George Wackenhut

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George R. Wackenhut
Born George Russell Wackenhut
(1919-09-03)September 3, 1919
Pennsylvania
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Vero Beach, Florida
Alma mater University of Hawaii
Johns Hopkins University
Occupation Founder of Wackenhut private security corporation
Spouse(s) Ruth
Children Janis Wackenhut-Ward, Richard R. Wackenhut
Parent(s) William Wackenhut and Francis Hogan

George Russell Wackenhut, (September 3, 1919 – December 31, 2004) was the founder of the Wackenhut private security corporation.

Biography

George Russell Wackenhut was the son of William and Francis (Hogan) Wackenhut, he grew up in Upper Darby, outside Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and graduated from Upper Darby High School in 1937. He was inducted into the school's Wall of Fame in 2000. He served in the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers during World War II and witnessed the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor. He graduated from what is now known as West Chester University of Pennsylvania.[1] He earned a bachelor's degree from the University of Hawaii.[2] and a master's degree in education from Johns Hopkins University, then taught classes in physical education and health.[1]

In 1951, Wackenhut joined the FBI as a special agent in Indianapolis and Atlanta, handling counterfeit money and bad-check cases and tracking down Army deserters. He resigned in 1954 to launch Special Agent Investigations in Coral Gables, Florida, with three other former agents - William Stanton, A. Kenneth Altschul and Miami lawyer and FBI agent Ed Du Bois, Jr.[3] Following an infamous in-office fist fight[citation needed] with Du Bois, Jr. in 1955, a professional split occurred and Du Bois, Jr. went on to form his own company, Investigators, Inc, focusing on private investigations.[3] In 1958, Wackenhut bought out his remaining partners, renamed the company after himself and expanded into the security guard field, and went public in 1965.

Even with a profit margin of 2.5 percent, the company's earnings allowed Wackenhut to live lavishly in homes scattered throughout the country. Prior to his move to Vero Beach, Florida in 1995, his primary residence was "Tyecliffe Castle", in Coral Gables, near Miami. It was known in the Miami as Castle Wackenhut.[4] It was a $10 million ($15.5 million today) turreted mansion complete with moat, decorated with firearms and medieval suits of armor. The 18,000 sq ft, 57 room Tyecliffe Castle was sold to Allen Stanford and was demolished c.2008.[5] His house was wired with infrared and laser sensors, closed-circuit television monitors and photo-cell surveillance and had private radios for his family. In 1994, The Quiet American, an 800-page authorized biography of Wackenhut by John Minahan, was published.[6]

George Wackenhut was known as a hard-line right-winger. He built up dossiers on Americans suspected of being Communists or left-leaning "subversives and sympathizers" and sold the information to interested parties. Frank Donner claimed in his book Age of Surveillance that the Wackenhut Corporation maintained and updated its files even after the McCarthy hysteria had ebbed, adding the names of antiwar protesters and civil rights demonstrators to its list of "derogatory types."[7] By 1965, Wackenhut was boasting to potential investors that the company maintained files on 2.5 million suspected dissidents - one in 46 American adults then living. In 1966, after acquiring the private files of Karl Barslaag, a former staff member of the House Committee on Un-American Activities, Wackenhut could claim that with more than 4 million names, it had the largest privately held file on suspected dissidents in America. In 1975, after the US Congress investigated companies that had private files, Wackenhut gave its files to the now-defunct anti-Communist Church League of America of Wheaton, Illinois.[citation needed]

When he sold his company for $570 million in 2002 ($750 million today), he owned more than 50 percent of its stock. Wackenhut died on 31 December 2004 of heart failure, at his home in Vero Beach, Florida, at the age of 85.[2]

See also

References

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External links