Windsor Star

SUPER-SECRET RETAIL THERAPY

Meet the man behind the shop most customers aren’t allowed to visit

- KATIE SANDERS

LANGLEY, VA. There’s a room in the main building of the Central Intelligen­ce Agency stocked with secret sauce. Barbecue sauce, that is. It’s available by the bottle: $12.99 plus tax, complete with a “Top Secret” label and the official CIA seal. Nearby is a rack of ties designed to look like burn bags (the bags government spies ignite to make classified materials disappear); and a basket of plush “secret squirrels” inspired by the ones scurrying about on the Langley grounds.

“We like wordplay and fun things,” Mark Wiggins says of the merchandis­e. Wiggins is executive director of the CIA gift shop, a oneof-a-kind souvenir store that most of the world can’t visit. He greets me and a photograph­er — and our entourage of plaincloth­es security chaperones — at the door to the unmarked space in the Original Headquarte­rs Building, past the Directors Gallery, a wall of portraits of the men who’ve headed the agency since its 1947 founding (Gina Haspel’s portrait is not up yet).

At six-foot-six, Wiggins rivals the height of the sauce display. Affable and casual, he’s sporting a red polo shirt emblazoned with the agency’s circular blue logo that matches the shirts hanging in the shop’s golf section.

“All right, let’s go,” he says, and with a coach’s zeal, he starts our tour at the “tchotchke wall” — his nickname for popular quick grabs, such as seal-emblazoned Bic lighters.

Packages of fudge, pecans and a handful of CIA challenge coins — brass medallions commemorat­ing various events and units — line the mahogany shelves.

“Collect ’em. Gift ’em. Just have them because they’re new and awesome,” Wiggins says of the collectibl­e coins, which also keep the store competitiv­e with other government agency gift shops that carry their own.

The shop, which started as a basement pop-up in 1957, is the revenue-generating arm of the CIA’S non-profit Employee Activity Associatio­n. In a building dedicated to intelligen­ce gathering and national security, Wiggins considers his shop a refuge from occupation­al stress. Come for stamps, Aspirin, a last-minute anniversar­y bracelet. Grab a light-up tumbler. A beanie. A hug. “There’s a level of happiness and joy in my store,” he says.

Outside his 9-to-5, Wiggins, 52, is a motivation­al speaker, a self-improvemen­t author and a leadership coach.

His on-the-job persona is more low-key. Here, his identity isn’t exactly classified informatio­n, but it’s not highly publicized, either: He works mostly behind the scenes, from his basement office or at trade shows. He came to America’s most exclusive swag shop 15 years ago after a career in retail that included stints with Levi Strauss and Foot Locker.

The No. 1 question people ask him upon hearing where he works is, “How can I shop there?” Put simply: Anyone is welcome to peruse the merchandis­e online, but actual shopping is restricted to agency employees, a shortlist of vetted visitors and, once a year, employee family members. To hit his sales goals, Wiggins leads his 12-person team on a continuous search for goods that will fly off the shelves. If he finds a customizab­le item he thinks would do well, he places an order and gives the vendor permission for the CIA logo to be used only on his purchase. Branded glassware is always a big seller.

“We can’t keep this in at all,” he says, leading the way to a wall chockabloc­k with Cia-logoed glasses, stemless wine sets, decanters and steins. He travels the country curating items, from chocolate bars to Waterford crystal sets to Air Force One Flight Attendant dolls.

“We have to be different and unique because the agency is that,” Wiggins says. He’ll try out a lot of merchandis­e to achieve that end, but there are limits. And not everything carries the CIA brand: Plenty of employees won’t go near merchandis­e that identifies where they work, so, along with the Top Secret barbecue sauce, for instance, Wiggins also carries the General’s Hot Sauce, an American brand that donates to military veterans organizati­ons.

On Family Day, the annual occasion when agency employees are encouraged to bring relatives to their workplace, the gift shop is the can’t-miss attraction. For months before this year’s September festivitie­s, Wiggins’s team loaded the stockroom with inventory, from prints of the art lining agency corridors to the bestsellin­g logoed mugs showcased in Hollywood spy flicks.

In-house CIA historian David Welker has watched the gift shop evolve over his 35 years at Langley. He doesn’t own a logoed item, but his 85-year-old mom picked up a CIA sweatshirt at Family Day years ago that she still wears to the gym, he says. Though Welker visits the shop regularly, he doesn’t actually know who’s behind its operations. He’s never given much thought to the logistics. “An unseen hand magically guides this store,” he says. “Things just appear, and you’re always grateful whenever you walk in.”

 ?? PHOTOS: BILL O’LEARY/THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Cia-branded barbecue sauce sits in the CIA gift shop, with merchandis­e available mainly to employees.
PHOTOS: BILL O’LEARY/THE WASHINGTON POST Cia-branded barbecue sauce sits in the CIA gift shop, with merchandis­e available mainly to employees.
 ??  ?? Mark Wiggins is executive director of the CIA gift shop at CIA headquarte­rs, which you can’t even visit unless you’re on a list of vetted visitors or an employee’s family member. You can see the inventory online, however.
Mark Wiggins is executive director of the CIA gift shop at CIA headquarte­rs, which you can’t even visit unless you’re on a list of vetted visitors or an employee’s family member. You can see the inventory online, however.
 ??  ?? Cia-branded glassware is always a big seller, says Mark Wiggins, executive director of the shop.
Cia-branded glassware is always a big seller, says Mark Wiggins, executive director of the shop.

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