John R. Bartels Jr.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Appointed byAttorney General John N. Mitchell
Preceding
Appointed byPresident Richard Nixon
Succeeded by
John R. Bartels Jr.
1st Chief of the New Jersey Strike Force
In office
1968–1973
Appointed byAttorney General John N. Mitchell
Preceding
Acting Administrator of the Drug Enforcement Administration
In office
July 1, 1973  October 4, 1973
Appointed byPresident Richard Nixon
1st Administrator of the Drug Enforcement Administration
In office
October 4, 1973  May 30, 1975
Succeeded by
Personal details
BornNovember 27, 1934 (1934-11-27) (age 91)
Alma mater

John Ries Bartels Jr. (born November 27, 1934) is an American lawyer and was the first Administrator of the Drug Enforcement Administration.[1] He was also the first Chief of the New Jersey Organized Crime Strike Force.[2]

Early career in the federal government

Bartels was born in 1934 in New York to parents John R. Bartels and Anne Wilson.[3]

Bartels attended the Phillips Exeter Academy and Harvard University.[4] He spent time in Germany on exchange as a Fulbright scholar at the University of Munich.[2] He returned to attend Harvard Law School, and joined the BAR soon after.[2]

He was Assistant United States Attorney in the Southern District of New York for Robert Morgenthau.[2][5] In an interview for Time Magazine, Bartels said: “I learned the extent of organized crime, the pervasive influence of mobsters.”[2]

After the 1967 Newark riots, John N. Mitchell appointed Bartels to run the New Jersey Strike Force.[6] While running this unit, Bartels coordinated the activities of ten federal agencies and local law enforcement.[7] Bartels performed investigations, interviewed suspects, worked alongside federal agents, and arranged for witness protection.[2] Bartels was directly responsible for "the most significant attack on organized crime in the state’s history."[2] People that Bartels helped to indict include Hugh Addonizio, Thomas J. Whelan, John V. Kenny, corrupt cops, and corrupt politicians.[2]

First administrator of the DEA

Bartels and Richard Nixon

The Drug Enforcement Administration was established on July 1, 1973,[8] by Reorganization Plan No. 2 of 1973, signed by President Richard Nixon on July 28.[9] It proposed the creation of a single federal agency to enforce the federal drug laws as well as consolidate and coordinate the government's drug control activities. Congress accepted the proposal, as they were concerned with the growing availability of drugs.[10] As a result, the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs (BNDD), the Office of Drug Abuse Law Enforcement (ODALE); approximately 600 Special Agents of the Bureau of Customs, Customs Agency Service, and other federal offices merged to create the DEA.[11]

When John Finlator, Myles Ambrose, and John Ingersoll - all three men who had been on the short list to run the new agency - all quit their jobs, Bartels was appointed Acting Administrator of the new Drug Enforcement Administration.[12][13][3][14] Bartels' predecessors represented great interagency rivalry and oppositional approaches to narcotics and drugs law enforcement; Finlator at BDAC treated addiction as a medical issue, Ingersoll at BNDD stressed the need for vast and long-term investigations of global syndicates, and Ambrose at Customs ran an agency that had been known for patting-down American citizens and mass arrests of low-level street dealers.[15][12][5]

Bartels and Gerald R. Ford

Congress, and the Nixon Administration desired someone to lead the agency that was not from Customs (Ambrose) or BNDD (Ingersoll), which had been in constant interagency dispute.[1] While Bartels had been a deputy director for Ambrose, he had not been working for him long enough to have the appearance of favoritism.[1][5]

In October, he officially became the 1st Administrator of the DEA.[3]

He expanded the DEA into a lasting federal agency.[3] Bartels established the El Paso Intelligence Center, the DEA special agent training program, expanded the DEA Air Wing from its BNDD origins, and established the DEA's Office of Intelligence.[5]

Scandal and resignation

Retirement and later life

References

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