actively spied on Anderson, whose code name in the project was "Brandy". The CIA ended Mudhen after being unsuccessful at finding his sources and believing that Anderson was beginning to suspect he was being spied on by the CIA, which was able to collect a large file on his personal movements, his family, and the fact that he drove too fast occasionally. He later used documents he had been given about the project as part of a lawsuit against Richard Nixon and other government officials in 1977 claiming "that the agencies and officials committed various illegal acts and violated his constitutional rights to free speech and privacy".[26]

Glomar Explorer

Anderson has been credited as breaking to a nationwide audience in 1975 the story of the Glomar Explorer, a ship constructed under tight security by the CIA to recover the lost nuclear-armed Soviet submarine K-129.[29] Rejecting a plea from the Director of Central Intelligence William Colby to suppress the story, Anderson said he published the story because "Navy experts have told us that the sunken sub contains no real secrets and that the project, therefore, is a waste of the taxpayers' money."[29]

JFK conspiracy allegations

In November 1988 Anderson hosted a two-hour prime-time television special entitled American Expose: Who Murdered JFK?[30][31] The program asserted that the assassination of John F. Kennedy was a conspiracy involving an alliance between organized crime and the Cuban government,[30] and that the Warren Commission did not publicly reveal the true findings.[32] Anderson's theory was based on interviews with mobster John Roselli who – prior to his death 12 years earlier – said he learned of a conspiracy through mob sources.[30] Anderson's conversations with Roselli were re-enacted with an actor portraying Roselli.[33] According to Anderson, Cuban leader Fidel Castro wanted Kennedy killed in retaliation for CIA plots to kill Castro, and leaders of La Cosa Nostra in the United States opposed him due to his brother Robert F. Kennedy's efforts as US Attorney General against organized crime.[30] He said that Santo Trafficante, Carlos Marcello, and Jimmy Hoffa had the "motive and means to kill the president",[30] and reiterated reports connecting Lee Harvey Oswald and Jack Ruby to the mob.[30][33] Anderson also alleged that President Lyndon B. Johnson covered up the conspiracy for fear that public knowledge of the CIA plots would trigger war with the Soviet Union.[30]

According to Anderson's report, private photographic analysts concluded that the shot that killed Kennedy came from the front, and that E. Howard Hunt and James Earl Ray were depicted in photographs of the "three tramps".[30] Hunt denied the charge on the program[30] and said he had witnesses who could prove he was not in Dallas.[33] An Associated Press (AP) writer described it as a "bizarre allegation," to which Anderson provided "no explanation of their alleged connection".[30]

Chicago Tribune columnist Steve Daily called the program "limp" and said Anderson's conclusion that organized crime was responsible for the assassination was based "on circumstantial evidence and the word of dead gangster Johnny Roselli."[34] Howard Rosenberg of the Los Angeles Times wrote that it was "tawdry and strident" and said Anderson's "so-called evidence was unclear, unconvincing and untrustworthy."[33] The Deseret News said Anderson was trying to "rewrite history".[31]

Capitol security stunt

To demonstrate the weak security within the U.S. Capitol, in 1989, Anderson brought a gun to an interview in the office of Bob Dole, Senate minority leader. He was reprimanded and Congress passed a change of rules for reporters' access to the Capitol and politicians.[35]

Legmen and alumni

Investigative reporter Les Whitten shared the byline of Anderson's column in the 1970s. Anderson also used a staff of "legmen" on his payroll, who earned little but gained valuable reporting experience. Among Anderson's legmen—reporters who went out into the field and gathered the information, forwarding it to writers such as Anderson—was Brit Hume, later a television reporter for ABC News and Washington managing editor for the Fox News Channel.[23]

Death and aftermath

Anderson was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease in 1986. In July 2004, at the age of 81, Anderson retired from his syndicated column, Washington Merry-Go-Round. He died of complications from Parkinson's disease on December 17, 2005.[7]

In April 2006, Anderson's son Kevin said that some FBI agents had approached his mother (Jack's widow), Olivia, earlier that year to gain access to his father's files. This was purportedly in connection with the Lawrence Franklin espionage scandal. FBI spokesmen said that Anderson's archives contained classified information and confirmed that they wanted to remove the papers before they were made public.[36][37] The agents claimed to be looking for documents pertaining to American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) as part of an espionage investigation. In November 2006, the FBI quietly gave up its pursuit of the archive. The Chronicle of Higher Education reported that the archive contains Anderson's CIA file, along with information he had compiled about prominent public figures such as Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, Thomas Dodd, and J. Edgar Hoover.[38]

Books

Nonfiction

Fiction

References

  1. Anderson. (1930) Jack Northman Anderson (1922-2005) was an investigative journalist, author, television personality, and for over 50 years the columnist behind the syndicated political column "Washington Merry-Go-Round." Cultivating sources who provided him with exclusive access to classified information, Anderson became the longest-running political columnist in America, appearing at one point in more than 1,000 American newspapers and claiming 40 million readers. He received the Pulitzer Prize for national reporting in 1972. In addition to his daily column, Anderson maintained a high-profile presence in television, radio, and magazines, and he wrote or co-wrote 17 books.
  2. Cass, Connie. (December 18, 2005). Pulitzer-Winning Columnist Anderson Dies Kitsap Sun, AP. Archived at Wayback Machine, Archived on June 8, 2022.
  3. Simon, Diane (November 17, 2010). "The Merry-Go-Round: On Jack Anderson". The Nation. Archived from the original on August 19, 2015. Retrieved June 8, 2022.
  4. The Aggressive Inheritor. (September 12, 1969). Time (94)11, 86. Academic Search Premier, February 14, 2013.
  5. Sheehan, Susan. (August 13, 1972). The Anderson strategy: We hit you‐pow! Then you issue a denial, and‐bami‐we really let you have it. The New York Times, Archived by CIA Retrieved June 8, 2022.
  6. Smith, Stephen (December 17, 2005). "Columnist Jack Anderson Dies At 83". CBS Broadcasting. Associated Press. Archived from the original on October 27, 2014. Retrieved June 8, 2022.
  7. Martin, Douglas (December 18, 2005). "Jack Anderson, Investigative Journalist Who Angered the Powerful, Dies at 83". The New York Times. Archived from the original on October 17, 2018. Retrieved June 8, 2022.
  8. Naylor, Brian. (July 31, 2004). Writing the Book on Jack Anderson. Weekend All Things Considered (NPR), Retrieved June 8, 2022, Interview with Mark Feldstein.
  9. "Remarks on Receiving the Final Report of the President's Private Sector Survey on Cost Control in the Federal Government". Reagan Archives. October 28, 1985. Retrieved April 29, 2008.
  10. "Jack Anderson: The Fall of J. Edgar Hoover DVD". History Channel Store. Retrieved September 25, 2014.
  11. Bennett, Brian; Thompson, Mark (April 23, 2006). "A Reporter's Last Battle". Time. p. 29. Archived from the original on February 4, 2013.
  12. Eigen's Political & Historical Quotations Archived March 5, 2009, at the Wayback Machine, politicalquotes.org; accessed October 29, 2016.
  13. Feldstein, Mark (November 14, 2011). "The love J. Edgar Hoover does not deserve". Salon.com. Retrieved January 8, 2018.
  14. Anderson, Jack (March 27, 1971). "Hoover's Trash Shows He's Human" (PDF). The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. OCLC 2269358. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 9, 2018. Retrieved January 8, 2018.
  15. Gentry, Curt (2001). J. Edgar Hoover : the man and the secrets. New York: Norton. p. 803. ISBN 978-0393321289.
  16. Feldstein 2000.
  17. Welch, Robert (1975). "American Opinion". 18 (University of Virginia). Robert Welch, Incorporated. ISSN 0003-0236. OCLC 1480501. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  18. Reeves, Thomas C. (Spring 1977). "The Search for Joe McCarthy". The Wisconsin Magazine of History. 60 (30): 185–196. JSTOR 4635147.
  19. "Nixon's Plot to Assassinate Jack Anderson", Crime Magazine, crimemagazine.com; accessed October 29, 2016.
  20. "Corruption Within", Time 92.8 (1968): p. 80
    Academic Search Premier, February 14, 2013.
  21. Memo of conversation, January 3, 1975, between President Gerald Ford, William Colby, etc., made available by the National Security Archive.
  22. "When Elvis Met Nixon", smithsonianmag.com; accessed April 29, 2017.
  23. Kurtz, Howard. (April 19, 2006). Moving to the Right, The Washington Post, Wayback Machine Archived on December 10, 2006. Retrieved on June 8, 2022. ProQuest 410035213 ISSN 0190-8286 OCLC 2269358.
  24. Feldstein, Mark (July 28, 2004). "The Last Muckraker". The Washington Post. p. A19. ISSN 0190-8286. OCLC 2269358. Archived from the original on October 14, 2008. Retrieved June 8, 2022.
  25. Liddy, G. Gordon (1996). Will. St. Martins Press. pp. 208–11. ISBN 0-312-92412-7.
  26. Tomothy S. Robinson (May 4, 1977). "CIA Elaborately Tracked Columnist". Washington Post. Retrieved December 22, 2022.
  27. Daryl Gibson (May 24, 2022). "How this Latter-day Saint Sunday school teacher got to the top of Richard Nixon's enemy list". Deseret News. Retrieved December 22, 2022.
  28. Jack Anderson (November 19, 1975). "Project Mudhen, or Tracking Jack" (PDF). The Washington Post via jfk.hood.edu. Retrieved December 22, 2022.
  29. Robarge, David (March 2012). "The Glomar Explorer in Film and Print" (PDF). Studies in Intelligence. 56 (1): 28–29. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 26, 2012. Retrieved August 4, 2014.
  30. Callahan, Christopher (November 2, 1988). "Jack Anderson TV Special Concludes JFK Victim Of Mob Conspiracy". AP News. Associated Press. Retrieved February 4, 2013.
  31. Walker, Joseph (November 2, 1988). "Rewriting History on JFK's murder". Desert News. Salt Lake City. Retrieved April 29, 2017.
  32. Maksian, George (November 1, 1988). "Kennedy Assassination Hot Topic This Month". Sun-Sentinel. Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Retrieved April 29, 2017.
  33. Rosenberg, Howard (November 4, 1988). "TV's J.F.K. Remembrance Begins on a Tawdry Note". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved April 29, 2017.
  34. Daley, Steve (November 17, 1988). "TV merely tarnishes JFK anniversary". Chicago Tribune. p. C1. Retrieved April 29, 2017.
  35. "Reporter Reprimanded In Capitol Gun Incident". The New York Times. June 27, 1989. Retrieved May 5, 2010.
  36. Shane, Scott (April 19, 2006). "F.B.I. Is Seeking to Search Papers of Dead Reporter". The New York Times. Retrieved December 14, 2014.
  37. "FBI wants columnist Jack Anderson's papers". USA Today. Gannett. Associated Press. April 19, 2006. ISSN 0734-7456. Archived from the original on December 15, 2014. Retrieved December 14, 2014.
  38. Carlson, Scott (March 2007). "In Jack Anderson's Papers, a Hidden History of Washington". Chronicle of Higher Education (March 16, 2007). Archived from the original on March 20, 2007.

Further reading

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