Williamsburg Regional Library

Cold War secrets, a vanished professor, a suspected killer, and Hoover's FBI, Eileen Welsome

Classification
1
Content
1
Mapped to
1
Label
Cold War secrets, a vanished professor, a suspected killer, and Hoover's FBI, Eileen Welsome
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references and index
resource.biographical
contains biographical information
Illustrations
illustrationsplates
Index
index present
Literary form
non fiction
Main title
Cold War secrets
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
1197850381
Responsibility statement
Eileen Welsome
Series statement
True crime history
Sub title
a vanished professor, a suspected killer, and Hoover's FBI
Summary
"Thomas Riha vanished on March 15, 1969, sparking a mystery that lives on 50 years later. A native of Prague, Czechoslovakia, Riha was a popular teacher at the University of Colorado at Boulder and a handsome man, with thick, graying hair and a wry smile. After his disappearance, the FBI and the CIA told local law enforcement and university officials that Riha was alive and well and had left Boulder to get away from his wife. But, as Eileen Welsome convincingly argues, Riha was not alive and well at all. A woman named Galya Tannenbaum, she concludes, had murdered him. Galya-a mother of four, a talented artist, and an FBI informant-allegedly went on to murder two more people in Denver as the trail to find Riha ran cold. Her weapon of choice? Cyanide. Galya was a chameleon, able to deceive businessmen and experienced investigators alike. But she had an Achilles' heel: she couldn't spell. She consistently misspelled words, such as "concider" and "extreemly." For the first time, Galya's signature misspellings are linked to documents once thought to be written by Riha and two other murder victims, as Welsome reexamines the facts and evidence of the case. She argues that these misspellings prove that Galya forged the documents and committed other murders. Her conclusion is buttressed by a wealth of additional information from police reports, depositions, and court testimony. During the Cold War era, the Riha case had an extraordinary ripple effect that reached even the highest levels of government. When the local district attorney in Colorado threatened to subpoena intelligence officials to find out who was behind the "alive and well" rumors, the CIA's representative in Denver claimed the information originated with the FBI. Director J. Edgar Hoover was infuriated by this assertion and actually cut off relations with the CIA. Presenting a compelling cast of characters in an era of intrigue and with astounding attention to detail, Eileen Welsome demonstrates why Galya Tannenbaum's alleged crimes continue to fascinate-even as her motivations remain mysterious"--, Provided by publisher
Table of contents
Beginnings. Crazy Billy ; Galya ; Thomas ; Behind the Iron Curtain ; Chicago ; Boulder -- "Alive and well". Neighborhood watch ; Country cousins and socialites ; Gus ; Barbara ; "Bag of snakes" ; Making mud ; Sightings -- The butterfly effect. "H" bomb ; The Huston plan ; Thirty-six days ; The trial ; The smell of almonds -- "What would the Russians think?". Torpedoes and submarines ; The fink ; Misspellings and murder ; The informant and the "useful idiot"
Target audience
adult

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