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CIA Memorial Wall

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

38°57′06″N 77°08′48″W / 38.951796°N 77.146586°W / 38.951796; -77.146586

Memorial Wall
Central Intelligence Agency
The wall with 140 stars in 2023
For CIA employees who died in the line of service
UnveiledJuly 1975
Location
Designed byHarold Vogel
"In honor of those members of the Central Intelligence Agency who gave their lives in the service of their country"

The Memorial Wall is a memorial at the Central Intelligence Agency headquarters in Langley, Virginia.[1] It honors 140 CIA employees who died in service to their nation.[2]

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Transcription

Memorial

The Memorial Wall is located in the Original Headquarters Building lobby on the north wall. There are 140 stars[2] carved into the white Alabama marble wall,[3] each one representing an employee who died in the line of service.[1] Paramilitary Operations Officers (PMOO) of the Special Activities Center comprise the majority of those memorialized.[4]

CIA Book of Honor 1950–2003

A black Moroccan goatskin-bound book, called the "Book of Honor", sits in a steel frame beneath the stars, its "slender case jutting out from the wall just below the field of stars", and is "framed in stainless steel and topped by an inch-thick plate of glass."[5] Inside it shows the stars, arranged by year of death and, when possible, lists the names of employees who died in CIA service alongside them.[1][5] The identities of the unnamed stars remain secret, even in death, though many names from the Cold War era have been released or uncovered in recent years.[1] In 1997, there were 70 stars, 29 of which had names.[5] There were 79 stars in 2002,[6] 83 in 2004,[7] 90 in 2009,[8] 107 in 2013,[9] 111 in 2014,[3] 125 in 2017,[10] 129 in 2018,[11] 133 in 2019,[12] 135 in 2020,[13] 137 in 2021,[14] 139 in 2022,[15] and 140 in 2023.[2] Of the 140 entries in the book in 2023, 103 are named, while 37 are not.[16][17] The 37 not named are represented only by a gold star followed by a blank space.[18][19]

The wall bears the inscription "In honor of those members of the Central Intelligence Agency who gave their lives in the service of their country."[5] The wall is flanked by the flag of the United States on the left and a flag bearing the CIA seal on the right.[5]

Adding new stars

One of the engraved stars

When new names are added to the Book of Honor, stone carver Tim Johnston of the Carving and Restoration Team in Manassas, Virginia adds a new star to the wall if that person's star is not already present.[1] Johnston learned the process of creating the stars from the original sculptor of the wall, Harold Vogel, who created the first 31 stars[7] and the Memorial Wall inscription when the wall was created in July 1974.[1] Although the wall was "first conceived as a small plaque to recognize those from the CIA who died in Southeast Asia, the idea quickly grew to a memorial for Agency employees who died in the line of duty."[7] The process used by Johnston to add a new star is as follows:

Johnston creates a star by first tracing the new star on the wall using a template. Each star measures 2¼ inches tall by 2¼ inches wide and half an inch deep; all the stars are six inches apart from each other, as are all the rows. Johnston uses both a pneumatic air hammer and a chisel to carve out the traced pattern. After he finishes carving the star, he cleans the dust and sprays the star black, which as the star ages, fades to gray.[1]

Candidates

The Honor and Merit Awards Board (HMAB) recommends approval of candidates to be listed on the wall to the Director of the Central Intelligence Agency.[1] The CIA states that

[i]nclusion on the Memorial Wall is awarded posthumously to employees who lose their lives while serving their country in the field of intelligence. Death may occur in the foreign field or in the United States. Death must be of an inspirational or heroic character while in the performance of duty; or as the result of an act of terrorism while in the performance of duty; or as an act of premeditated violence targeted against an employee, motivated solely by that employee's Agency affiliation; or in the performance of duty while serving in areas of hostilities or other exceptionally hazardous conditions where the death is a direct result of such hostilities or hazards.[1] After approval by the director, the Office of Protocol arranges for a new star to be placed on the Wall.[1]

The first suicide to be added to the wall was for employee Ranya Abdelsayed, who died by suicide in 2013 after working for a year in Afghanistan. CIA leadership was criticized by some who feel she did not meet the criteria for the wall.[20]

Current stars and known individuals

Date of Death Name Cause of Death
1947
March 20, 1947 Lieutenant John W. Creech Killed when their plane crashed in bad weather while en route to Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. They worked for the Central Intelligence Group (CIG), the direct predecessor to CIA.[12][21]
Daniel C. Dennett, Jr.
1950
April 29, 1950 Douglas Mackiernan The first CIA employee to be killed in the line of duty and the first star on the wall. Mackiernan had worked for the State Department in China since 1947. When the People's Republic of China was established at the end of the Chinese Civil War in 1949, the State Department ordered that the Tihwa (Ürümqi) consulate where Mackiernan was stationed as vice consul be closed, and personnel were to leave the country immediately. Mackiernan, however, was ordered to stay behind, destroy cryptographic equipment, monitor the situation, and aid anti-communist Nationalists. Mackiernan fled south toward India after most escape routes were cut off, along with Frank Bessac, an American Fulbright Scholar who was in Tihwa, and three White Russians. Although Mackiernan and his party survived the Taklamakan Desert and Himalayas, Mackiernan was shot by Tibetan border guards, probably because they mistook them as Communist infiltrators, on April 29, 1950.[22]
1951
January 11, 1951 Jerome P. Ginley Ginley was killed when his plane crashed into the East China Sea, near the Japanese Ryukyu Islands.[23]
1952
November 29, 1952 Norman A. Schwartz Schwartz and Snoddy were pilots of a C-47 aircraft on a mission to extract a CIA operative from China. Their plane took off on November 29, 1952, from South Korea for Jilin province, China. They were preparing to pick up the agent with an airborne extraction system when the operative was compromised by Chinese forces on the ground and their plane was shot down. Both Schwartz and Snoddy were killed, while two other CIA crewmembers, Richard G. Fecteau and John T. Downey, were captured by the Chinese and held until 1971 and 1973, respectively. Schwartz's and Snoddy's remains were returned in 2005.[24]
Robert C. Snoddy
1954
1954 James "Pete" McCarthy Jr. Born 1925 a world War II Veteran[25] and later a paramilitary operations officer who died in 1954, on a training flight in Southeast Asia.[26]
1956
May 15, 1956 Wilburn S. Rose Three CIA Lockheed U-2 pilots who died in plane crashes – Rose, Grace, Carey were honored with stars in 1974.[27]
August 31, 1956 Frank G. Grace
September 17, 1956 Howard Carey
1957
January 1957 James J. McGrath A native of Middletown, Connecticut, McGrath died following an accident while working on a high-power German transmitter in January 1957. His star was placed on the wall in 2007.[28]
1960
March 17, 1960 Chiyoki Ikeda Ikeda died when Northwest Orient Airlines Flight 710 crashed in Indiana while he was on temporary duty assignment in the United States.[29]
May 1, 1960 Stephen Kasarda, Jr. A native of McKees Rocks, Pennsylvania, Kasarda died while stationed in Southeast Asia. He was working with air supply missions being flown into Tibet.[28][30]
1961
April 13, 1961 Nels L. Benson Killed in a training accident while instructing members of Brigade 2506 on the use of C-4 explosives in Retalhuleu, Guatemala.[31][32]
April 19, 1961 Leo F. Baker Four CIA pilots were killed while supporting the failed Bay of Pigs invasion on Cuba.[33] One more American was killed during the invasion, paratrooper Herman Koch Gene, but he was not part of the CIA.[34] Baker was buried in a mass grave in Cuba[35] and Thomas Ray's remains were returned to his family in 1979.[36] Shamburger and Gray were killed when their plane was shot down and crashed at sea
Wade C. Gray
Thomas W. Ray
Riley W. Shamburger
August 13, 1961 David W. Bevan Bevan, Eubanks, Lewis were former smokejumpers working for the CIA's Air America airline when their plane crashed in Laos on August 13, 1961, killing them and two other crew members. They were dropping cargo in support of General Vang Pao's Hmong army when their plane experienced a mechanical problem. The three men were honored with stars in 2017.[37][38]
Darrell A. Eubanks
John S. Lewis
1965
March 30, 1965 Barbara Robbins Killed in a Vietcong car bomb attack on the U.S. embassy in Saigon, South Vietnam.[39] She was honored with one of the original 31 stars in 1974, but her name was not included in the Book of Honor until May 2011.[40]
April 26, 1965 Eugene "Buster" Edens CIA Lockheed U-2 pilot who died in a plane crash. He was honored with a star in 1974.[27]
June 6, 1965 John W. Waltz Died in Baghdad, Iraq, while working as an Aide at the U.S. embassy.[41] He became ill and died from medical complications following emergency surgery.[42]
August 20, 1965 Edward Johnson Johnson and O'Jibway were intelligence officers assigned to Air America. They were killed when their helicopter crashed into the Mekong River. The CIA's Book of Honor incorrectly lists O'Jibway's date of death as 1966.[43]
Louis O'Jibway
October 12, 1965 Michael M. Deuel Both Deuel and Maloney were intelligence officers assigned to Air America. They were killed, along with an Air America pilot and a mechanic, when their helicopter crashed near Saravane, Laos.[44][45][46][47]
Michael A. Maloney
November 29, 1965 Marcell Rene Gough A maritime specialist who died in a vehicle accident in November 1965, in Zaire, while on assignment to maintain equipment for operations designed to defeat communist-backed rebels.[26][48]
1965 Unidentified Killed in action during the Vietnam War in South Vietnam or Laos.[39]
1967
January 5, 1967 Walter L. Ray CIA A-12 pilot killed in a crash in test flight in Nevada.[49][50]
February 15, 1967 Ksawery "Bill" Wyrozemski An air operations officer who died in a vehicle accident in Zaire.[26]
1968
June 4, 1968 Jack W. Weeks CIA A-12 pilot killed in a plane crash.[51][52]
October 12, 1968 Charles Mayer Born 1936[53] An engineer in the Directorate of Science and Technology, who died in an airplane crash in Iran in 1968. His duties at the CIA were to monitor the Soviet Union's missile capabilities.[26]
1969
January 5, 1969 Jon Price Evans A CIA medical officer, who was also a former Army physician, Evans was killed along with three others when their DC-3 airliner suffered mechanical problems and crashed in northern Thailand while en route to Vientiane, Laos.[2][54]
1971
1971 Paul C. Davis Unknown[55]
October 24, 1971 David L. Konzelman Konzelman was killed in action during the Vietnam War in South Vietnam or Laos.[39]
1972
April 28, 1972 Wilbur M. Greene Greene was serving in the Vietnam War when he died during a gall bladder operation.[56]
September 27, 1972 Raymond L. Seaborg Seaborg,[57] Peterson,[58] and Kearns[59] were killed in action during the Vietnam War in South Vietnam or Laos.[39][60]
October 19, 1972 John Peterson
December 15, 1972 John W. Kearns
1975
January 1975 William E. Bennett Bennett was killed in an explosion at his residence in Tuy Hòa, South Vietnam, during the Vietnam War, while working as a political reporting officer for the U.S. embassy.[39][61]
December 23, 1975 Richard Welch Station chief in Greece who was assassinated by the radical Marxist organization Revolutionary Organization 17 November.
1976
January 3, 1975 James A. Rawlings Killed in a cargo plane crash in South Vietnam. He was declared missing and, a year later, the CIA issued a "presumptive determination" of death.[61][62]
March 1976 Tucker Gougelmann Gougelmann was a Paramilitary Operations Officer from the CIA's Special Activities Division who worked in the CIA from 1949 to 1972, serving in Europe, Afghanistan, Korea, and Vietnam. Gougelmann returned to Saigon in spring 1975 in an attempt to secure exit visas for loved ones after North Vietnam had launched a major offensive. He missed his final flight out of Saigon, and was captured by the North Vietnamese, who tortured him for 11 months before he died. Gougelmann was honored with a Memorial Star after the criteria for inclusion on the Wall were broadened and after "It was determined that although Gougelmann did not die in the line of duty while employed by CIA, his past affiliation with the Agency led to his death."[63]
1983
April 18, 1983 Robert Ames Died in the 1983 Beirut embassy bombing. Haas was the station chief.[64][65]
Phyliss Faraci
Kenneth E. Haas
Deborah M. Hixon
Frank J. Johnston
James Lewis
Monique Lewis
William Richard Sheil
1984
October 18, 1984 Richard Spicer Killed in a plane crash while on a covert mission during the Salvadoran Civil War.[66][67][68]
Scott J. Van Lieshout
Curtis R. Wood
Unidentified
1985
June 3, 1985 William Francis Buckley Station chief in Lebanon killed in captivity by Hezbollah.[69]
1987
March 26, 1987 Richard D. Krobock Killed in a helicopter crash during the Salvadoran Civil War.[70]
1988
December 21, 1988 Matthew Gannon Gannon was the CIA's deputy station chief in Beirut, Lebanon; he was one of at least four American intelligence officers aboard Pan Am Flight 103 (he was assigned Clipper Class seat 14J), when a bomb detonated and destroyed the plane high over Lockerbie, Scotland.
1989
August 7, 1989 Robert W. Woods Killed in a plane crash (along with U.S. Representative Mickey Leland), while on a humanitarian mission in Ethiopia.[18]
November 27, 1989 Michael Atkinson Killed when their Lockheed L-100 Hercules transport plane crashed on November 27, 1989, in Angola while supporting the rebel group UNITA. Eleven members of UNITA who were on board also died in the crash.[71]
George Bensch
George V. Lacy
Pharies "Bud" Petty
Gerhard H. Rieger
Jimmy Spessard
1989 Unidentified Unknown[citation needed]
1992
July 19, 1992 Barry S. Castiglione Killed during the ocean rescue of a colleague in El Salvador.[18]
December 23, 1992 Lawrence N. Freedman Killed by a landmine in Somalia on December 23, 1992.[72]
1993
January 25, 1993 Lansing H. Bennett M.D. The two fatalities of the 1993 shootings at CIA Headquarters. Bennett, with experience as a physician, was working as an intelligence analyst assessing the health of foreign leaders.[73] Darling worked in covert operations.
Frank Darling
August 8, 1993 Freddie Woodruff Woodruff was assassinated in Tbilisi, Georgia, while acting as the station chief and training the bodyguards of Georgian leader Eduard Shevardnadze and the élite Omega Special Task Force.
1995
March 8, 1995 Jacqueline K. Van Landingham Shot and killed in Pakistan on March 8, 1995.[18][74]
1996
April 3, 1996 James M. Lewek Killed when a US Air Force CT-43A crashed near Dubrovnik, Croatia. Thirty-four other people on board were also killed.[75]
November 17, 1996 John G.A. Celli III Killed in a traffic accident in the Middle East.[76]
November 23, 1996 Leslianne Shedd Killed when three Ethiopians, who were seeking political asylum in Australia, hijacked Ethiopian Airlines Flight 961 on November 23, 1996, and crashed the plane into the Indian Ocean.[18]
1997
December 6, 1997 Thomas M. Jennings Jr. Died in a car accident in Bosnia-Herzegovina under State Department cover.[18]
1998
August 7, 1998 Tom Shah Died in the 1998 African embassy bombings.[77]
Molly C.H. Hardy
2001
November 2001 Johnny Micheal "Mike" Spann Spann was a Paramilitary Operations Officer from the Special Activities Division, killed during a Taliban prison uprising in November 2001 in Mazar-e Sharif (see Battle of Qala-i-Jangi). He was the first American killed in combat during the United States invasion of Afghanistan His star, the 79th, was added in 2002.[6] Officer Spann was posthumously awarded the Intelligence Star for valor for his actions.
2002
January 4, 2002 Nathan Chapman He was the first U.S. soldier to be killed in combat in the American war in Afghanistan. At the time of his death, he was detailed to the CIA as a CIA paramilitary team's communications specialist. He was killed while investigating an Al-Qaeda safe house in Khost.[78]
2003
February 7, 2003 Helge P. Boes Killed by a grenade during a training accident in Afghanistan.[79]
July 9, 2003 Gregg Wenzel An operations officer who was killed in Ethiopia in 2003, also was honored with a star on the CIA's memorial wall. A former defense attorney in Florida, Wenzel grew up in Monroe, New York, and was a member of the first clandestine service training class to graduate after the terrorist attacks of September 11th, 2001. His Agency affiliation was withheld for six years. Overseas, Wenzel gathered intelligence on a wide range of national security priorities. In Director Leon Panetta's words: "At age 33, a promising young officer – a leader and friend to so many – was taken from us. We find some measure of solace in knowing that Gregg achieved what he set out to do: He lived for a purpose greater than himself. Like his star on this Wall, that lesson remains with us always."[80][81]
October 25, 2003 Christopher Glenn Mueller Mueller and Carlson were paramilitary contractors from Special Activities Division, killed in an ambush in Afghanistan on October 25, 2003.[7][82][83] On May 21, 2004, these officers' stars were dedicated at a memorial ceremony.[84] "The bravery of these two men cannot be overstated," then-Director of Central Intelligence George J. Tenet told a gathering of several hundred Agency employees and family members of those killed in the line of duty. "Chris and Chief put the lives of others ahead of their own. That is heroism defined." Mueller, a former US Navy SEAL and Carlson, a former Army Ranger, Green Beret and Delta Force soldier, died while tracking high level terrorists near Shkin, Afghanistan, on October 25, 2003. Both officers saved the lives of others, including Afghan soldiers, during the ambush.[83][84]
William "Chief" Carlson
2005
December 7, 2005 Gregory R. Wright, Jr. Killed in Iraq while working on a Protective Service Detail. His team was returning from an asset meeting when they were ambushed by unknown attackers.[85][86]
2006
September 30, 2006 Rachel A. Dean Dean was a native of Stanardsville, Virginia, who joined the CIA as a young support officer in January 2005. She died in a car accident in September 2006, while on temporary duty in Kazakhstan.[28]
2007
May 11, 2007 Douglas A. Zembiec Known as the "Lion of Fallujah" for his deployment there with the US Marine Corps, he was serving with the CIA's Special Activities Division when he was killed in a gun battle in Baghdad in May 2007 while leading Iraqis on a "snatch-and-grab" operation against insurgents. Officially, his star is anonymous; the CIA refuses to comment on Zembiec's employment with the Agency. However, former U.S. intelligence officials have stated in interviews with The Washington Post that Zembiec was indeed serving with the SAD Ground Branch at the time of his death.[87]
2008
May 10, 2008 Donald A. Barger Killed in a Taliban ambush in Afghanistan.[88] Barger was a retired Master Sergeant, former US Army Ranger and Special Forces soldier. He served with 1st Ranger Battalion and Army 3rd Special Forces Group.
September 28, 2008 Stephen Stanek Lost at sea when their 40-foot vessel was hit by Tropical Storm Higos while they were surveilling a small island in the South China Sea, north of the Philippine island of Luzon, which was occupied by the Chinese military.[89]
Michael Perich
Jamie McCormick
Daniel Meeks
September 29, 2008 Jeffrey R. Patneau Died in a car accident while posing as a State Department employee in Yemen.[18]
2008 Unidentified Unknown[citation needed]
2008 Unidentified Unknown[citation needed]
2009
December 30, 2009 Harold Brown Killed in the Camp Chapman attack in Afghanistan.[90]
Elizabeth Hanson
Darren LaBonte
Jennifer Matthews
Dane Paresi
Scott Roberson
Jeremy Wise
2011
September 25, 2011 Jay Henigan Shot and killed by a rogue Afghan working for the U.S. government while working as a plumber and CIA contractor at the U.S. embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan.[91][88]
2012
September 11–12, 2012 Glen A. Doherty Killed during the attack on the U.S. diplomatic mission in Benghazi, Libya, on the night of September 11–12, 2012. Both were former Navy SEALs and worked as CIA security contractors.[92] In addition, the US ambassador to Libya, Chris Stevens, and one other American diplomat, Sean Smith, were also killed in the attack.[93]
Tyrone S. Woods
October 13, 2012 Dario N. Lorenzetti Killed during a suicide bombing by a member of the Afghanistan National Directorate of Security. He was a 1993 West Point graduate and Army Ranger.[94][88][95][96]
2013
August 28, 2013 Ranya Abdelsayed Died by suicide while stationed in Afghanistan targeting senior al-Qaida and Taliban members.[97]
2016
May 23, 2016 Mark S. Rausenberger Killed while working for the CIA in the Philippines, details about the circumstances of his death remain classified. He worked for the CIA for 18 years and also served in the U.S. Army. He was previously stationed in Afghanistan, Iraq, Somalia, and other countries.[38] He was honored with a star in 2017.[37]
October 26, 2016 Brian R. Hoke Both were killed during an assault on an ISIS compound outside of Jalalabad, Afghanistan. Hoke was a former United States Navy SEAL and Delemarre a former Marine. Both were members of Special Activities Division.[88]
Nathaniel P. Delemarre
November 4, 2016 Matthew C. Lewellen Members of the 5th Special Forces Group – were working for the CIA, training moderate Syrian rebels in Jordan, when they were shot and killed on November 4, 2016.[98] Although Jordan initially claimed that security forces at King Faisal Air Base had fired upon the Americans for failing to stop at the base's gate, U.S. officials stated that the soldiers were killed by a deliberate terrorist attack. Video shows that after the Americans had been cleared to enter the base, one of the Jordanian guards opened fire on the men. The Jordanian attacker was wounded in the shootout.[99]
Kevin J. McEnroe
James F. Moriarty
December 18, 2016 George A. Whitney Killed in the Jalalabad area of Afghanistan. Whitney was a former United States Marine Captain.[88]
2017
2017 Unidentified Unknown[100]
2017 Unidentified Unknown[100]
2017 Unidentified Unknown[100]
2017 Unidentified Unknown[100]
2020
November 21–22, 2020 Michael Goodboe Killed in combat in Somalia.[101][102][103]
Undisclosed year
Unknown Unidentified Unknown[12]
Unknown Unidentified Unknown[12]
Unknown Unidentified Unknown[12]
Unknown Unidentified Unknown[12]
Unknown Unidentified Unknown[13]
Unknown Unidentified Unknown[13]
Unknown Unidentified Unknown[14]
Unknown Unidentified Unknown[15]
Unknown Unidentified Unknown[15]

Other fatalities

First fatality

Jane Wallis Burrell was the first CIA officer to die in the Agency's service when an Air France DC-3 from Brussels crashed on approach to the Le Bourget Airport near Paris on January 6, 1948, killing all five crew members and 10 of the 11 passengers. She died only 110 days after the CIA was officially established the previous September. Burrell was never a candidate for a star on the CIA's Memorial Wall because the wall commemorates Agency employees who died in specific circumstances and deaths from commercial aircraft crashes have generally not qualified.[104]

Civil Air Transport

On May 6, 1954, during the Battle of Dien Bien Phu, two CIA pilots, James B. McGovern, Jr. and Wallace Buford, were killed when their C-119 Flying Boxcar cargo plane was shot down while on a resupply mission for the French military.[105] They worked for Civil Air Transport, which was later reorganized as Air America. Neither of them has a star on the Memorial Wall.

Air America

There were more than 30, pilots and other crew members, of the CIA's Air America company who were killed during the Vietnam War that were not counted as part of the Agency even though they worked for it.[106][107] The names of some of them were: John M. Bannerman,[108] Eugene DeBruin, Joseph C. Cheney,[109] Charles Herrick,[110] John Lerdo Oyer, Jack J. Wells,[111] George L. Ritter,[112] Edward J. Weissenback,[113] and Roy F. Townley.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "The Stars on the Wall." Central Intelligence Agency 24 April 2008.
  2. ^ a b c d CIA Honors Fallen Officers in Annual Memorial Ceremony
  3. ^ a b Shapira, Ian (2014-05-22). "CIA's Memorial Wall for Fallen Operatives Is Shaped by a Northern Virginia Stone Carver". Washington Post. Retrieved 2014-05-23.
  4. ^ Gup, Ted (2000). The Book of Honor: Cover Lives and Classified Deaths at the CIA.
  5. ^ a b c d e Gup, Ted. "Star Agents: The anonymous stars in the CIA's Book of Honor memorialize covert operatives lost in the field Archived April 29, 2009, at the Wayback Machine." Washington Post 7 September 1997.
  6. ^ a b "CIA Honors Slain Agency Officers at Annual Ceremony." Central Intelligence Agency 31 May 2002.
  7. ^ a b c d "CIA Remembers Employees Killed in the Line of Duty." Central Intelligence Agency 21 May 2004,
  8. ^ "CIA Pays Tribute to Fallen Officers". www.cia.gov – Central Intelligence Agency. Archived from the original on June 10, 2009.
  9. ^ "Remembering CIA's Heroes: Barbara A. Robbins". Central Intelligence Agency. Archived from the original on August 5, 2013.
  10. ^ CIA Adds Eight Stars to Memorial Wall For Fallen Officers, NBC News (May 24, 2017).
  11. ^ "CIA Pays Tribute to its Fallen in Annual Memorial Ceremony". CIA. Archived from the original on June 12, 2018. Retrieved 12 June 2018.
  12. ^ a b c d e f "CIA Pays Tribute to Its Fallen in Annual Memorial Ceremony". www.cia.gov – Central Intelligence Agency.
  13. ^ a b c CIA on Twitter
  14. ^ a b Castelli, Opinion by Matt (29 May 2021). "Opinion: The brave, fallen 'stars' that brought me to Afghanistan". CNN.
  15. ^ a b c "CIA Honors Fallen Officers in Annual Memorial Ceremony". www.cia.gov. Retrieved 2022-05-25.
  16. ^ 2 CIA Officers Killed in Line of Duty, Stars Added to Memorial Wall
  17. ^ "CIA Book of Honor". Central Intelligence Agency. 2021. Archived from the original on 2021-01-19. Retrieved 2021-05-26.
  18. ^ a b c d e f g Dilanian, Ken (23 May 2012). "CIA discloses names of 15 killed in line of duty". Los Angeles Times.
  19. ^ Rosenberg, Howard L. (January 5, 2010). "The CIA's Secret Grief". The Daily Beast. Retrieved January 6, 2010.
  20. ^ "A CIA suicide sparks hard questions about the agency's Memorial Wall". Washington Post.
  21. ^ "CIA Honors its Fallen in Annual Memorial Ceremony [May 21 2019]". May 22, 2019.
  22. ^ "Amnesia to Anamnesis". Central Intelligence Agency. Archived from the original on September 19, 2008.
  23. ^ "Hammond Man Hopes to Lift CIA's Veil of Secrecy". NWI Times.
  24. ^ "Cold War Missing In Action Aviator Identified".
  25. ^ CIA Book of Honor
  26. ^ a b c d "CIA Adds Names to Memorial Wall".
  27. ^ a b "Remembering CIA's Heroes: Agency Pilots in the U-2 Program." Central Intelligence Agency 14 May 2008.
  28. ^ a b c "CIA Adds Four Stars to Memorial Wall." Central Intelligence Agency 20 May 2007.
  29. ^ "Chiyoki Ikeda - CIA". Central Intelligence Agency. Retrieved 2021-05-15.
  30. ^ "Remembering CIA's Heroes: Stephen Kasarda". Central Intelligence Agency. Archived from the original on June 23, 2015.
  31. ^ "Remembering CIA's Heroes: Nels "Benny" Benson". Central Intelligence Agency. May 26, 2016. Archived from the original on August 4, 2016.
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