The Team House - Inside Military Intel in WW2 | Tim Scherrer | Ep. 395

Episode Date: February 5, 2026

In this conversation, Tim Shearer shares his extensive background in military intelligence, detailing his journey from Quincy, Illinois, to becoming a counterintelligence officer in the Army Reserve. ...He discusses his experiences during Desert Storm, his time at TransCom during the Gulf War, and the impact of 9/11 on his military career. Shearer also reflects on his transition to teaching and writing, culminating in his latest book, 'Spy Catchers, Interrogators, and Analysts,' which explores lesser-known aspects of military intelligence during World War II.00:00 Introduction to Tim Shearer and His Background02:47 Military Journey: From Quincy to the Army05:48 Becoming an Officer: ROTC Experience08:59 First Experiences in the Army Reserve11:53 Counterintelligence Operations in Iceland14:47 Desert Storm: Mobilization and Experiences17:44 Working at TransCom During the Gulf War20:50 Post-Gulf War Experiences and Company Command23:49 Transitioning to Teaching and Writing26:39 The Impact of 9/11 on Military Service29:54 Intelligence Operations and the War on Terror32:54 Writing Career: From History to Military Intelligence35:39 Spy Catchers, Interrogators, and Analysts: The New Book38:52 Reflections on Military Service and LegacyBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-team-house--5960890/support.

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 The Team House with your hopes, Jack Murphy and David Park. Hey, everyone. My name's Jack Murphy. This is The Team House. I'm here tonight with our guest, Tim Shear. He served as an Army Counterintelligence Section Chief, amongst other positions that he held, service in Desert Storm and elsewhere. He's also the author of Spycatchers, Interrogators, and Analysts, Tactical U.S. Army Military Intelligence in World War II.
Starting point is 00:00:33 I was just looking through this the other day while I was here in the office. It's super cool. I mean, if you're interested in World War II era military intelligence, you're definitely going to want to have this book on your shelf. Tim, thank you for joining us tonight. Yeah, thanks for having me. I'm very humble to be here. And, yeah, I was, I had a variety of jobs when I was in. Again, I was an Army Reserve Counterintelligence guy, and I was mobed for Desert Storm stateside.
Starting point is 00:01:03 and also 9-11, so I don't want people to think I'm trying to oversell myself. Well, tell us a little bit about that, you know, sort of the process that you took towards joining the Army. Yeah, I grew up in Quincy, Illinois, so if you're not familiar with where Quincy is, if Illinois was a pregnant woman, Quincy would be the belly button. So we're just right across the Missouri, or the Mississippi River from Missouri.
Starting point is 00:01:30 So I basically grew up in the same home. came into that home as a baby until I graduated. So I was always interested in the military, and my mom would take us to the library. And they had these CB Colby books, like equipment of the Cold War, weapons of World War II, things like that. And I remember opening that book
Starting point is 00:01:53 and seeing that Davy Crockett on the back of that Jeep thinking that was the coolest thing ever. So, and I was always interested. definitely interested in World War II. And there was one point when I was super young, I was maybe five or six, like the movie the battle, The Bulge was on. And the parents were trying to give me to go to bed, and I didn't want to go to bed because I wanted to know how the war was going to turn out.
Starting point is 00:02:18 I mean, the Germans had patent tanks. I mean, how could they not lose? But so my dad said, go to bed. You'll be fighting World War II for the rest of your life. And that's kind of how it's been. I think. So my dad served the military. I had some uncles that served. One was in Patton's Army. I have one that's a little bit of a mystery. He was an aviator who received a silver star during the Japanese attack at Clark Field on the 8th of December 41, and he survived the baton death march and died
Starting point is 00:02:53 afterwards. And also, I mean, my brother served in the Air Force. My niece just got back from a deployment as the chief of staff for the Air Force Base in the UAE. She just got back like a week ago. So, you know, you had some family background and did, you know, as far as becoming an officer, did you go through ROTC or how did that work for you? Yeah, I was really thinking I was going to go more like a radio broadcasting route. I think that was where my interest wasn't in high school. And then I realized it was kind of a suck job. So I think, well, if I'm going to go to college. I might as well go for four years and I might as well study history and then ROTC presented itself. So yeah, I started participating in ROTC as a freshman and then I ended up getting a three and a half year scholarship,
Starting point is 00:03:45 which because I got it at the end of that semester, that gave me the money to buy my 73 Volkswagen Beetle, which was my college car. So drove that all the way through school. You know, I'm a first-gen college student. So my dad basically said this is a waste of money. Why are you doing? this. When I moved into the doors, my parents later just said, hey, just go put your stuff up there and drive back the next day and then we'll drop you off. Like, there was no big moving day. Like, we didn't know how to do any of this. So, and I was, again, I was a band kid. To the ninth degree, I mean, Quincy Public Schools had bought a child-sized tuba, and I was the guinea pig for the child-sized tuba.
Starting point is 00:04:31 And so I started playing it in fourth grade, and I remember having to march in like, you know, three-mile parades with like a full-sized fiberglass sousaphone that's almost like dragging on the ground and stuff like that. Although I was a pretty good, pretty good tuba player in that I think I only set second chair one time in my life. Ended up being Allstate, actually, my senior year. And then I really walked away from it. I just decided, you know, there's not going to be any big resurgence in polka.
Starting point is 00:04:59 of music. And I think so far I've called that one right. I could have bought a tuba with my scholarship money, but I thought the car would do me a little more good. So again, I was a skinny kid. I was 160 pounds. And I really worked hard during my freshman year, my sophomore year to build up and get strong. I've got these ridiculously skinny arms. So like pushups are just, like the mechanics for push-ups for me are just not pretty. And so the second semester of my sophomore year in college, I got mono. And I went from like 160 to 130. And I lost everything. And I had to completely start over. So, you know, went through my junior year, became, went through RTC Advance Camp, Fort Riley. I would have been somewhere of 86.
Starting point is 00:05:56 and then I was a pretty mediocre cadet. Again, I just wasn't that physical. I mean, I was just a skinny kid that was, you know, just had mono like a year before. And, but I did the best I could. And, you know, I never, I never struggled with anything, but it was just always a bit of a, bit of a challenge for me. So they, they do like an internship for cadets.
Starting point is 00:06:19 And I got, it's called cadet troop leader training. So I got a CTLT assignment. and it was like the worst CTLT assignment in the world. I got assigned to the jail commander at Fort Gordon, Georgia. So I'm like, I show up and like day one, hey, we're feeding them. Hey, they're getting showers. Hey, they're doing this. And then like day two, hey, we're feeding them.
Starting point is 00:06:42 Hey, we're doing. So actually, we went and kind of farmed out and rode along with the MPs, busting up fights at the enlisted club. I stood gate one time, caught a drunk driver, you know, all these sort of fun things that I got to do. So when it came time to commission, again, you submit your dream sheet. And mine didn't come back the way I'd hoped. I mean, I ranked as a distinguished military graduate, but then I got put in the reserve
Starting point is 00:07:11 component. And I got the branch I wanted, and no one could seem to quite understand how that happened. And everyone's like, well, you're DMG and you got in the reserves. I'm like, yeah, I have no idea how that happened. So I didn't really have a plan B. So I had to move pretty quick and figure things out. So I had to, and when you're in the Army Reserve as an officer, there's no career manager for you. Like you are your own career manager.
Starting point is 00:07:35 There's no one you call and say, hey, what jobs are open? You have to figure it out yourself. So I figured out there were two MI detachments in St. Louis. One was the 485th in my detachment, which was an infantry brigade support unit. And the other one was the 283rd M.I. Det, which was a U.com. theater-level CI counterintelligence unit. And so to me, the 485th seemed like the place to go. So I went ahead and signed on there.
Starting point is 00:08:05 I was really kind of an extra officer until I went to my basic course, which was not until October. But so I show up from my first drill. I have no idea, never been to a drill in my life. And I'm just kind of sitting there, and it's a warm June day. And all these guys are taking off their blouses because it's warm and they all got guns. I'm like, do I get a gun? Like, I don't, is this normal?
Starting point is 00:08:26 They were all St. Louis City cops. So they were packing guns with them all the time because you never know. They might walk out of the reserve center and see somebody that they knew. But so we ended up doing our very first annual training that summer. And we were going to Gagetown Canadian Forces Base. Now, the 45th mission was U.S. Army Forces Republic of Iceland.
Starting point is 00:08:52 So there's the Icelandic Defense Force, and then there are the different service components. Nav Ice, which is active duty, AFICE, which is active duty. And then the reserve component had the Army headquarters, was a reserve unit out of a, oh gosh, an Air Force base out of Massachusetts. And the 187th SIB, Army Reserve, this was before the offside agreement and the Army Reserve lost all the combat units. They were out of Massachusetts. And so because I didn't have a job, didn't have really anything to do, I got put on an advance party. So we went up there and we had all kinds of problems. Sato screwed up our tickets.
Starting point is 00:09:34 Like our connecting flights were booked for the second day, ended up sleeping in the Bangor Main Airport with my RTC colleague. And then it came time for us to pick up our vehicles. So we had this blue Bonneville station wagon with like wood grain on the side. It's what they rented at the airport. to kind of run around until we got all of our equipment. So our equipment had been railroaded out of St. Louis and shipped up to, like, New Hampshire, and then put on flatbeds to haul up to Gagetown Canadian Forces Base,
Starting point is 00:10:01 which is New Brunswick. And so we go up to pick up our vehicles, and we quickly discover that we only have one of our vehicles. We only have our two-and-a-half-ton truck. And fortunately, that's got all of our tents and everything else in it. I mean, we only have, like, five vehicles to begin with. So our other vehicles were involved with the fatal traffic accident and the state police impounded them.
Starting point is 00:10:30 So like we didn't know when we're going to get our stuff. And so we decided to keep the Bonneville wagon for a while. And so we, you know, fortunately we had our tents. We got our tents and everything set up. And the brigade commanding general showed up. there's, you know, this kind of like Strack E5. He sees I've got a different patch. He goes, hey, where are you from?
Starting point is 00:10:50 I said, I'm 40, 5th in my eyes. He says, okay. So what's going on? How's it going? I'm like, well, not well. We don't have any of our vehicles because of this thing happen. And he said, oh, okay, well, thanks for letting me know. And so he told the general, the next thing you know, like the brigade S4 came looking
Starting point is 00:11:06 for us. He's like, hey, you guys don't, you got your vehicles are gone. Like, okay, we can loan you to M151 jeeps. We're like, hey, that's awesome. Thank you. And so we got the two M151 jeeps. And then so in the motor pool, you know, it was like Humvee, Humvee, Cuck v. Bonneville with wood grain. Humvee, Humvee, Humvee.
Starting point is 00:11:28 And they wanted the Jeeps back after like two days. So we started hiding the jeeps. So we found a place where we could park them where no one could see them. And so then the, you know, the S4 were coming back, hey, I need my jeeps back. and we're like, oh, you know, they were just here five minutes ago. Here, why don't you come back in about two hours and we think they'll be here? So we finally got our vehicles like well into the second week, but I remember we did a jump talk for the brigade.
Starting point is 00:12:00 And so it was an R-TEP exercise. So the aviation unit, Cairo Warriors, is flying overhead. I can see the Cavs Squadron screening us on the flanks and then one-13s. And I'm in the Bonneville in the middle of this convoy. So that was an interesting experience. So from there, I went to MIOBC Class 88-2. It's about a half-active, half-reserve start in October. And it was a really good experience.
Starting point is 00:12:35 I did pretty well there. And there was a guy in there, which I've never quite figured out who he was to this point. I think his name was, his last name was McKenzie, and I want to say Bob McKenzie, but that may be like a, that may be like a Great White North mix up in my brain. But Bob had a really curious intel background, and he had some stories about how he had been in Grenada, he had been in the evasion of Lebanon, in an Israeli uniform, and he had just come from infantry officer basic course and then he was going through my officer basic course i'm like who does that so we and he was going to brag so we're kind of curious so if anyone knows bob
Starting point is 00:13:20 let me know kind of who he was but um so he actually ended up getting hurt in ranger school which you went to right after then i think he got out processed but so then i had another opportunity to go for active duty they had what was called the commandants program and um so i i ran ranked six out of my 45 members of my class, but my buddy, good friend of mine, he ranked fourth out of 45. So I, he ended up getting it. And he was clearly the better man. But so then I'm like, okay, I got to go back and find a job. And that's what I did. This time of year, the pace doesn't slow down, but you still need to. The calendar's packed, the weather's changing, and your body's reminding you that it's time to rest and reset.
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Starting point is 00:15:33 please check out the link down in the description and support our sponsor. Is that how it works in the reserves? They're not just assigning you somewhere. Well, I mean, I was already, I was in the 485th. That was my unit, but I had to go find it like a civilian job. Oh, oh, on the outside, got you. Right. And it's hard when you're in the reserves, especially when you're young,
Starting point is 00:15:57 because you might get called up or whatever. And so I ended up working for a trucking company for a while. It's actually my mom's competing company. So I did that for like about a month and a half. And it was kind of a meh job. And so I had put in orders for the intelligence and terrorism counteraction course at Fort Huachuca two weeks of school. And I went to my boss on Friday.
Starting point is 00:16:24 And I'm like, hey, I've got these orders. I can get them canceled if need be. I kind of like to go. Came into work Monday and he fired me. So it, you know, it's, you know, It all actually kind of worked out and that the next day I actually got a much better job offer for where I worked for 12 years. So it turned out to be pretty well. So my job was I worked at Northeast Missouri State and I maintained 1,492 apartments and dorm rooms.
Starting point is 00:16:53 I had 26 staff and just basically kept all those kids warm, dry, and safe and did that for 12 years. And that was never a dull moment for sure. Yeah. So what was going on with your military service throughout that time frame? Well, I mean, I was formally assigned to the CI section as the CI section chief. And the 485th was a pretty cool unit in that. It was a very capable unit, even though, like, we had steel pots, we had Gamma Goats. We had just, you know, we had an M16, not even an A1 in 80s. in 88, I think it was. But the unit was really capable in that, like my CI section chief was me.
Starting point is 00:17:46 I had a warrant officer who was a school teacher, librarian, but he spent all summer going to Army schools and teaching in Army schools. So he, you know, he was an interrogator. He was a CIA agent. He had taught at the schoolhouse, all that kind of stuff. And then I had a deputy sheriff from Madison County, Illinois. So he was a full-time cop. And then I had a guy who was a St. Louis city cop, former prior service sergeant York
Starting point is 00:18:17 Khrumann, if that says anything. And then I had a guy who was a private investigator. So I had a pretty stacked little team of guys who did stuff on their outside work from the unit. The interrogator section had a bunch of St. Louis City cops, a postal inspector. our photo interpreter warrant worked at defense mapping the order of battle warrant worked at defense mapping I mean there's a lot of very good crossover inside of that unit despite the army not giving us a whole lot of anything and about what years was this that you were there um I commissioned 87 and it came back in 88 and then I was there until desert storm spun up.
Starting point is 00:19:08 So we did go to Northern Viking 89. We took the CI section up there and they took the R.I.'s headquarters, brigade headquarters and one battalion and then we were kind of an attachment. So we actually got to run around on our ground and we liaised with NIS and was able to give them a few leads on a few different things. But that was super cool if you've ever read Red Storm Rising. That's the scenario right there. That's what was going to go down in Iceland.
Starting point is 00:19:37 And we, like I remember, we were next to the flight line. And like an F-15 would go screaming off the runway. And you could follow it because the sky was so clear, you know, and it's going up to intercept a bear bomber in the sky. There were anti-submarine aircraft flying all the time, things like that. So it was pretty fascinating. It was also during summer solstice, so it really didn't get dark the whole time we were there. So when we came back, we're like eating dinner in Connecticut and we're like, it's dark.
Starting point is 00:20:09 You see that? It's dark outside. Yeah, it's dark. So that was an interesting experience. What kinds of things did you do there as a CI guy? We were just interviewing another person earlier who's telling us, he was a CI guy also. He's telling us about how he had to put the kibosh on the young soldiers going to the strip club in a foreign country. Yeah, it was a real challenge when we went to Iceland because the Icelanders are xenophobic, very xenophobic.
Starting point is 00:20:41 They don't like outsiders very well. They didn't like us. In fact, when we went out of town, me and my guys, we found these like Icelandic Canadian pins that we would wear so people would be nice to us. But the biggest problem we had off post, which our soldiers didn't go off. post a whole lot for that exercise. But these were intercity Boston kids, and that's like the Flav-A-Flave era. So I remember one guy walking around with the big clock and all this kind of stuff. And so that was a bit of a challenge.
Starting point is 00:21:14 And also we were just doing standard tactical CI, making sure that they had good operational security practices, make sure they weren't throwing op-orders and dumpsters and, you know, listening to radio nets and visiting sites for kids. camouflage and all those sorts of things. We actually, the year before, we were with the separate infantry brigade out of Oklahoma. And we decided that we were talking to the battalion commander. He's like, oh, yeah, you guys can collect on my boys. They're good.
Starting point is 00:21:44 I'm like, okay. And that sounds like fun. So we snuck some guys in and they used a lighter and burned off the insulation on their WD1 wires. And we tapped them. and ran a line off of that. Flew around and got aerial imagery of it. We had a interrogator female, so she put on a pair of shorts and a tank top and went for a ride on the Roach Coach and started asking questions to see what kind of information she could get.
Starting point is 00:22:14 So it was all over with we gave this guy like a, yeah, I actually sat and listened to the radio nets and did traffic analysis on it and stuff like that. So we presented, you know, okay, here's your battalion. This is what we know about them. So that was good. That was actually good training. Did they shit bricks when you give a brief on that? Yeah, they were a little humbled by everything we were able to get. And we really were not that capable either.
Starting point is 00:22:37 I mean, we were pretty old school. I think we stole a, we got the frequency off one of their vehicles. And that's how then we were able to then start building their radio net through traffic analysis. Like S3, he's the angry guy, you know, things like that. when he's on the radio. So, yeah, that was fun. So in the summer of 1990, we didn't have an annual training. Like, people were just going to schools.
Starting point is 00:23:02 So I actually got sent to kind of a crap job. I got to, I got sent to Fort Leonardwood to the special security office, although it turned out to be interesting because that was July of 1990, and I was producing the Black Books for the engineer school. And that was the entire buildup of Saddam on the Kuwait border. So I'm reading all of this Intel. before, of course, you know, it ended and I went home, but little did I know a few months later I would get roped into it.
Starting point is 00:23:34 Tell us about that spinning up for the Gulf War. How did that come about? Well, it's pretty clear the 485th wasn't going to get mobilized unless like the Russians were crossing the Mississippi River. So the 283rd did get called up and they went to they went to Germany and by the time they got spun up and trained. like the whole thing was over and they came back like a couple months later. So they actually pulled two officers out of the unit myself and another guy who worked at
Starting point is 00:24:04 McDonald-Douglas, which is now Boeing in St. Louis. And they sent us to U.S. Transcom, the J-2 of Transcom, which is at Scott Air Force Base, Joint Force headquarters, four-star headquarters. And at that point, Transcom was really only two years old as Goldwater Nichols had just happened. and the J2 was really just the military airlift command IN shop, and then they had like a little space with about a dozen people in it, a Navy guy, there was like an Army imagery guy and a few others. And I was either the second or third Army guy assigned to the J2 there at Transcom.
Starting point is 00:24:47 And so then I got thrown over to be the briefer on the Crisis Action Team. And so I was briefing the four-star general, like, within two days of me getting there. And I was like, I was not a good briefer. I had to figure it out quick. And it actually worked out okay. But so I did that for like 45 days. And then the other lieutenant swapped with me. He came over to the crisis action team.
Starting point is 00:25:10 And we were working four days on, two days off. And then we had flipped the nights. And then we do four days on and then two days off and then flip back to days. So every six days, we were flipping days and nights. They just have enough people to do days and night. So I was working in the crisis action team among all the operations folks, the logistics team, the air team, Navy team, all those guys that are making all of this high-level logistics working.
Starting point is 00:25:37 And so we would give them our J-2 update. So I got swapped out, and I actually went over to write a trucking study on the Saudi Arabian Peninsula. So that was my job for like 45 days. you got to write this trucking study on Saudi Arabia. I'm like, okay. So I'm researching, I'm trying to find everything. I asked for a couple days of like a permissive TDI.
Starting point is 00:26:00 Why I went back to my college library, spent two days. And all I found was a reference in Smithsonian magazine that said no self-respecting Bedouin truck driver would drive anything less than a Mercedes. I'm like, I went to my boss. I'm like, I am floundering on this. So another guy came in and he's like, why don't we call? call, why don't we call like a auto company. They called the Ford Motor Company. And like, you know, four days later, we had a print out like this thick of every vehicle that has ever
Starting point is 00:26:30 been sold to Saudi Arabia. So, um, so I've got a citation for that, but I also didn't do much on it. So, uh, the other guy decided he wanted to go back to Boeing or McDonald-Douglas. So I was left there. And then I got joined by an army guy who transferred in by the name of Brock ears. Now, Brock actually had grown up in that area. He was a captain as a lieutenant. And I was a brand new first lieutenant at that point. And he had just come out of the White House situation room. In fact, he was the Southcom briefer for just cause. So, and he had some really good stories about, you know, how all that went down. But so how he briefed on the Oval Office and that how he went and briefed Quail separately and things like that.
Starting point is 00:27:20 like that. So he was a really great mentor for me. And we were working together these kind of day and night shifts. So there were a few moments when we didn't actually know what to make of anything. So Brock's like, hey, let me call my buddies. You know, and he'd get on the stew three and call him and pop up White House. Hey, Bob, tell me what's going on, that kind of thing. So it was, it was really interesting to be there. But so the J2 desk was actually right next to the snack bar. And the J3, and the J3, General Cross, Wall Cross, was kind of a junk food junkie. And so he would always come over and looking for something to eat. And he would just strike up conversations.
Starting point is 00:28:01 And we had complete access to all the GOs there. There were no people we had to go through. We need to talk to anybody. We could just go talk to them. And I remember one day I was reading bodyguard of lies. And he's like, Lieutenant, I'm so proud of you for that. So it was pretty, pretty busy. I actually did make an attempt to try and deploy.
Starting point is 00:28:25 I went over to the helicopter unit, Army Reserve helicopter unit, which is part of our command. I said, hey, I mean, am I a guy? I'm trained up. I'm already working the problem. I like to go with you guys. And they're like, no. I think I probably worked it wrong.
Starting point is 00:28:39 But they were actually the unit, they were a super cool unit. They were, a lot of the guys worked. at Aviation Systems Command, which is at that point was in St. Louis, Missouri. And all the warrants were Vietnam guys. And they actually ended up being like the distinguished visitor, ELO unit for Centcom. So they flew Schwartzcoff to the peace talks with the Iraqis, things like that. So that was kind of a missed opportunity for me.
Starting point is 00:29:09 But so, yeah, there's a lot going on. And when Israel started to start, receiving scuds from Iraq, we got like a warning and execution order like that. Like we got to do this right now. We had to get patriots down to Israel. So my colleagues worked at that evening. I didn't really have much of a play in it other than making sure that the A-pods and S-pods were okay in Germany.
Starting point is 00:29:39 And then the next night they were set up in Israel and we watched them like knock missiles out of the sky and save lives. That was super cool. Yeah, I mean, I for a documentary project, I was watching some of the news footage from back then of the scuds coming into Israel and hitting residential areas. And I mean, it looks so terrifying. Yeah, I had a, I had kind of a funny experience with those. So we didn't have any connectivity where the crisis action team was actually in the old commissary, the post commissary. They built a new one. It was a big open building, so they just chopped it up into a bunch of offices.
Starting point is 00:30:22 And so the cat team was in there. And so to read Intel traffic, or pick up Intel traffic, they would print it. We put in a suitcase carried over to us about two block walk. And then we'd read it over there. And so I was in the watch center. And I heard the beep, beep, beep, beep. And the enlisted, it was like, we got a critic. We got a critic. Like, okay, we got a critic. Okay, let's see what happens. And beep, beep, beep, beep. Okay, we got a scud.
Starting point is 00:30:54 It's coming out of Iraq. It's going to Turkey. It's going into Turkey. I'm like, Turkey. Turkey's a NATO country. So if they shoot a missile at Turkey, that means that's an attack on a NATO country, which means NATO is probably going to join the Gulf War. I was like, oh, shit.
Starting point is 00:31:16 This is pretty big deal. And then, beep, beep, beep, beep. Another one comes in. We got the azimuth wrong. It's going to Israel. Like, geez, Louise. So, you know, the war kind of drew down. And so there's a little bit of an insurgency that popped up there.
Starting point is 00:31:36 And I ended up, I was briefing the general. And the general really kind of took a shining to me at Hansford T. Johnson. Air Force four-star guy. And like all the GEOs kind of took a shining to me because I was, you know, a younger version of them. And so there was one moment in a briefing where the four-star, at that point they were called Sinks, like I'm briefing something about Iraqi insurgency. And he's like, well, why don't they just fade into the woodwork in like Vietnam?
Starting point is 00:32:07 I'm like, well, sir, there. And I just shot right back. And I'm sure there is no woodwork in Iraq. And there was this like pregnant moment. I'm like, I am so screwed. like I'm about to get fired. And then he started laughing. And so from then on, I became Lieutenant Woodwork.
Starting point is 00:32:25 So as things spun down, we worked on like Northern Watch. I remember I had to hand draw a map for the four star to brief him. I literally hand drew a map and laid it on the table for him and kind of explained it to him. And he's like, LT, what's this? I go, sir, that's an infantry company, you know, things like that. That was a little crazy. One of the weirder things we did was as Desert Storm was, Desert Sorte was starting to pick up, which is the return. We got like a warning order that there had been some sort of humanitarian disaster in Iran.
Starting point is 00:33:04 And they wanted us to start looking at the possibilities of taking humanitarian supplies into Iran. We're like, oh, geez, that's a weird one. And so I got with the Middle East analyst and we started looking at road networks and train network and roads and all that kind of stuff. We got like a day into it. And then the Iran put out a message that they didn't want any AIDS-infected blankets from the U.S. So that pretty much shut that whole thing down immediately. So I kind of like smallpox blankets. I don't know.
Starting point is 00:33:38 Yeah. So really from there, I went back. So I got demoked, went back to the 45th for a couple months. And then they created the Joint Transportation Reserve Unit, which was the first reserve unit, stood up on a joint manning document. There were some different units that maybe drilled together, but we were actually under a unified command, joint document, everything else. But when they stood up the Army element in October of 91,
Starting point is 00:34:08 they made us a drilling IMA detachment, which basically just means you're not going to get paid. I figured that out. So I actually went eight or nine months without getting any of my drill pay, which was not cool. And I ended up having to work through my congressman like every single month so I could actually get my drill pay. It was so screwed up. So then when we went into Somalia, Restore Hope, I believe. Is that name of that exercise? I think so.
Starting point is 00:34:42 Yes. So I was down there for a week. weekend and then they're like okay we're going to call you up we're going to put you on 90 day orders and uh you know we you guys are going to run the situation shop or the the j2 for this particular exercise we're like okay that's that's good uh super cool in that there is the intel system where i you know you could chat with people i remember i was chatting with an amphib and hey i need some pictures of the dock can you get me pictures of the dock you know some guy and he's like ah sure sure LT, I'll get it right for you.
Starting point is 00:35:15 You know, two hours later, these JPEGs show up. I'm like, this is so cool. Like, this thing, this internet thing's pretty interesting. But when I actually reported, the day I report, I remember I was checking into the Scott Inn, and I saw the seals coming over the beach on CNN and the lobby of the, I'm like, okay, well, this is going to be different. And then that pay issue continued. I was going towards my second month of active duty and still had not been paid,
Starting point is 00:35:48 which was ridiculous. So I would work a night shift and Army Reserve Personnel Center is 9700 page in St. Louis. So I would come off a full night shift and I drove over there. I'm like, I'm not going to leave until this is resolved. I end up having to go back three times to get it resolved. resolved. And... That sounds typical.
Starting point is 00:36:14 Yeah, yeah. And like, well, in the first month wasn't so bad because I was still getting my civilian salary. But... And when I was in there, I just completely understood how the army can get screwed up. There would be like a pallet of 201 files sitting in the hallway. And like, one of them would fall off the top and get on the floor and people would start walking on it. Next thing you know, the whole file's all over the place. all over the place, all over the place.
Starting point is 00:36:42 And somebody kind of scoops it back up, but it's probably missing a few pages and stuff like that. So I demobed around March, I think. And that was well before Black Hawk Down happened. I did brief the weekend of Black Hawk down, but we had no idea what was going on over there. We just, you know, typical operations in Somalia at this point. We heard about it later, later on.
Starting point is 00:37:06 And when was it that you started coming up on company commander time? Yeah, I had a few more, a few more things. The company command came up in like 1995 or 1996. You know, I'd been at the J2 too long. I was feeling like I needed to get green. I was, I've been a lieutenant. I was now a captain. We did have one other kind of interesting thing.
Starting point is 00:37:38 happened and that was one weekend I walked in and on a Friday because you go on the Friday if you're going to brief and I walked into the conference and there's a VTC going on and it's the the briefing the air drop plan for the brigade of 82nd to go into Haiti yeah yeah and so the air at that point I think it might have been air mobility command versus Mac and so we got that whole plan And I got a phone call before I left. They said, hey, you know, we may send you down to Homestead to be an L&O down there. I'm like, okay, you know, I'll just, I'll pack some extra clothes and, you know, I'll show up and just tell me where to go. And then on Saturday, they're like, no, we think we got all this covered.
Starting point is 00:38:23 So we don't need you. So just go home. So I worked this plan for like two days. I'm like, go home and watch it on CNN. My roommate was like, hey, let's watch something else. I'm like, no, we're going to watch CNN tonight. Why? Because we're going to watch CNN tonight.
Starting point is 00:38:37 So, but yeah, I ended up going on to becoming a company commander. And again, there's, by that point, the MI debts had completely folded in St. Louis. They were gone. There were no MI slots there. So the only way I was going to get a company command was get like a zero one alpha branch of material. So there was the second of the 334th Infantry Regiment, which is an Army Reserve Basic Training Company. And, and they were. located in my hometown they had uh they had a debt up in my hometown uh of quincy and the main unit was
Starting point is 00:39:15 in granite city which is right across from st louis so i talked to the battalion commander he goes you know i need someone to be an s one and we got to merge three giants into one and then when you finish that i'll give you a company command i'm like okay that's good so did that um we didn't do like a two-week annual training we busted it all up into two weekends so generally we were working two weekends a month, which was getting kind of old by the end of it. But so, yeah, I took this basic training company command. D. Company 334th Infantry Regiment. So, and I had a little bit of street cred.
Starting point is 00:39:54 Like, I'm the MI geek coming out of nowhere. Like, who is this guy? But I was also from Quincy. So I got a little bit of street cred there. And so I did that for three years. we did multiple, you know, annual training cycles. We did two at Knox and we did one at Benning. The Benning one was kind of just kind of weird
Starting point is 00:40:20 because the basic combat training brigade was standing up at that point. And it had only been the ITB at that point. So they stood up this other brigade to do basic training. And some of the drill sergeants came from ITB, and a bunch of them were brand new. And they kind of dumped us on us on top. of them to help them out because I mean we had drill sergeants that had been on the trail for 20 years doing that so but they were just doing really just dumb stuff I'm just looking at this like what are you people doing so one of the things when we were at Fort Knox we were always we were always to be in the exact same uniform as the privates like the privates are wearing helmets we're wearing helmets we're in LBE there were an LBE and these these drill sergeants didn't want to do that. And so they were trying to figure out ways to carry water. And they're doing like gatorade
Starting point is 00:41:12 bottles and camelbacks and all this kind of stuff. And I'm like, dude, the army has a thing that has canteens on it that carries water if you just want to wear it. So that was also, gosh, so the unit that relieved me was out of Chicago. And we tried to do a good handover to them. And I remember the company commander came in. I'm like, where are your guys? They're supposed to right seat ride, left seat ride? And she's like, well, my NCOs had a meeting today and they decided they didn't want to come in this early. I was like, excuse me, your NCOs had a meeting and decided they didn't want to come in this morning.
Starting point is 00:41:56 Okay. So that was curious. But so then I finished out of, I finished my company command and then there was an opportunity to go back to Transcom and it was a major slot, which is good because I needed that. Again, you've got to manage your own career. So I actually went to the Advanced Air Lift Tactics Training Center, which is a super cool course that the Air Force runs out of Rosecrans Air Base in St. Joe, Missouri. So it's really to teach airlifters how to do defensive tactics besides just to curl up the ball and die.
Starting point is 00:42:35 So protect themselves from AAA, missiles, aircrafts. craft, things like that. So it was a two-week school. We went to Rosecrans for like four or five days. And then we flew to Wachuka. And, uh, which, you know, I'm familiar with Wachuka. And then we did the flying phase. And like they would literally teach them to fly over a mountain, drop a wing and fly down the other side, like in a C-130. Um, also we had a C-17 and we had a G-3 three there as well. And one of the guys, one of the pilots overbanked a C-130 doing this training. So they had to ground that. I did win the biggest puker award, although in my own defense, like they had to give it to the Army guy. They just had to. But in my own defense, I was the third person to puke on that
Starting point is 00:43:25 aircraft. The Hope Aircrew had been out drinking all night. And they were definitely not eight hours throttle the bottle. So they were hung over. So we're taking off and I look over and the nav is on oxygen. I'm like, this is not a good sign. And we take off and that was the where they were doing the terrain, train flying and falling down the other side of a mountain and all the kind of stuff. Yeah, and big trash haulers. And so the, so he started puking. The flight engineers start puking. and then I start puking. And then so apparently I was like the biggest puker, even though I was the third one to puke on the aircraft.
Starting point is 00:44:11 But we had a C-17. They brought in a third pilot to clear the wings to make sure they didn't hit anything with the wings of the aircraft. So that was pretty interesting to do all that. So from there I left my job at Truman, an MSU, which became Truman State. And Army ROTC was doing contractor jobs to teach RTC, and they were hiring Guard Reserve and active duty officers.
Starting point is 00:44:41 And at that point, they didn't want anyone to know our status. They didn't want anyone to know our contractor. So we were our BDUs, just like everyone else. So I had BDUs with the Cadet Command Patch, and I had stuff for my unit. I just kind of swapped the blouses depending upon where. I was at. And I had opportunities. I was a, you know, captain straight off company command, and I had an opportunity to go to Missou, Illinois State, and Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville. But I also had a class 3 MP40 Schmeiser, and I couldn't take that to Illinois, so that kind of
Starting point is 00:45:19 made my decision to go to Missouri. So I went to Missouri and started some history classes. I taught the freshmen. I was a platoon tack officer that summer. Greg Hammer, Panama Ranger was my Akincio, great guy. We had a blast. We had so much fun together. And when I was at Missouri, we had some interesting kids go through there. Some are just people in general. Andrew Bailey, who's now the deputy director of the FBI.
Starting point is 00:45:50 He was a cadet there at that time. Will Edens, who was a KIA in about 2004, he was there. And then Sar Major Kevin Griffith was my colleague. colleague, my, my, he was the senior NCO there for a couple of years. And he actually, he was one of the four that got killed in that suicide attack, that Flo Goberg, shoved the guy away and received the Medal of Honor. So, um, it was, uh, kind of wild to see those people pop up here and there. Yeah. Ooh, take a drink. Sure. So then 9-11 happens and I'm at I'm teaching Missou. I was doing PT. I was leading like incentive PT that morning. And I come back and like the first plane hits the tower. I'm calling it. You know, B-25 hit the Empire State Building World War II. The second plane hit the tower. I'm like, damn it. This is Al-Qaeda and I just lost next year. So by 10 o'clock, I had an email said, hey, we need people to come in at the at Transcom.
Starting point is 00:47:04 which was my reserve unit of assignment at that point. And so I actually went down there on the Friday after 9-11 and checked in and got on my J-Wix terminal. Watched Bush on the mound for my J-Wix terminal. And my shift changeover was a guy who was, you know, had been working on 9-11. He's like, okay, we have fighters on St. Alert at Lambert Field in St. Louis. So if you see any threats, let us know. We can, you know, send some fighters after him.
Starting point is 00:47:32 And I'm like, damn, I'm at like 100 miles from where I'm. I grew up. And this is insane. So went back to Mizzou and like they kept telling we're going to get called up. We're going to get called up. We're going to get called up. Finally, they called us up on the first of October. My boss was, the PMS was starting to be kind of a jerk about it. And so when I finally did get called out like two days in, he shoots me an email, hey, since you were mobilized, you can't come back to work here. And I had, I had just had an excellent performance evaluation. There were no issues up to that point. I'm like, really? So I printed it, sent it to a U.S. Department of Labor filed a case, one that got my job back. So in the beginning, we augmented the night team. And so we
Starting point is 00:48:20 would do this terrorism VTC in the middle of the night. And there were, so all the different agency CIA, DIA, Joint Terrorism Task Force. And there was a special ops task force. I think it was around the Rhino era when we were in Rhino. And so like joint task force, whatever 20 or whatever they were would pop on. And they were clearly in a tent. So we were sitting there one night and we're doing the roll call to make sure everyone's on. And task force, whatever it was, 20 pops in.
Starting point is 00:48:56 And there's gunfire. We're like, damn, what's going on there? Are they getting overrun or whatever? And it gets muted and we hear, sorry, we were watching a movie. So that was a little nutty. But another funny thing that kind of happened is we were getting ready to put all those C-17s into Rhino. I think they were moving in the 101st and maybe some Marines in there. And in the middle of the briefing, you know, the C-17 can land on a dirt strip, like it has that capability.
Starting point is 00:49:35 But the middle of the briefing, the J-3 is like, have we done any studies about the long-term effects of landing C-17s on dirt runways? The room went quiet. Everyone's just looking at each other. And he's like, well, I guess we're about to find out. So my job eventually became the Asimam. metric threat chief. So we produced the dice on my, the briefing team, uh, had a group of briefers that would then do the, the, the, the J2 and the J3 briefs in the morning. So, uh, they would come in at like midnight. I would come in at like three or four,
Starting point is 00:50:13 kind of read the intel, read their products. We'd brief it to the deputy or the current intelligence chief. And then we brief it in the J2 and then we go and we brief it in the J3 later in the morning. So, um, one of the weirder days is we walked in on a Monday and Anaconda had just happened. And like the J3 is like hair on fire. Like, okay, we're air refueling direct Apaches from Fort Campbell. And we're rounding up all this AC 130 ammo from all of the world, air refuel direct, getting it over there. I know the briefing that the J3 is like, two, how come you didn't tell us about this?
Starting point is 00:50:55 And we're like, that's because we're the two. Like, we don't know what the J3 is doing. We know what the two is going, is doing. So they actually had to assign an officer to keep track of that and keep them up to date of what the three was doing because we've really had no idea. We were just reading Intel traffic. So I did get to go to the, oh, I did get an information war briefing
Starting point is 00:51:18 that was super fascinating. I had a guy who kind of worked information war. So we had this arm come in and it was a contractor, contracting company, and they were running the information war campaign. for that war. And they gave us, you know, how they do things, how they do information bracketing, like they would put stories out there in advance to get picked up by the media and to drive their briefings.
Starting point is 00:51:48 And it really changed my view on everything. These were just a political company that was hired. And they were doing that. And they were on like a joint VTC every morning to get the messaging right. Just things that you don't really get to see a whole lot of. But I went to the Dynamics of International Terrorism course, which was at Joint Special Ops Hugh, which was pretty amazing course. Our speakers were General Dozier, who had gotten kidnapped by the Red Brigades. we had the real guy who was kidnapped by the FARC in Proof of Life.
Starting point is 00:52:34 We had the force protection guy from Cobar Towers. So it was a legit course. It was really, really good. So, yeah, I got released after a year. And in the middle of that, I got another issue with my job in that the contract went from one company, from NPRI to Comte. And I got an email from Comtech, and they're like, you've never worked for us, so you don't have any reemployment rights with us. So I went to my Department of Labor rep, and I'm like, dude, what's going on here? Like, I don't know what to make of this.
Starting point is 00:53:14 He goes, no problem, got it. It's a continuation of interest. So they ended up having to hire, like, a dozen people back that they tried to screw over. So then I went back to Mazoo, that reserve unit. And oh, yeah, another thing I did do is I did brief at the 1003 TipFit briefing or Iraqi Freedom. And that was in February of 2002. So I, you know, went into the vault, got right into the plan and then presented my briefing before the assembled crew. And the Tipfit meeting is like a big food fight for everyone wants to get their folks in early.
Starting point is 00:53:53 Like, do you take the loggies in early? Do you take the infantry in early? Do you do those kinds of things? like what's the right flow for all this where everything works the best. So that was pretty interesting. So I went back to Mizzou and then I was back at ROTC. Everything's going great. And then I get another email, hey, from my company, hey, we are overstaffed at your position and you're the junior employee.
Starting point is 00:54:19 So you have to go. I'm like, are you kidding me? I'm the original guy. Like I'm the first guy. Like none of this happened without me. getting called up a year ago or a year and a half ago. So again, I called Dennis McElroy, U.S. Department of Labor. He's like, what are these people thinking? So again, I got reinstated again. Third time I had to get my job back. Now, I felt awful, though, because the guy who had taken my position,
Starting point is 00:54:46 a buddy of mine named Terry Heisler, he, uh, Signal Corps guy. So he was losing his job, but I actually called Transcom and got him hooked up with a J6 because he was Signal Corps dude. and so he got orders to go to transcom J6 for like a year and it actually worked out for him because the daughter got really sick with cancer and needed that medical attention that would be paid for. So that actually worked out for him. He now owns a beer garden in Washington, Missouri. So John G's, if you ever go there. So really, I mean, from there, just continued to teach our art.
Starting point is 00:55:27 RTC. Summer of 07, I walked, I walked sticks lanes, and I was doing pretty well. I felt pretty good about all that. So I was at the Vance Camp up in Lewis walking, I don't know, five, seven miles a day with gear. I got back and I was at a World War II Division reunion to connect with some vets I knew, and I had this massive chest pain. I was like, oh shit, what is this? I went white. And then I recovered. I went and saw the doctor. they didn't know what it was. So then I went to a couple weeks later, I was at Kansas City for drill. And I had another one of those in a hotel room
Starting point is 00:56:07 was by myself, so I called 911, ended up in the hospital. And really that started like a year-long ordeal for me. My spleen was destroying my red blood cells. And my hemoglobin count was like 4.8, where it's supposed to be like 15 to 18. So it was really my spleen that was causing that. So I went through that for a period of time.
Starting point is 00:56:31 And then it was really kind of time for me to get out of Missou. Like, Missouri, I was just kind of done with it. And so I went ahead and got a job at Missouri Military Academy. Although the last year we were there, we got the MacArthur Award for Best ROTC Program, West in the Mississippi. And we had failed an inspection like four years before horribly. I mean, I thought my boss was going to jump over a table at our personnel person. But so I also changed reserve units. I got out of the JTRU.
Starting point is 00:57:08 I just felt like I'd done everything I could there. And again, it's your free agent. You got to go find another job. So I actually found the Command and General Staff College, which I had a background in education that seemed to be like a good fit. So they put me in as the S3 and then I could become a student after that. which was perfect because I wasn't have to do like two weekends. So my first job as the S3 was to give a PT test to 80 lieutenant colonels.
Starting point is 00:57:33 And that was a good time. And so I ended up finishing the course and became a instructor. And then I eventually became a lead instructor. And then I became ahead of school for that unit. on the civilian side, I went to Missouri Military Academy as a director of college placement counseling. So it was, again, another uniform job. I did testing, college placement, tossed history, military history. One of the kids that was there, some people may know, Ian Ives, he was a combat cameraman.
Starting point is 00:58:09 They got blown up in Afghanistan in 2019. So he was one of my kids there. And he's doing okay. I think he lost an eye and jacked up his arm pretty good. but um so i was there for six years it was pretty toxic um so then i ended up uh looking for another job and my final job in the army reserve was that i had to set up a schoolhouse at camp parks california which is where the myth busters blow everything up so it's right across the mountains from oakland california and so as a new side i had to go out there had to
Starting point is 00:58:48 figure out how everyone was going to get there, messing, classrooms, all that kind of stuff. And then when we did our first iteration out there, it was March of 2015. And I had four classrooms, maybe eight instructors. And at one point, I had like 12 inspectors there on the ground. And these were all people that got orders to come out to California in the winter. And then they would check in with us for like an hour or two hours and say, everything's going great. And we wouldn't see them for four days.
Starting point is 00:59:15 So, but yeah, I ended up retiring from there. And then I ended up at the Catholic school that I'm at right now because I was friends with the principal, and she wanted the placement program that I built at the military academy. I kind of turned around that program. And so I ended up getting hired in 2014 and jumped in there and basically started doing a lot of the same things I was doing at the military academy, except this time I got to work with girls.
Starting point is 00:59:47 So working with, you know, I'm working all with boys before, and now they're boys and girls. Although our kids are so sweet. They're great kids. So, yeah, I'm in my 12th year there. Fourth principal, went through COVID school. We stayed open where the public school's closed. So I do the master schedule, career center, which is like our Votech Center,
Starting point is 01:00:07 coordinate with that. I'm like the L&O for that. Moverly Area Community College, we're the largest earner of dual credits for Moverly Area Community College, although we are one of the smaller schools. Testing. Just drop a few names of some kids we've had through the school. This guy in Brooklyn, you might know it by the name of Michael Porter Jr. plays for the Mets. I don't know anything about baseball, I'm afraid.
Starting point is 01:00:32 I'm sorry, basketball. Mets. The only person from Brooklyn that people seem to be talking about this week, it's Jeffrey Epstein. Imagine that. Imagine that. Well, anyway, they're talking about trading him from Brooklyn. Brooklyn to Detroit. But so he was a kid at our school for a couple of years.
Starting point is 01:00:50 His brother, Jontay, a real good kid, but he got caught up in that whole gambling thing up with the Toronto Raptors. Oh, yeah. So, and he got banned for life from that. And then Cam Lee is a kid that just got picked up by the Baltimore Orioles. And then there's another kid who was just kind of floating around by the name of Sophie Cunningham, who you might know of her as a player on the Indiana Beaver. She's like the enforcer for Caitlin Clark.
Starting point is 01:01:19 So she didn't go to my school, but she was the same age and went through eighth grade with the kids in my school. And so she was always around. I actually knew her grandma. So those are kind of all my brushes with greatness. Yeah. Yeah. So it's been interesting. We've had a lot of kind of known people that I brushed up against here and there.
Starting point is 01:01:38 So it's been a good run. And how did our writing come into the picture? How did that start for you? Yeah, really it was, I got a B, A, M, and history. And that's what you do, you write. And so when it came time to write my master's thesis, I was discouraged to write anything military. Like, you can't get a job if you write something military.
Starting point is 01:02:04 So I was a little bit desperate for a topic. So I was watching the movie Convoy with, based upon the song, the C.W. McCall song, Chris Christofferson, I'm watching this movie. I'm like, this is an amazing expression of American culture. So I actually wrote my master's thesis as a cultural history of CB radios, which is actually my first book. In fact, I argue that it's really America's first social media platform.
Starting point is 01:02:34 So there's that. The second book was a, just a paper I turned into about a doctor who gets himself arrested down in Southern Boone County and gets himself released by the president. And then third book was a series of articles I sewed together about Army chaplains. Like what they, what were their qualifications? What equipment did they have? And what were some of the basic soldier religious items?
Starting point is 01:03:02 Mm-hmm. And then the third book, a fourth book, involves this guy right here. Homing Pigeon? Yeah, I wrote, I wrote, I wrote, the book War Pigeons, which is about the Signal Pigeon Corps and how the Signal Pigeon Corps operated and how a Signal Pigeon company operated in the Army and all the different equipment and things like that. So that was a lot of fun to write. And I get to speak about that one in Missouri. And then my fifth book was about a small town in Missouri that burned at 90 minutes in October 22nd,
Starting point is 01:03:41 in 2022. Combines spit a wall of flame at the town. Eight minutes later, the first home caught on fire. And 90 minutes later, half of this town of 28 people is gone. It was crazy. What led up to that just out of curiosity? Like, how did it burn so quickly? That's like kind of unheard of in this day and age, right? Well, it's certainly unheard of in the Midwest. Like California, you know, Stobankville. Sure, a huge wildfire. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, I wrote a book about, wildfires before wildfires were cool in Hawaii and California but um it was a it's a red flag warning uh average 20 mile per hour winds there was a defect in the in the combine and he was going basically east to west the winds were coming from the south and it just put out this wall of flame
Starting point is 01:04:28 quarter mile wall of flame and those winds just pushed it into the first homes and you know people people looked out their doors and there's a wall of flame coming at their house so it was a little crazy and uh the first responder. I have all the audio recordings for it. I have the 911 call and I have the, the, like the first responder. And so there's like a 22-year-old firefighter.
Starting point is 01:04:54 He lives in the fire station, volunteer fire department. He, you know, five-acre brush fire, Woldridge, Missouri, he rolls down there. He shows up in the whole town's catching on fire. And he's by himself. Wow. And you can hear it in his voice. He's like, he's stressed, but he's like, he immediately called for second tone and then third tones to get backups.
Starting point is 01:05:17 He started evacuating the town. He got on the speaker on his brush truck and told people to get out of there and called for backup. And he's really a, he's a little bit of a hero. Well, he did everything right. Let's just say that. Yeah, yeah. But the people in that town, only one family had insurance. Everyone else lost everything.
Starting point is 01:05:38 They didn't get anything from FEMA. It's just kind of a really, really sad story about what happened there. But it was the largest mutual aid fire response in the history of the state of Missouri. 163 firefighters from 66 departments showed up to that. So that was, and I only got into that story because we were, I'd heard about it. I was out of town when it happened, and I heard about it. We had some families that lived in that area from the school. and I just I called the the family contact I'm like you guys need help we've got like a day off
Starting point is 01:06:15 coming up here we can get some kids to come down and they're helping them like made some calls yeah sure we had 44 kids show up and parents and and we didn't have to tell them to do a damn thing like they they saw what they had to do and the only thing that was left was like door knobs and appliances and you know some kids were digging around and found some rings and a few other personal artifacts, but it was, it was, it was not good. And then they called us and wanted us to come back. And so we went back over Christmas and New Year's and a couple weeks later, I had this brilliant idea to write a book about it. And I thought, oh, 100 page book, you know, firefighters being helpful and safety and all that kind of stuff. And then I got it into it and it got pretty dark
Starting point is 01:06:59 at different points, but it came out on the anniversary of the fire. Wow. No, I mean, it's It's great that you were able to chronicle that piece of local history. Yeah, it's really a crazy story when you get into it. And the problem with writing that book is like 20 things are happening literally at the same time. So you have to kind of interweave and introduce characters and things like that. So my sixth book was on the U.S. and the military hand cart, which I know people are super excited about that. But so the U.S. military used hand carts from World War I really until Korea.
Starting point is 01:07:44 So the whole purpose of them were to carry heavy weapons. And so before half tracks existed, the plan for mechanized infantry was to use ton and a half trucks. And this is in the mid-1930s. So the ton and a half trucks would go up to a couple miles short, or maybe like a mile short, of the front lines as the tanks rolled forward and then these guys would dismount and they would take their weapons on these carts and so the army perfected that design but then by war war two starting they had half tracks they had jeeps they had things that they can mount weapons so they ended up um they ended up um uh giving them to airborne units and assault units that may not have
Starting point is 01:08:32 their equipment. So a lot of people refer to them as airborne carts, but they really predate airborne by like five years. So that was my sixth and now my seventh spy catchers, interrogators, and analysts, and that's why we're here today. Yeah, yeah. So tell us about this book, what this one's about. Well, most history about intelligence in World War II focuses on really two things, the OSS and glorious bastards, that kind of stuff, and in Bletchley Park. Like, the whole imitation game and things like that. And so I knew that there were a lot of other folks on the ground. So I went through to kind of document all of these other MOSs,
Starting point is 01:09:16 which are really the foundation for what we have in MI today. And I started off with doctrine and looked at it. And it's really not that different than what I learned in the 80s, late 80s, intelligence for the commander. They have a decision support template that's part of that. It's a little slightly different. They have essential elements of information, which is really like their PIRs at that point.
Starting point is 01:09:40 But so I documented that. And then I went through the pipelines of where these soldiers came from. Now, the U.S. didn't have really any serious capability before World War II. They had like 16 counterintelligence police. There were some sick gunners. And that was about it. So they went to the Brits and said, how do you guys do this? And they gave them a template.
Starting point is 01:10:02 and that's what they ended up using. So they stood up a schoolhouse at Camp Ritchie, Maryland, and the schoolhouse trained the photo interpreters and order of battle teams, and then they also trained the ETO-based linguists. And a lot of those were expat, German Jews. Again, they're called the Richie Boys because they had... Henry Kissinger is in the book. Yeah, Kissinger is a lot.
Starting point is 01:10:34 little bit different. Kissinger was actually never a school-trained MI guy, and the guy that he wrote on the coattails with was also not a school-trained guy. In fact, Fritz Kramer, the other guy, was trying to get into the OSS, and they didn't take him. So he got drafted as an infantryman, and he was up on a platform yelling during a training exercise, I mean, he's like an infantry private, yelling at them in German to try and make the training seem better. And the division commander's there, he's like, Who's that guy? Who's that guy there? So they actually moved him into the G2 shop, and he became friends with Kissinger.
Starting point is 01:11:10 Now, Kissinger was a high-a-Q guy. He was going to Brooklyn College, maybe, or somewhere like City College of New York, to become an accountant. And he gets drafted, and he's a high-a-Q guy, so he gets put in this Army-specialized training program, which took high-a-Q guys, and they sent him to college to try and have them get degrees and operate. the more high-tech equipment in 1945, 1946, 1947 as the war goes on. So, you know, Kissinger goes to a college in Pennsylvania and, you know, doing well.
Starting point is 01:11:44 And the Army in the spring of 1944 discovers they have a personnel shortage. They have an infantryman shortage. And where can we get more infantrymen? There's 300,000 college boys. So they knocked the ASTP from 300,000 to 30,000 and sent all those guys on orders to the infantry divisions. So Kissinger shows up to G Company of the 335th infantry,
Starting point is 01:12:12 just a normal infantry company. And he immediately gets poison ivy and it's in the hospital for 45 days. And then they did some sort of a psychological test with him and they found that he wasn't really suited to be an infantryman. So they made him like a driver. And then eventually his connections with Kramer, who talks to the division commander, gets him assigned to the counterintelligence
Starting point is 01:12:33 Corps. And he ends up working in the counterintelligence Corps. And Kramer gets a German garrison to surrender of like 50 guys by himself in like November, December of 44. He literally just walks into this town and talks to him and gets him to surrender. So he gets a field promotion. And then Kissinger's given this assignment to stand up like civil affairs operations in this one German village. and he gets everything going in a period of like two weeks, and he gets promoted to sergeant.
Starting point is 01:13:06 They tried to get him constructive credit to be a CIC agent, and the Army said no. And he did actually get his, he actually did become a certified agent, but that was not until like 1947. So Kramer and Kisinger actually became long-term friends, and the book actually has a picture of Kramer and Kissinger sitting in the Oval Office.
Starting point is 01:13:30 Yeah, yeah. It's pretty cool. And so what has the reception been like to the book so far? It's been pretty good. It's pretty good. I was just a show of shows in Louisville. And it was, you know, people are like, oh, this is really interesting. Sold quite a few copies of it. And just starting to get the promotion for it out there. That's why we're talking today. Sure. but but um it's uh it's just a completely different angle um and really a lot of this information
Starting point is 01:14:05 is already out there you know like the nisi uh interpreters interrogators that whole that whole school that they they set up in minnesota the sigan operations at vent health farms um the cic got itself into a little bit of trouble early on they they tried to make them into to, um, they tried to make them into like G-Men. Uh, so their schoolhouse was in Chicago at the Tower Town Club on Michigan Avenue. So they would go out and they'd do their practice surveillance exercises and stuff on Michigan Avenue. And they would, um, they would go to underwriters laboratory to get some like scientific
Starting point is 01:14:48 training in the Chicago police lab. In 1943, they got themselves in a little bit of hot water. So they were, they were following a guy. who was involved with the youth labor movement, who they thought was a communist. I feel pretty sure he was a communist, in fact. And he was friends with Eleanor Roosevelt. In fact, Eleanor Roosevelt introduced him to his future spouse.
Starting point is 01:15:14 And so the CIC recorded a meeting between him and Eleanor Roosevelt, and then later on, they recorded an encounter between him and his future wife in the same hotel room. That's one version of the story. The other story is a little bit different. Just some of the details are a little different if you read the guy who is in Ball's account. But word gets back to the White House that the CIC may have intercepted an encounter with the First Lady. And that did not play well.
Starting point is 01:15:52 So they ended up shit rolled downhill to, the CIC, and they got banned from Washington. The schoolhouse got shut down for like a year. Eventually, it was reestablished at Richie. They focused on tactical counterintelligence, but it was kind of a not a good situation for them to be in. Yeah, no, I can imagine. Well, I think it's great that you captured this unit history,
Starting point is 01:16:21 and this is the type of book that, you know, people in your career field are going to want to read. And as you said, I mean, a lot of it is already out there. A lot of this stuff is declassified it, but it's incumbent on folks like you to kind of bring it all together. Yeah, I've got one story I want to talk about, though, from my school, if you won't indulge me. Sure. So a few years ago we had, and I have permission from the parent to do this, but we had an international kid that had come to our school, very, very talented kid. from a country that had just been invaded, you can figure out which one it is.
Starting point is 01:17:01 And, you know, a 6'10 target's not a good thing. A junior Olympic level player. And he showed up on our doorstep. And so we gave him 920. He was there for about five days and we lost him. He disappeared. We didn't know where he went. We're trying to find him.
Starting point is 01:17:17 He was with this like post-high school basketball team thing that turned out to be a little sketchy. So, but we couldn't find this kid and we called the cops. We did everything we could do and we were getting into a situation where we were in the I-20 fraud. And so I saw him on Valentine's Day in the grocery store, but I lost track of him. And then like about a week later, my phone rang and it was a sports agent from somewhere in Virginia. And he calls me and he's the guy that put the kid into this particular school. And so it turns out what had happened is the sports program had the prior year, there's going to be a connection here.
Starting point is 01:17:59 Just let me get to it. The, this particular sports program, the year before had lived in some student housing and not paid the entire year. And they got, they got fined $74,000. So this was the second year. So he actually, the guy who ran it, ran it a dorm from a local university. And then he didn't pay them. either. So they kicked them out because there was vandalism and drug use and things like that. So, and then they bounced from hotel to hotel to hotel with, as soon as, you know, like a week,
Starting point is 01:18:37 no payment they would move. Another week, no payment they would move. And this is like 20 people. This is not a small group. And so this, this coach calls me, says, you know, this kid, I put him here, I feel bad. He's in a bad situation. We got to go get him. Like, like, we got to do something here. This is not a good situation. That particular team had ended. So this kid was living in an apartment with a mattress and nothing else. The dudes he was living with were like charging him to go to the grocery store. It was not a cool situation. So we're like, okay, well, have him get to school.
Starting point is 01:19:14 So he gets to school. And we figure out what's going on all these different threads about, you know, what's really going on with this situation. We called a city of refuge. He found like an older couple who were willing to take him. We're like, oh, thank God. And so they called her doctor to get advice. And the doctor was a school mom from high school.
Starting point is 01:19:36 And she's like, well, we'll take him. So, okay, we got a good place for this guy, but we got to go get this kid. And so the city of refuge guy thought that this might be a little bit shady. Like this may, this may break bad for us. So, you know, rather than a pickup, it could become an distraction. So he called a lady named Nanette, who's with the Stop Human Trafficking Coalition, and she agreed. And she gave us a security guy. So we met at the fire station, and this security dude rolls up.
Starting point is 01:20:08 And this dude is frickin' John Wick. He's driving a five-series BMW. It looks like he just stepped out of a structure store. And we kind of developed a plan, and then we went, knocked on the door. It turned out to be a non-event, and the John Wick dude disappeared. So I finally figured out who John Wick was. That was a guy by the name of Ryan Burke. Does that ring a bell?
Starting point is 01:20:34 No. Andrew Milbourne would know who he is. He's the guy that sued Andrew Wilmilborn. Oh. For defamation. I'm sure that one. So he just got shot and killed, actually, that guy. Really?
Starting point is 01:20:51 Yeah. Yeah. And that's kind of where I was going. with this. Yeah, he got about two weeks ago Saturday night, our Sunday night before Martin Luther King Day, he was doing a Facebook marketplace deal. And these four kids showed up, the oldest being 18. One was a juvenile. The deal went bad, and they shot and killed him. I think I saw this. Yeah, it was in the press. I didn't know it was the guy that tried to sue Milburn. Wow. Holy shit. Yeah, it's the same guy. And actually I found out later on that he almost
Starting point is 01:21:29 became my co-worker and that he was he was in the running for like a campus ministry job to work with me. And the lady that we ended up hiring ended up actually becoming really good friends with him. And actually he was so distraught she couldn't come into work the day after this happened. But so I would suggest everyone look at his Facebook profile and just see who he is and what he is. The allegations that came out from Andrew, I think Andrew was coming from an honorable place. I think that he, you know, again, he won the lawsuit, the defamation suit, although that may not necessarily, that may just speak to his motivations and sourcing, but not necessarily what occurred. In the end, only two people in the world know what happened in that situation. And I know people who grew up with him here in Columbia.
Starting point is 01:22:28 I knew people who knew him when he was at Missouri. I was at Missouri at the same time. This was the dude that showed up from the Human Trafficking Coalition to go get that kid on a Sunday morning that he didn't know. And I don't know what happened in Ukraine, but I can say, what I will say is it's completely out of character with who he is, absolutely out of character with who he is. And I'm actually very nice.
Starting point is 01:22:58 There are many of my friends who are like, this is absolute bullshit. But again, I'm not accusing Andrew of anything. I think he was probably coming. He's an officer and a gentleman. I'm assuming he's coming from a good place. But, you know, stuff can happen with alcohol. I get that. But in the end, this is completely out of character with the rest of the
Starting point is 01:23:17 man's life and I'm just trying to set the record straight because I met him I looked him in the eye and he helped me yeah I mean people are multifaceted they're not all good or all bad as we often want to believe sorry to drop that on you at the end but you know I say the people that I knew that knew him were just amazing 20 of the best people I've ever met my life and you know people are still upset about it. I believe, of course. So I don't know what happened in Ukraine, but I can tell you everyone in his hometown
Starting point is 01:23:58 and in the town where he died thinks it's not true. I mean, whatever the case is kind of irrelevant, isn't it? I mean, the guy got murdered by, you know, trying to sell something on Facebook marketplace. I mean, I think that's sort of the bigger issue here. Yeah, I think so. But this is like the day after this happened, a local media company put out a story saying that he may have been murdered because of what happened in Ukraine. And I'm like, oh, I don't.
Starting point is 01:24:30 Yeah, I don't think so. Yeah, I don't. I, no, I don't think so. I think this guy was just trying to grab a headline and things like that. But it really kind of brought it back to the forefront and really, really sullied this guy's reputation. So I would encourage anyone to just go look at his Facebook profile and see who he was. it's very curated, it's very millennial. But like there's, like one of the last videos he posted
Starting point is 01:24:52 was him playing his guitar for a bunch of school children in Uganda. And that was a couple weeks ago. Damn, that's terrible. Yeah. So, Tim, anything else you want to talk about before we get going tonight? I think that's basically it. I, you know, I appreciate the time coming on here. if you're interested in the book, go to lulu.com and search for my name, Tim Shear, S-E-H-E-R-R-E-R-E-R-E-R-E-R, and should come up with my page.
Starting point is 01:25:29 It's not on Amazon yet, and might not for a while, but I think it's a solid book. I had a lot of fun writing it, and I think people are going to enjoy it. Oh, that's great. And your other books can be found there, too? Yeah, everything's on there. Actually, there's a cat calendar on there, too, although I made that for my mom. And in fact, my mom loved your book. Oh, really?
Starting point is 01:25:55 My mom loved your book. Oh, great. I'm happy to hear that. Yeah. Yeah, I gave it to her for Christmas last year, and it was a big hit in the 85-year-old and birting home demo. That's great.
Starting point is 01:26:08 It's right in their wheelhouse. Everyone, thanks for joining us tonight. Really appreciate Tim Shear. in us on the show. The book is spy catchers, interrogators, and analysts. I hope you guys will go check it out at Lulu.com. And we will see all of you next time. I want to tell all of you today about a new newsletter that we're launching that encompasses both the Team House podcast, the Eyes on podcast, and the high side news outlet, which I run with Sean Naylor. The newsletter is going to be once a week. It's going to come into your inbox and you're going to get the most current
Starting point is 01:26:48 podcasts on Aizon and the Team House and whatever's topical or current on the high side. So it's another way for us to get the information out to you as social media algorithms are pretty iffy and you never really know what you're going to get. So this is a once a week email. It'll slide into your inbox and it will have the greatest hits of that week. It's really good. I'm checking it out. The website for it is teamhousepodcast.kitt.com slash join. Teamhousepodcast.com slash join. You go there and you enter into your email list or you enter your email into the little thing on the website and you're good to go and that'll be it.
Starting point is 01:27:31 So we really appreciate your support and hope you'll consider signing up. Where's the link? The link will also be down in the description if you're looking for it there. And that's teamhousepodcast. Dot, K-I-T-K-L-I-N-Yatango.com backslash join.

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