Aliases
Disambiguation
John Philip Mohr (1910–1997) was a high-ranking FBI administrator, not to be confused with other government officials named Mohr during the mid-20th century.
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Person
Enrichment
- John P. Mohr — WikipediaWikipedia▎ high· 2026-05-14
- Born April 20, 1910; died January 25, 1997
- Assistant to the Director for Administrative Affairs
- FBI's No. 3–4 official, retired June 30, 1972 after 33 years
- Oversaw FBI procurement, budget, personnel, and files
- Handled sensitive materials after Hoover's death
- Subject of 1978 AG Griffin Bell investigation
- JOHN MOHR, KEY FBI OFFICIAL, DIES AT 86 — The Washington PostThe Washington Post▎ high· 2026-05-14
- Worked for FBI for 33 years before retirement in 1972
- Died of renal failure at Arlington Hospital
- One of Hoover's most powerful lieutenants
- Allegations about Lee Harvey Oswald note handling
Mr. Mohr
Description (EN)
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Descrição (PT-BR)
Stub gerado pela deduplicação de entidades. Será enriquecido na Fase 6.
<!-- enrichment:start -->Enrichment (EN)
John Philip Mohr (1910–1997) was the Assistant to the Director for Administrative Affairs at the Federal Bureau of Investigation, retiring in 1972 as the FBI's No. 3 or No. 4 official after 33 years of service. He wielded enormous power over the bureau's budget, procurement, personnel assignments, and its millions of files while serving as one of J. Edgar Hoover's most trusted lieutenants. Following Hoover's death in May 1972, Mohr played a key role in securing and handling the director's sensitive personal files. Mohr's tenure was marked by administrative authority and close association with Hoover's era, though a 1978 investigation by Attorney General Griffin Bell examined his use of FBI resources and found he had directed FBI employees to perform repairs on his personal property and accepted gifts from vendors, though prosecution was barred by statute of limitations.
Enriquecimento (PT-BR)
John Philip Mohr (1910–1997) foi o Assistente do Diretor para Assuntos Administrativos do Federal Bureau of Investigation, aposentando-se em 1972 como o terceiro ou quarto oficial do FBI após 33 anos de serviço. Exercia autoridade imensa sobre o orçamento da instituição, compras, atribuições de pessoal e seus milhões de arquivos, servindo como um dos principais confidentes de J. Edgar Hoover. Após a morte de Hoover em maio de 1972, Mohr desempenhou papel importante na segurança e tratamento dos arquivos pessoais sensíveis do diretor. Sua carreira foi marcada pela autoridade administrativa e estreita associação com a era Hoover, embora uma investigação de 1978 do Procurador-Geral Griffin Bell tenha examinado seu uso de recursos do FBI e descoberto que havia direcionado funcionários para realizar reparos em sua propriedade pessoal e aceitado presentes de vendedores, embora a ação criminal fosse impedida pela prescrição.
External Sources
- John P. Mohr — Wikipedia · Wikipedia · reliability:
high— Born April 20, 1910; died January 25, 1997; Assistant to the Director for Administrative Affairs; FBI's No. 3–4 official, retired June 30, 1972 after 33 years; Oversaw FBI procurement, budget, personnel, and files; Handled sensitive materials after Hoover's death; Subject of 1978 AG Griffin Bell investigation - JOHN MOHR, KEY FBI OFFICIAL, DIES AT 86 — The Washington Post · The Washington Post · reliability:
high— Worked for FBI for 33 years before retirement in 1972; Died of renal failure at Arlington Hospital; One of Hoover's most powerful lieutenants; Allegations about Lee Harvey Oswald note handling