107:. However, the autopsy report later revealed discrepancies with his documented height and weight, leading to long-held suspicions that the badly-decomposed body, as was found, was not actually Paisly's. . Due to the advanced state of decomposition of the body when it was found, fingerprinting was not possible, and other means of positive identifications were similarly impossible to be ascertained. The CIA arranged for the body to be cremated, without family, friends and/or associates having had an opportunity to positively identify the remains as Paisley's.
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counterintelligence within the Soviet Union, who had defected to the United States early in 1964. Nosenko was the most important K.G.B. officer ever to defect. Ostensibly, Nosenko's greatest value to United States intelligence was to provide information on Soviet counterintelligence agents operating at home and abroad. This may have included data on counterintelligence in the strategic field - part of
Paisley's expertise - and Paisley became enmeshed in the most controversial C.I.A. secret intelligence project of the decade".
126:(SSCI) opened an inquiry in order to determine if his death was due to his activities with the CIA. After a two year investigation and three public statements, the SSCI reported that it "found no information to support the allegations that Mr. Paisley's death was connected in some way to involvement in foreign intelligence or counterintelligence matters."
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On
January 7, 1979, The New York Times' investigative report ("The Missing CIA Man", by Tad Simic), revealed that "Paisley was called in when the C.I.A. began the lengthy and laborious process of debriefing Nosenko, a member of the K.G.B.'s Second Chief Directorate, responsible for
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on
September 26 with his estranged wife to discuss the failure of their marriage. He speculated that due to personal developments Paisley may have been experiencing "feelings of loss and abandonment".
156:, in which the author maintains that Paisley, working as a double agent, and at his request, was exfiltrated by the USSR and his death in the US was staged, presumably by the KGB Counterintelligence.
137:, a book by William R. Corson, Susan B. Trento, and Joseph J. Trento that stated the CIA failed to properly investigate the deaths of Paisley and two other CIA officials,
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Paisley retired as deputy director in the Office of
Strategic Research, the branch that monitored Soviet military movements and nuclear capabilities.
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When
Paisley was two-years-old, his father left the family. He was raised by his grandparents when his mother went to work as a
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Paisley served in the CIA from 1963 to 1974. During his career, he was heavily involved in Soviet operations.
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Shortly after his presumed death, the psychiatrist stated
Paisley was to attend a group therapy session in
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69:. In December 1977 and March 1978, he attended two five-day "personal awareness" seminars conducted by
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95:. On October 1, a body claimed to be his was found floating in the Bay near the mouth of the
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145:. The authors state that the body discovered in the Chesapeake Bay was not Paisley's.
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The spy who knew too much: an ex-CIA officer's quest through a legacy of betrayal
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This article is about the former CIA officer. For the
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Due to the circumstances of
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The Agency & The Hill: CIA's
Relationship with Congress, 1946-2004
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Another report noted his position as "director of strategic research".
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On
September 24, 1978, Paisley disappeared after setting sail on the
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26:(August 25, 1923 – September 24, 1978) was a former official of the
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312:. Washington, D.C.: Center for the Study of Intelligence. p.
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around his waist. His boat was found the previous week
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United States Senate Select Committee on Intelligence
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99:with a gunshot wound to his head and a weighted
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469:: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (
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152:published "The Spy who Knew Too Much", by
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390:. UPI. Section 2, page 14
344:Simlc, Tad (1979-01-07).
296:Snider, L. Britt (2008).
73:. According to Paisley's
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346:"THE MISSING CIA. MAN"
437:Blum, Howard (2022).
223:. AP. January 5, 1984
171:Sabbatical: A Romance
112:Chevy Chase, Maryland
262:(October 11, 1978).
18:John Paisley (actor)
268:The Washington Post
81:sessions in April.
24:John Arthur Paisley
511:20th-century spies
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350:The New York Times
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363:2023-12-13
196:References
166:John Barth
71:Lifespring
34:Early life
465:cite book
394:August 3,
358:0362-4331
274:August 3,
148:In 2022,
129:In 1989,
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88:with his
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46:Career
310:(pdf)
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453:OCLC
443:ISBN
424:2015
396:2015
354:ISSN
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