Story automatically generated by StoryBot Version 0.2.2 rel Testing.
Storybot ('Arthur T Knackerbracket') has been converted to Python3
Note: This is the complete story and will need further editing. It may also be covered
by Copyright and thus should be acknowledged and quoted rather than printed in its entirety.
FeedSource: [HackerNews]
Time: 2017-01-04 17:41:24 UTC
Original URL: https://www.muckrock.com/news/archives/2016/dec/13/richard-feynman-put-himself-fbis-do-not-call-list/ [muckrock.com] using utf-8 encoding.
Title: Richard Feynman Put Himself on the FBI’s Do Not Call List
--- --- --- --- --- --- --- Entire Story Below --- --- --- --- --- --- ---
Richard Feynman Put Himself on the FBI’s Do Not Call List
Arthur T Knackerbracket has found the following story [muckrock.com]:
Want the latest investigative and FOIA news?
Fed-up physicist pulled “I helped make the A-bomb” card to get out of Bureau interviews
Richard Feynman’s sprawling FBI file covers two-thirds of the physicist’s legendary career, from drama over his invitation to speak at a Soviet science conference [muckrock.com] to an unnamed colleague citing his hobby of cracking safes at Los Alamos as evidence he was a “master of deception and enemy of America [muckrock.com].” But the file stops abruptly in 1958, and for a very Feynmanian reason: Feynman asked them to.
After decades of Bureau inquiries, it appears a fed-up Feynman simply pulled the “I made the atomic bomb” card and asked to be left alone.
To their credit (and perhaps due to Feynman’s not inconsiderable clout), the FBI obeyed Feynman’s wishes, with Hoover even writing a chastising memo reminding agents not to bother the man without a damn good reason.
So there you have it: if you ever wanted to get the Bureau off your back, try to get a job on the Manhattan Project.
Read Feynman’s full file embedded below, or on the request page [muckrock.com].
Share
Want the latest investigative and FOIA news?
MuckRock is a non-profit collaborative news site that gives you the tools to keep our government transparent and accountable.
© 2010–2017 Muckrock
-- submitted from IRC