Google Groups no longer supports new Usenet posts or subscriptions. Historical content remains viewable.
Dismiss

consultant for Mitre Corporation found dead in landfill

11 views
Skip to first unread message

Eric

unread,
Mar 20, 2011, 9:57:12 AM3/20/11
to
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/jan/04/usa-us-politics

John Wheeler, US military expert, found dead in US landfill

Police are investigating death of former US government official
John Wheeler after his body was found at dump

* guardian.co.uk<http://www.guardian.co.uk/>, Tuesday 4 January
2011 02.27 GMT

Associated Press

The body of a military expert who served in three Republican
administrations was found dumped in a landfill over the New Year's
weekend, and investigators said Monday they do not know who might
have killed him.

Authorities say John Wheeler III, 66, was scheduled to be on an
Amtrak train from Washington to Wilmington on 28 December. Police
say it's now not clear if he ever made that trip. His body was found
three days later, on New Year's Eve, as a garbage truck emptied its
contents at the Cherry Island landfill.

His death has been ruled a homicide.

Wheeler, who served as an Army staff officer in Vietnam, later
worked in the Reagan and both Bush administrations and helped lead
efforts to build the Vietnam Veterans Memorial wall in Washington.
He also was the second chairman and chief executive officer of
Mothers Against Drunk Driving.

His body was discovered on 31 December as a waste management truck
emptied its contents at the Wilmington-area landfill. His death has
been ruled a homicide.

Police have determined that all the stops made by the garbage truck
on Friday before it arrived at the landfill involved commercial
disposal bins in Newark, several miles from Wheeler's home in the
historic district of New Castle.

Newark, Delaware police spokesman Lt. Mark Farrall said investigators
had been to Wheelers' house, which was roped off with police tape
after his death, but that it could not be considered a crime scene.

"We don't have a crime scene at this point in time," said Farrall,
adding that investigators still do not have any leads in the case.

Farrall said initial police reports that Wheeler was last seen
getting off an Amtrak train in Wilmington last Tuesday were incorrect.

"The information that we have is that he was scheduled to take a
train from Washington DC, to Newark on the 28th. We don't know if
that occurred," Farrall said, adding that investigators don't know
how long Wheeler might have been missing before his body was found,
or where and when he was last seen.

Asked why Wheeler had not been reported missing, Farrall said the
family was not in town at the time.

"That's why there was some delay in notification," he explained.

A graduate of the US Military Academy at West Point, Wheeler went
on to study at Harvard Business School and Yale Law School.

Richard Radez, a longtime friend who also graduated from West Point
and Harvard Business, said he exchanged e-mails with Wheeler on
Christmas. On the day after Christmas, Wheeler sent Radez an e-mail
expressing concern that the nation wasn't sufficiently prepared for
cyber warfare.

"This was something that had preoccupied him over the last couple
of years,"

Radez said.

James Fallows, a national correspondent for The Atlantic magazine,
wrote in an article on the magazine's website that he had known
"Jack" Wheeler since the early 1980s.

Wheeler, Fallows wrote, had spent much of his life trying to address
"what he called the '40 year open wound' of Vietnam-era soldiers
being spurned by the society that sent them to war."

Wheeler retired from the military in 1971, and went on to serve in
the administrations of Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H.W.
Bush, including at the Securities and Exchange Commission. He also
was a special assistant to the Secretary of the Air Force under
President George W. Bush. He recently worked as a consultant for
The Mitre Corporation, a nonprofit based in Bedford, Mass., and
McLean, Virginia, that operates federally funded research and
development centers.

"He was just not the sort of person who would wind up in a landfill,"
said Bayard Marin, an attorney who was representing Wheeler and his
wife, Katherine Klyce, in an ongoing legal dispute with a couple
wanting to build a home near the Wheelers' in the historic district.

"He was a very aggressive kind of guy, but nevertheless kind of
ingratiating, and he had a good sense of humor," Marin said.

END ARTICLE

For more on Mitre, check out this link:

http://justanotherblowback.blogspot.com/search?q=mitre

0 new messages