Aliases
Disambiguation
Cartha Dekle DeLoach (1920–2013) is the primary DeLoach in FBI records. The name is relatively unique; no major disambiguation required.
Stats
Person
Enrichment
- Deke DeLoachWikipedia▎ high· 2026-05-14
- Born July 20, 1920, Claxton, Georgia
- Died March 13, 2013, age 92, Hilton Head Island, SC
- FBI liaison to CIA from 1948
- Associate Deputy Director 1963–1970
- Third-ranking FBI official
- White House liaison under LBJ
- Cartha (Deke) DeloachSpartacus Educational▎ high· 2026-05-14
- Joined FBI 1942 as clerk
- FBI liaison to CIA 1948 onward
- Promoted deputy FBI director 1965
- Resigned 1970
- White House liaison during Johnson presidency
- Oversaw MLK assassination investigation
Mr. DeLoach
Description (EN)
Stub generated by entity dedup. Will be enriched in Phase 6.
Descrição (PT-BR)
Stub gerado pela deduplicação de entidades. Será enriquecido na Fase 6.
<!-- enrichment:start -->Enrichment (EN)
Disambiguation: Cartha Dekle DeLoach (1920–2013) is the primary DeLoach in FBI records. The name is relatively unique; no major disambiguation required.
Cartha Dekle 'Deke' DeLoach (July 20, 1920 – March 13, 2013) was a career FBI official who rose to Associate Deputy Director, the third-ranking position in the Bureau during the 1960s. He joined the FBI in 1942 as a clerk and became a special agent in 1942. From 1948 onward, DeLoach served as FBI liaison to the CIA, and from 1963 to 1970, he held the position of Associate Deputy Director and White House liaison to President Lyndon B. Johnson following the Kennedy assassination. He oversaw the FBI's investigation into the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and played a central role in FBI operations under Director J. Edgar Hoover. After retiring from the FBI in 1970, he worked in private industry, including Pepsi, and published a memoir in 1995 titled 'Hoover's FBI: The Inside Story by Hoover's Trusted Lieutenant.' DeLoach's involvement in intelligence liaison roles and CIA coordination places him within the institutional knowledge base of government agencies that handled UAP-related matters during his tenure, though no direct UAP investigation record is publicly documented.
Enriquecimento (PT-BR)
Desambiguação: Cartha Dekle DeLoach (1920–2013) is the primary DeLoach in FBI records. The name is relatively unique; no major disambiguation required.
Cartha Dekle 'Deke' DeLoach (20 de julho de 1920 – 13 de março de 2013) foi um funcionário de carreira do FBI que ascendeu a Deputy Associate Director (terceira posição no ranking do Bureau durante os anos 1960). Ingressou no FBI em 1942 como funcionário administrativo e tornou-se agente especial poucos meses depois. A partir de 1948, DeLoach serviu como liaison do FBI junto à CIA, e de 1963 a 1970 ocupou a posição de Associate Deputy Director e liaison da Casa Branca junto ao Presidente Lyndon B. Johnson após o assassinato de Kennedy. Supervisionou a investigação do FBI sobre o assassinato do Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. e desempenhou papel central nas operações do Bureau sob a direção de J. Edgar Hoover. Após sua aposentadoria do FBI em 1970, trabalhou na iniciativa privada, incluindo a Pepsi, e publicou uma memória em 1995 intitulada 'Hoover's FBI: The Inside Story by Hoover's Trusted Lieutenant'. O envolvimento de DeLoach em funções de liaison de inteligência e coordenação com a CIA o posiciona dentro da base de conhecimento institucional de agências governamentais que lidaram com questões relacionadas a UAP durante seu mandato, embora nenhum registro de investigação direta de UAP esteja publicamente documentado.
External Sources
- Deke DeLoach · Wikipedia · reliability:
high— Born July 20, 1920, Claxton, Georgia; Died March 13, 2013, age 92, Hilton Head Island, SC; FBI liaison to CIA from 1948; Associate Deputy Director 1963–1970; Third-ranking FBI official; White House liaison under LBJ; Worked for Pepsi after FBI; Educated at Stetson University - Cartha (Deke) Deloach · Spartacus Educational · reliability:
high— Joined FBI 1942 as clerk; FBI liaison to CIA 1948 onward; Promoted deputy FBI director 1965; Resigned 1970; White House liaison during Johnson presidency; Oversaw MLK assassination investigation; Published memoir 1995