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SAC Richard B. Spencer |
The exact date when
an FBI office was first opened in Milwaukee is unknown,
but we do know that one was operating as early
as November 1917. The earliest Special Agent in Charge
on record was Richard B. Spencer in May 1918.
1920s and 1930s
In November 1921, Special Agent in Charge Henry H.
Stroud reported that there were four special agents
and one professional support employee assigned to the
office. During the early 1920s, the division investigated
bankruptcies, labor law violations, motor vehicle thefts,
Communist Party activities, and other matters.
In March 1925, the Milwaukee Division was closed,
and its territory was assigned to the St. Paul and
Chicago field offices.
On May 10, 1935, the Milwaukee Division was reopened
in remodeled space in ten rooms on the 10th floor of
the Bankers Building. A day later, Virgil W. Peterson
was named acting Special Agent in Charge.
In February 1939, a newspaper article indicated that
the office had nine special agents.
1940s and 1950s
In the early 1940s, like much of the FBI, Milwaukee
investigated activities by Nazi agents and other wartime
enemies in its territory. In September 1942, for example,
following an investigation by Milwaukee agents, denaturalization
proceedings were begun against Hans Behnke—the
Midwest secretary of the pro-Nazi group the Milwaukee
Volksbund and a member of the “Friends of the
New Germany.” By December 1942, the Division
had arrested more than 100 enemy aliens in Wisconsin
who posed a threat to national security; many were
members of the Volksbund at Camp Hindenburg, Wisconsin.
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Agents take
a break from weapons training. |
By 1946, the office had a total of 36 agents and 18
support employees. In March 1949, the Milwaukee Special
Agent in Charge proposed establishing a satellite office,
or resident agency, in Wausau. At that time, resident
agencies already existed in Green Bay, Superior, and
Eau Claire, Wisconsin. By 1953, resident agencies were
operating in La Crosse and Appleton, and two more offices
were opened in Kenosha and Madison within five years.
In early March 1952, special agents arrested three
individuals for the burglary of the home of L.V. Redfield
in Reno, Nevada, on February 29. The press characterized
the burglary as the largest ever committed in the U.S.
at that time.
1960s and 1970s
During the next two decades Milwaukee handled many
significant cases; several involved the turbulence
of the 1960s and 1970s.
On November 28, 1964, Milwaukee special agents arrested “Top
Ten” fugitive Raymond Lawrence Wyngaard. A prison
escapee from Detroit, Michigan, Wyngaard had gone on
a crime rampage, which included robbing a gun shop
and supermarket in the Detroit area, shooting a Detroit
policeman, robbing 10 occupants of an office building,
stealing three cars, and abducting two motorists.
On March 19, 1967, three armed bandits robbed a grocery
store owner of a coin collection valued in excess of
$45,000. During the robbery the victim and his family
were tied up. The coin collection, which weighed more
than two tons, was transported from the premises in
grocery boxes, wooden crates, and metal ammunition
boxes. On March 24, 1967, after an extensive investigation,
the three subjects were identified and arrested by
Milwaukee special agents. Eighty percent of the coin
collection was recovered.
During the 1970s, anti-war sentiment continued to
run high and led to several bombings in Wisconsin.
On July 26, 1970, for instance, bombs were set off
at three separate locations at Camp McCoy; three soldiers
linked to a group that opposed the Vietnam War were
later indicted. Less than a month later, on August
24, 1970, a massive explosion rocked Sterling Hall
on the campus of the University of Wisconsin–Madison.
A 33-year old researcher was killed in the blast and
four others were severely injured. On September 2,
four men were charged in the bombing, which was a protest
against the war in Vietnam (Sterling Hall housed an
army mathematics research center). Three of the four
men were later arrested and convicted; the fourth man—Leo
Burt—remains wanted by the FBI. The following
year an agent also captured a leftist fugitive wanted
for making incendiary devices.
In May 1972, Arthur H. Bremer attempted to assassinate
Alabama Governor and presidential candidate George
Wallace in Laurel, Maryland, by firing four shots at
Wallace from close range. Wallace survived the attack,
but it left him paralyzed for life; several other bystanders
were also wounded. The Milwaukee office entered the
investigation when authorities determined that Bremer
lived in the city; numerous items of evidence were
found in his Milwaukee apartment. Bremer was convicted
of the shooting and spent 35 years in prison.
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SAC John D. Glover |
A fugitive hunt by Milwaukee agents in February 1974
turned violent—and deadly. After Milwaukee was
notified that a murder suspect named Jacob Peter Cohen
was likely living in the city, the Special Agent in
Charge and another agent were wounded when they attempted
to arrest him. After Cohen took a teenage boy hostage,
he was shot and killed by a special agent marksman.
On February 16, 1979, John D. Glover was appointed
Special Agent in Charge in Milwaukee, making him the
first African-American in FBI history to head a field
office. Glover served until April 1980, when he became
Special Agent in Charge in Atlanta. He later became
Executive Assistant Director at FBI Headquarters in
Washington, D.C.
1980s and 1990s
During the last two decades of the 20th century, Milwaukee
joined the rest of the Bureau in investigating an increasing
number of white-collar, drug, and violent crimes.
In October 1980, the Paine Art Center in Oshkosh was
burglarized of art works and jewelry valued at more
than $3 million. Among the stolen items were Fabergé eggs
that had been crafted for the Czar of Russia in the
17th century. As a result of an investigation, the
art objects were recovered and two subjects were arrested
and convicted.
In September 1985, the largest robbery in the history
of Wisconsin took place when two armed men took a bank
vice president and his family hostage in their home
in Allis, then took them to the bank the following
morning, secured all bank employees, and made off with
more than $574,000. The two men, identified as Terry
Lee Conner and Joseph Dougherty, were placed on the
FBI’s Top Ten Most Wanted fugitives list. Information
obtained by the Milwaukee Division led to the November
1986 arrests of Conner in Chicago and Dougherty in
San Francisco.
In January 1986, five men—including Frank Balistrieri,
the leader of the La Cosa Nostra operations in Milwaukee—were
convicted of skimming over two million dollars from
Las Vegas casinos that were secretly owned by the Mafia.
This was the direct result of the FBI's Strawman investigation,
a long-term racketeering probe conducted across several
states with federal, state, and local cooperation.
More than 19 mob leaders were convicted in the course
of these investigations, virtually eliminating the
hierarchy of organized crime in Kansas City, Milwaukee,
and Chicago.
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Jeffrey Dahmer |
On July 22, 1991, in a case that made international
news, serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer was arrested after
one of his victims escaped. Dahmer subsequently confessed
to killing and dismembering 17 men and boys. The remains
of 11 of his victims were found in his Milwaukee apartment.
The Milwaukee Field Office assisted in the investigation,
as did the FBI Laboratory Division. Dahmer was sentenced
to life in prison in 1992 and was murdered by another
inmate in 1994.
Also in 1996, following a Milwaukee-based investigation,
seven men were charged with the largest-ever heist
of combat equipment from a U.S. military base. The
mastermind—a military surplus dealer named Leo
Anthony Piatz, Jr., from Hudson, Wisconsin—was
convicted in March 1997 for stealing more than 150
military vehicles which he then stripped, scrapped,
traded, or sold to collectors and buyers.
Post 9/11
The terrorist attacks of 9/11 led to major changes
within the FBI, including the Milwaukee Division, as
preventing future strikes became the Bureau’s
overriding priority.
Cooperation between the various Wisconsin law enforcement
agencies began immediately following the attacks, and
our Wisconsin Joint Terrorism Task Force was officially
established in January 2002 to formalize and enhance
this cooperation.
Since the 9/11 attacks, the Milwaukee Division has
played a significant role in terrorism-related investigations.
For example, the Division was instrumental in the May
2002 arrest of Luke Helder, who had placed pipe bombs
in mailboxes throughout the Midwest, Colorado, and
Texas. A search conducted at Helder's apartment in
Menominee, Wisconsin yielded valuable evidence and
identified Helder as the bomber. Helder was tracked
through real-time cell phone information to his location
on a Nevada highway. Once his location and direction
of travel were determined, FBI agents in the Reno Resident
Agency were notified. They then coordinated Helder's
arrest with local and state law enforcement officers.
Milwaukee agents identified another “lone-wolf” terrorist
whose actions nearly escalated to the use of chemical
weapons. From 1998 through 2002, Joseph Daniel Konopka,
also known as "Dr. Chaos," wreaked havoc
in 13 counties by setting fires, disrupting radio and
television broadcasts, disabling an air traffic control
system, selling counterfeit software, and damaging
the computer system of an Internet service provider.
Konopka was arrested in March 2002 after being caught
with cyanide, a potentially deadly chemical, near the
Chicago subway system. On May 7, 2002, he was indicted
in Milwaukee on 13 counts covering 53 crimes. He was
later sentenced to 13 years in prison.
Meanwhile, the Milwaukee Division has continued investigating
traditional crimes. For example, in 2003 it took part
in a multi-agency case that dismantled a coupon redemption
fraud and money-laundering ring across 15 states that
resulted in losses exceeding $4 million. In 2005, the
office also helped shut down a
beauty salon that was selling fake IDs of all kinds.
Like the FBI itself, the Milwaukee Division has proudly
helped protect local communities and the nation for
a century. For more information on the Bureau over
the years, please visit the FBI
History website.
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