The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

Onlysixmen­havefollow­ed inHoover’s FBIfootste­ps

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I’VE been following the stooshie about President Trump’s sacking of FBI director James Comey with interest.

However, apart from the first director, J. Edgar Hoover (pictured) I don’t know anything about any other FBI director.

Can you fill me in, Queries Man? – F.

The Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion came into being in 1935, when Hoover, who had been in charge of its predecesso­r, the Bureau of Investigat­ion since 1924, was appointed director.

Hoover was director under five US Presidents, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Harry Truman, Dwight Eisenhower, John F. Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson and Richard Nixon, for a total of 36 years, until his death in 1972. Apart from several acting directors who only spent a few months in charge, there have been six directors since Hoover – Clarence M. Kelley, William H. Webster, William S. Sessions, Louis J. Freeh, Robert S. Mueller and James Comey.

Kelley helped the FBI, transition from its 40–plus years of being dominated

by a single director, Hoover, and improved the public image of the FBI.

Webster became director of the Central Intelligen­ce from 1987-91, the only person to have held both these positions.

Sessions is the only director, apart from Comey, to have been fired.

Freeh was director at the time of the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing, overseeing the capture and prosecutio­n of Timothy McVeigh.

Mueller became director on September 4, 2001, just one week before the September 11 attacks against the United States.

His successor, James Comey, took office in 2013 and served three years and 247 days before his sacking.

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