Difference between revisions of "Christopher Boyce"

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|description=A code clerk turned counter spook who also tried to see secret to the USSR, got caught, escaped and caught again. He revealed how the CIA was involved in the [[1975 Australian coup]].
 
|description=A code clerk turned counter spook who also tried to see secret to the USSR, got caught, escaped and caught again. He revealed how the CIA was involved in the [[1975 Australian coup]].
 
|exposed=1975 Australian coup
 
|exposed=1975 Australian coup
|spouses=Kathleen Mills
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|spouses=Kathleen Mills, Cait Boyce
 
|parents=Charles Eugene Boyce, Noreen Hollenbeck  
 
|parents=Charles Eugene Boyce, Noreen Hollenbeck  
 
|cspan=https://www.c-span.org/video/?c4658654/christopher-boyce-us-senate-testimony
 
|cspan=https://www.c-span.org/video/?c4658654/christopher-boyce-us-senate-testimony
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|employment=
 
|employment=
 
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'''Christopher John Boyce''' aged 21 became a code clerk employed with the large US [[PMC]], [[TRW]], where he had access to classified information. After receiving misdirected documents that exposed the [[1975 Australian coup]] he "went off on a one-man war against the intelligence community"<ref name=wired/>, began stealing classified documents and leaking them to the [[Soviet Union]]. He was arrested in 1977 and sentenced to 40 years. He escaped in 1980, and robbed [[banks]] until he was recaptured in 1981. He was released from prison in 2002.
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'''Christopher John Boyce''', aged 21, was a code clerk employed with [[TRW]] (a large US [[PMC]]) where he had access to [[classified]] information. After receiving misdirected documents that exposed the [[1975 Australian coup]] he "went off on a one-man war against the intelligence community"<ref name=wired/>, began stealing classified documents and leaking them to the [[Soviet Union]]. He was arrested in 1977 and sentenced to 40 years. He escaped in 1980, and robbed [[banks]] until he was recaptured in 1981. He was released from prison in 2002.
  
 
==Background==
 
==Background==
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===Escape & recapture===
 
===Escape & recapture===
On January 21, 1980, when Christopher Boyce, with the help of fellow inmates, hid in a drainage hole, used a makeshift ladder and tin snips to cut through a barbed wire perimeter to escape from [[prison]]. On the run, he robbed 17 banks in Idaho and Washington State before being recaptured in August 1981.  
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[[image:Christopher Boyce recapture.jpg|left|250px]]
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On January 21, 1980, when Christopher Boyce, with the help of fellow inmates, hid in a drainage hole, used a makeshift ladder and tin snips to cut through a barbed wire perimeter to escape from [[prison]]. On the run, he robbed 17 banks in [[Idaho]] and [[Washington State]] before being recaptured by the [[US Marshal service]] in August 1981 after the "most extensive and complex manhunt in the history of the Service]] in the 1980's."<ref>https://www.usmarshals.gov/history/boyce/</ref>
  
 
===Release===
 
===Release===

Latest revision as of 02:07, 21 March 2020

Person.png Christopher Boyce   C-SPAN NNDB Website WikileaksRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(spook, whistleblower, bank robber)
Christopher Boyce.jpg
Born16 February 1953
NationalityAmerican
Parents • Charles Eugene Boyce
• Noreen Hollenbeck
Spouse • Kathleen Mills
• Cait Boyce
Exposed1975 Australian coup
A code clerk turned counter spook who also tried to see secret to the USSR, got caught, escaped and caught again. He revealed how the CIA was involved in the 1975 Australian coup.

Christopher John Boyce, aged 21, was a code clerk employed with TRW (a large US PMC) where he had access to classified information. After receiving misdirected documents that exposed the 1975 Australian coup he "went off on a one-man war against the intelligence community"[1], began stealing classified documents and leaking them to the Soviet Union. He was arrested in 1977 and sentenced to 40 years. He escaped in 1980, and robbed banks until he was recaptured in 1981. He was released from prison in 2002.

Background

Christopher Boyce's father was Charles Eugene Boyce, a former FBI agent[2] who was Director of Security at McDonnell Douglas in 1974.

Career

In 1974, Christopher Boyce was hired by TRW, after intervention by his father.[2] Within months, although aged only 21, he had been promoted to a highly sensitive position in TRW's "Black Vault" (the classified communications centre that held communications with CIA headquarters in Langley) with a top secret security clearance. He worked with National Reconnaissance Office transmissions.

Espionage

"Shocked" at the deception he uncovered, as a 2013 Wired article puts it "He embarked on a personal mission to damage the U.S. defense and intelligence complex, supplying classified crypto keys and and detailed specifications of the latest US spy satellites to his friend Andrew Daulton Lee, who in turn took the information to Mexico and sold it to the KGB."[1]

Arrest

Boyce's U.S. Marshals Service mugshot

He was arrested[By whom?][Where?] in 1977 and charged with espionage.[citation needed]

Trial

After a high publicity lawsuit, released a bestselling book about the exploits of The Falcon and The Snowman (himself and co-defendant, Andrew Daulton Lee. He was sentenced to 40 years for espionage.

Escape & recapture

Christopher Boyce recapture.jpg

On January 21, 1980, when Christopher Boyce, with the help of fellow inmates, hid in a drainage hole, used a makeshift ladder and tin snips to cut through a barbed wire perimeter to escape from prison. On the run, he robbed 17 banks in Idaho and Washington State before being recaptured by the US Marshal service in August 1981 after the "most extensive and complex manhunt in the history of the Service]] in the 1980's."[3]

Release

Christopher Boyce was released from prison in 2002.[1][2]

Revelations

Christopher Boyce's revelations included the fact that the CIA had infiltrated the Australian political and trade union elite and referred to the Governor-General of Australia, Sir John Kerr, as "our man Kerr".[4] His revelations were systematically blocked by the Australian corporate media after his 1982 interview by the Australian Channel Nine TV program, 60 Minutes.[5]

Opinions

A 2014 article quoted Boyce stating that "Our civil liberties are being trashed, and I’m really glad that Snowden and Manning have released these things. I think Snowden's a very brave man. I think he's kind of a hero, and the volume of things that he's revealed just astounds me."[5]

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References