A couple old news articles re: Youngblood, Behn, Boring, and Kellerman
Merry-Go-Round
OCT 1 9 191I
Secret Service Hero
/ Hounded Out of Job
Jack Anderson
"The new crowd
considered Youngblood too close to the
former President. Nixon aides suggested
quietly to the Secret Service that he be
moved out of the White House.
He was given a desk across the street
at Secret Service headquarters. Thereafter,
he was subjected to petty harassments
until he quietly resigned Iast June after
reaching eligibility for his 20-year pension.
At 48, he was at the peak of his career.
Youngblood doesn't believe President
Nixon personally had anything to do with
his treatment. President Nixon is a gentleman,"
Youngblood told us. He refused to
comment on whether Mr. Nixon's aides,
on their own authority, had put the
squeeze on him. Nor was he critical of the
Secret Service. "The Secret Service is a
good outfit," he said. "I don't want to say
anything that would hurt it."
---------------
NYT Times 9 Jan. 1965
2 Agents Removed
FromWhite House
By Secret Service,
WASHINGTON, Jan. 8 (UPI)
--The two top men assigned. to
the White House to protect
President Johnson were re-,
placed today by the Secret
Service.
Rufus W. Youngblood, who is
- Mr. Johnson's long-time personal
agent, was appointed spe-
"" cial agent in charge of the
_ White House detail, succeeding
- Gerald A. Behn.
Roy H. Kellerman, who was
in the same limousine in Dallas.
with President Kennedy when
- Mr. Kennedy was assassinated,
Nov. 22, 1963, was named dep-
- uty special agent in charge,
succeeding Floyd M. Boring.
Mr. Behn and Mr. Boring are
being assigned to Secret Service
headquarters as inspectors [note: Behn was adamant with me on 9/27/92 that he did NOT become an Inspector, as his 1976 JFK Library oral history also confirms: he instead became SAIC of Special Investigations, which he considered a demotion]. The
changes will take place Monday.
James J. Rowley, chief of the
Secret Service, said the shifts
were In line with the service's
policy of rotating key personnel
.in order to provide senior supervisors
with the broadest possible
experience."
The changes, he said, were
.part of his current plan to
"streamline and improve" the
Secret Service.
Was in Charge in Dallas
Mr. Kellerman was responsible
for all security arrange-.
snents during Mr. Kennedy's
trip to Texas.
- The role of the Secret Service
and the Federal Bureau of Investigation
came under scrutiny
during the Warren Commission's
investigation of the
assassination. In its report,
the commission recommended.
: greater liaison between the two
agencies.
Treasury Secretary Douglas
Dillon, whose department has
jurisdiction over the Secret
k Service, has announced
strengthening of its personnel
and modernized its equipment
and facilities in line with
the Warren Commission's suggest
ons.
Mr. Youngblood joined the
service in 1951. He served in
- the Atlanta office and then
joined the White House detail.
He was moved to the Vice-
: Presidential detail shortly after
Mr. Johnson assumed that
office. In November, 1963, Mr.
- Youngblood became an assist-
: ant special agent in charge of,
the White House detail. .
Joined Service in '41
Mr. Kellerman was appointed
to the service in 1941. He served
in Detroit, Toledo, Cincinnati,
Washington and Indianapolis
before he returned to Washing-
' ton in 1955.
He first served on the White,
House detail from 1942 to 1951,
and returned to it in 1955. Re
cently he has been an assistant
special agent in charge of the
detail.
Mr. Behn joined the service
in 1939 and was assigned to the
White House 10 years later. He
was put in charge of the detail
in 1961.
• Mr. Boring was appointed to
the Secret Service in 1943 and.
served in New York and Philadelphia
before being assigned to
the White House in 1944.
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