Leslie James Bennett (original) (raw)

About DBpedia

Leslie James Bennett (1920 — October 18, 2003) was a British/Canadian citizen who spent most of his working life as a counter-intelligence official, first for Britain's GCHQ, and later for the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) Security Service. He took an early retirement and moved to Australia. Bennett was born in Wales, served with the British signals intelligence organization GCHQ during World War II. According to the Encyclopedia of Cold War Espionage, Spies, and Secret Operations, Bennett met Kim Philby during World War II, when they were both stationed in Turkey.

Property Value
dbo:abstract Leslie James Bennett (1920 — October 18, 2003) was a British/Canadian citizen who spent most of his working life as a counter-intelligence official, first for Britain's GCHQ, and later for the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) Security Service. He took an early retirement and moved to Australia. Bennett was born in Wales, served with the British signals intelligence organization GCHQ during World War II. According to the Encyclopedia of Cold War Espionage, Spies, and Secret Operations, Bennett met Kim Philby during World War II, when they were both stationed in Turkey. While living in Australia in 1950 Bennett married an Australian woman. Later that year he and his wife moved to Canada when he began his 22-year employment as a civilian employee of the RCMP. According to the Encyclopedia of Cold War Espionage, Spies, and Secret Operations in 1962 the Central Intelligence Agency's chief of counter-intelligence James Jesus Angleton trusted Bennett to interview a key Soviet defector Anatol Golitsyn. However, Angleton, who was known for being highly suspicious, began to suspect that Bennett might himself be a mole. Angleton opened a dossier on Bennett in 1967. By 1970 Angleton's suspicions grew to the point the RCMP had to conduct an investigation into Bennett. They put him under surveillance, tapped his phone, and bugged his house—including his bedroom. This operation, codenamed "" culminated in taking Bennett to a safehouse for a humiliating five-day interrogation. During his interrogation his interrogators asked Bennett embarrassing personal questions about his sex life based on comments captured from the bug in his bedroom. The investigation did not find any evidence that Bennett was a double agent, but his clearance to have access to top secret information was withdrawn, to satisfy American concerns. According to the Encyclopedia of Cold War Espionage, Spies, and Secret Operations, when Angleton was removed in 1974, it turned out he never had any real evidence Bennett had ever been disloyal. After he left the RCMP his wife left him, and returned to Australia with their two daughters.The Encyclopedia of Cold War Espionage, Spies, and Secret Operations asserted that he was only able to get menial work. In 1977 Ian Adams published a short novel entitled S: Portrait of a Spy, about a senior RCMP security official who was a mole.Other commentators would assert that many of the novel's character seemed to be thinly veiled descriptions of real individuals—starting with "S", the titular character, who Paul Hellyer and Peter Worthington would identify as Bennett. Worthington contacted Bennett, strongly encouraging him to sue Adams.During the civil suit the judge required Adams to name his sources, but allowed Bennett to refuse to testify on the grounds that doing so might reveal secrets that would put national security at risk. Adams and Bennett reached an out of court settlement. Bennett was paid 30,000—reportedtobebarelyenoughtopayhislegalexpenses.In1982JohnSawatskypublishedForServicesRendered:LeslieJamesBennettandtheRCMPSecurityService,whichhepresentedasamorethorough,professionalexaminationofBennett′scareer.In1985anotherSovietdefector,VitaliSergeyevichYurchenkoconfirmedtherewasaSovietmoleintheRCMP,butidentifiedhimasanotherofficial.AccordingtotheEncyclopediaofColdWarEspionage,Spies,andSecretOperationstheactualmolewasSergeantGillesG.Brunet.In1993TheFifthEstate,aninvestigativejournalismtelevisionprogramfromtheCanadianBroadcastingCorporation,profiledBennett,andinterviewedaformerKGBdirectorofforeigncounter−intelligence,GeneralOlegKalugin,whoalsoconfirmedanotherRCMPofficialwasthemole,andthathehadneverheardofBennett.TheFifthEstatealsoidentifiedthemoleasGillesG.Brunet.Accordingto,acolleagueofBennett,in1993,afterTheFifthEstateprofiledBennett,thethenSolicitorGeneral"exonerated"Bennett,andhewasgivena30,000—reported to be barely enough to pay his legal expenses. In 1982 John Sawatsky published For Services Rendered: Leslie James Bennett and the RCMP Security Service, which he presented as a more thorough, professional examination of Bennett's career. In 1985 another Soviet defector, Vitali Sergeyevich Yurchenko confirmed there was a Soviet mole in the RCMP, but identified him as another official. According to the Encyclopedia of Cold War Espionage, Spies, and Secret Operations the actual mole was Sergeant Gilles G. Brunet. In 1993 The Fifth Estate, an investigative journalism television program from the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, profiled Bennett, and interviewed a former KGB director of foreign counter-intelligence, General Oleg Kalugin, who also confirmed another RCMP official was the mole, and that he had never heard of Bennett.The Fifth Estate also identified the mole as Gilles G. Brunet. According to , a colleague of Bennett, in 1993, after The Fifth Estate profiled Bennett, the then Solicitor General "exonerated" Bennett, and he was given a 30,000—reportedtobebarelyenoughtopayhislegalexpenses.In1982JohnSawatskypublishedForServicesRendered:LeslieJamesBennettandtheRCMPSecurityService,whichhepresentedasamorethorough,professionalexaminationofBennettscareer.In1985anotherSovietdefector,VitaliSergeyevichYurchenkoconfirmedtherewasaSovietmoleintheRCMP,butidentifiedhimasanotherofficial.AccordingtotheEncyclopediaofColdWarEspionage,Spies,andSecretOperationstheactualmolewasSergeantGillesG.Brunet.In1993TheFifthEstate,aninvestigativejournalismtelevisionprogramfromtheCanadianBroadcastingCorporation,profiledBennett,andinterviewedaformerKGBdirectorofforeigncounterintelligence,GeneralOlegKalugin,whoalsoconfirmedanotherRCMPofficialwasthemole,andthathehadneverheardofBennett.TheFifthEstatealsoidentifiedthemoleasGillesG.Brunet.Accordingto,acolleagueofBennett,in1993,afterTheFifthEstateprofiledBennett,thethenSolicitorGeneral"exonerated"Bennett,andhewasgivena100,000 payment.Bennett had been a civilian employee of the RCMP, he was not officially a Mountie, but, according to Mulvenna, due to his long service and the respect felt for him, the organization of retired Mounties made him an honorary member. (en)
dbo:birthPlace dbr:South_Wales
dbo:birthYear 1920-01-01 (xsd:gYear)
dbo:deathPlace dbr:Melbourne dbr:Australia
dbo:knownFor dbr:KGB_mole
dbo:nationality dbr:Canada dbr:United_Kingdom
dbo:occupation dbr:Canada dbr:Leslie_James_Bennett__PersonFunction__1 dbr:Counter-intelligence
dbo:stateOfOrigin dbr:Canada dbr:United_Kingdom
dbo:wikiPageID 41245587 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageLength 13796 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID 1110970506 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink dbr:Canada dbr:Canadian_Broadcasting_Corporation dbr:Royal_Canadian_Mounted_Police dbr:Paul_Hellyer dbr:Peter_Worthington dbr:United_Kingdom dbr:Signals_intelligence dbr:Solicitor_General_of_Canada dbr:South_Wales dbc:2003_deaths dbr:Melbourne dbc:Counterintelligence dbr:GCHQ dbr:Gilles_G._Brunet dbr:S_–_Portrait_of_a_Spy dbr:Australia dbc:1920_births dbc:British_expatriates_in_Australia dbr:Central_Intelligence_Agency dbr:Turkey dbc:Royal_Canadian_Mounted_Police_officers dbr:John_Sawatsky dbr:James_Jesus_Angleton dbc:British_emigrants_to_Canada dbc:GCHQ_people dbr:Kim_Philby dbr:The_Fifth_Estate_(TV) dbr:Ian_Adams dbr:Oleg_Kalugin dbr:World_War_II dbr:RCMP_Security_Service dbr:Canadian_citizen dbr:Anatol_Golitsyn dbr:Vitali_Sergeyevich_Yurchenko dbr:Counter-intelligence dbr:KGB_mole dbr:Dan_Mulvenna dbr:Operation_Gridiron
dbp:birthPlace dbr:South_Wales
dbp:deathPlace dbr:Melbourne dbr:Australia
dbp:knownFor accused of being a KGB mole (en)
dbp:name Leslie James Bennett (en)
dbp:nationality dbr:Canada dbr:United_Kingdom
dbp:occupation counter-intelligence official in the United Kingdom and Canada (en)
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate dbt:Infobox_person dbt:Death_year_and_age dbt:Birth-year
dcterms:subject dbc:2003_deaths dbc:Counterintelligence dbc:1920_births dbc:British_expatriates_in_Australia dbc:Royal_Canadian_Mounted_Police_officers dbc:British_emigrants_to_Canada dbc:GCHQ_people
gold:hypernym dbr:Citizen
rdf:type owl:Thing foaf:Person dbo:Person dul:NaturalPerson wikidata:Q19088 wikidata:Q215627 wikidata:Q5 wikidata:Q729 dbo:Animal dbo:Eukaryote dbo:Species schema:Person yago:CausalAgent100007347 yago:LivingThing100004258 yago:Object100002684 yago:Organism100004475 yago:Person100007846 yago:PhysicalEntity100001930 yago:WikicatGovernmentCommunicationsHeadquartersPeople yago:YagoLegalActor yago:YagoLegalActorGeo yago:Whole100003553
rdfs:comment Leslie James Bennett (1920 — October 18, 2003) was a British/Canadian citizen who spent most of his working life as a counter-intelligence official, first for Britain's GCHQ, and later for the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) Security Service. He took an early retirement and moved to Australia. Bennett was born in Wales, served with the British signals intelligence organization GCHQ during World War II. According to the Encyclopedia of Cold War Espionage, Spies, and Secret Operations, Bennett met Kim Philby during World War II, when they were both stationed in Turkey. (en)
rdfs:label Leslie James Bennett (en)
owl:sameAs freebase:Leslie James Bennett wikidata:Leslie James Bennett https://global.dbpedia.org/id/bFWf yago-res:Leslie James Bennett
prov:wasDerivedFrom wikipedia-en:Leslie_James_Bennett?oldid=1110970506&ns=0
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf wikipedia-en:Leslie_James_Bennett
foaf:name Leslie James Bennett (en)
is dbo:wikiPageWikiLink of dbr:John_Watkins_(diplomat) dbr:Josaphat_Brunet dbr:List_of_controversies_involving_the_Royal_Canadian_Mounted_Police dbr:Deaths_in_October_2003 dbr:Gilles_G._Brunet dbr:S_–_Portrait_of_a_Spy dbr:Ian_Adams
is foaf:primaryTopic of wikipedia-en:Leslie_James_Bennett