William H. Webster, Who Ran Both the F.B.I. and the C.I.A., Dies at 101
Source: New York Times
William H. Webster, Who Ran Both the F.B.I. and the C.I.A., Dies at 101
A former federal judge, he first came to the F.B.I. just as two of the worst spies in American history were running rampant.
William H. Webster in 2002. A federal judge, a moderate Republican and a Christian Scientist, he was chosen in 1978 to lead the F.B.I. in large part because he projected probity and integrity. Doug Mills/The New York Times
By Tim Weiner
Aug. 8, 2025
William H. Webster, the only person ever to lead both the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Central Intelligence Agency, switching from lawman to spymaster while the bureau was investigating high crimes at the White House and the C.I.A., died on Friday in Warrenton, Va. He was 101. ... A family spokesman, Jim McGrath, confirmed the death, at a care center, but did not provide a specific cause.
Mr. Webster was born two months before J. Edgar Hoover took command of the F.B.I. in 1924. Hoover, who governed the bureau for almost half a century, was not yet six years in his grave when Mr. Webster was sworn in as the F.B.I.'s third director on Feb. 23, 1978, a time when Hoover's long shadow still darkened Washington.
Senate hearings had exposed the bureau's Cold War history of warrantless wiretaps and burglaries and laid bare its vendettas against the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
The F.B.I., Americas leading law enforcement agency, was widely seen as lawless and malicious. Six weeks after Mr. Webster took office, a federal grand jury, citing a conspiracy to injure and oppress citizens with illegal break-ins against the friends and families of far-left fugitives, indicted L. Patrick Gray III, the former acting F.B.I. director; Edward S. Miller, the former F.B.I. intelligence chief; and Mark Felt, the former deputy director who was later revealed as Deep Throat, The Washington Posts secret Watergate source. (Mr. Grays indictment was later dropped by the Justice Department. Mr. Miller and Mr. Felt were fined and later pardoned by President Ronald Reagan.)
President Jimmy Carter chose Mr. Webster a federal judge, a moderate Republican and a Christian Scientist in large part because he projected probity and integrity, qualities that matched the presidents self-image. At his swearing-in, Mr. Webster vowed to do the work that the American people expect of us in the way that the Constitution demands of us.
Mr. Webster, center, with Chief Justice Warren Burger, left, and President Jimmy Carter, after he was sworn in as F.B.I. director on Feb. 23, 1978. Harvey Georges/Associated Press
Mr. Webster later said that it took several years before he could control the Hoover hard hats, as he called the old guard, and wrestle the bureau into the realm of the rule of law.
{snip}
Ash Wu contributed reporting.
Read more: https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/08/us/william-h-webster-dead.html

bucolic_frolic
(52,103 posts)I didn't realize he was appointed by President Carter, I associated him with Bushes. That's how these long appointments confuse the public.
conspiracy to injure and oppress citizens hey that's a novel concept. The Stassi will run with it.
LymphocyteLover
(8,636 posts)Certainly a patriot compared to the fascists in charge now. How much was he aware of what happened to this country before he died?
yardwork
(67,782 posts)How discouraging to watch the evil take root again.
Polybius
(20,739 posts)They think that being sick is more of a mental mistake than a physical issue, and they support healing through prayer instead of regular medicine. Unless, of course, he didn't really stick to it. Anyway, rest in peace.