SF Examiner 9./28/64
Security Guard Criticized;
`Serious'
Flaws in
Protection
By LESLIE H. WHITTEN
Examiner Correspondent
WASHINGTON
T h e
Warren Commission
found serious flaws in the
protective ring around
John F. Kennedy and today
proposed ways of
strengthening the guard
for President Johnson
and his successors.
The Secret Service was
"seriously deficient" in its
intelligence work and the
FBI "took an unduly restrictive
view of its role" in failing
to give the Secret Serv- ,
ice information on Lee Harvey
Oswald before Nov. 22,
196 the report said.
The FBI has been virtually
immune from official criticism
in its 40 years under
J. Edgar Hoover.
The Commission also cited
"a breach of discipline" by
nine members of the Secret
Service in Fort Worth. The
agents had up to three beers
and a mixed drink and a
half after midnight. One
stayed out until 5 a. m. Nov.
22. The report said there was
no evidence these men could
have averted the tragedy,
but that "it is conceivable
(they) might have been more
alert in the Dallas motorcade"...
A cabinet-level committee
to observe the Secret
Service and other Federal
agencies in their protection
of a president. The committee
might study whether protection
should be removed
from the Secret Service and
put elsewhere...
The Secret Service,
through Agent Robert I.
Bouck, in charge of the Protective
Research Section, testified
if it had such information
and had known he had
been courtmartialed on a gun
charge,, it would have been
on the alert for Oswald.
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