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First Women FBI Agents

First Women FBI Agents

Joanne Pierce Misko was one of the first two women special agents in 1972. This interview was conducted on June 22, 2012.

pierce500_videoJoanne Pierce Misko, Special Agent, 1972-1994
Interviewed June 22, 2012

Joanne Pierce Misko grew up in Niagara Falls, New York, the daughter and sister of police officers. Out of college, Pierce entered the convent of the Sisters of Mercy in Buffalo, New York, where she taught middle and high school students for 10 years.

“I met an FBI agent who came to our school doing recruiting, and I talked to him, and that’s how I eventually got involved in applying to the Bureau,” said Misko, 71, during an interview at her home in Arizona where she lives with her husband, Michael Misko, himself a former FBI agent. “I was looking for something to do after leaving the convent and this was an opportunity that presented itself.”

Misko joined the FBI as a researcher at the Training Academy in 1970, but when Acting FBI Director L. Patrick Gray opened the special agent position to females in 1972, Misko’s supervisor asked if she had any interest in applying. “Absolutely I would be interested,” Misko said. The head of the Training Division met with Misko to explain what it would be like and asked her if she was absolutely sure about it.

“He wanted me to do it,” said Misko, who was 31 at the time. “But he wanted me to know all the pluses and minuses of doing this. I said, ‘Okay. I still want to do it.’”

academy_agents500bIn the FBI Academy, the hardest part was the physical training—the timed two-mile run and the pull-ups. Learning to shoot a .38 revolver took some time. The academics came easiest for Misko because that had always been her strong suit. She trained frequently with her roommate, a 25-year-old Marine named Susan Roley Malone, and they leaned on each other to get through the 14 weeks.

“Just two of us were in the same boat, so to speak,” she said. “So you’re there for each other.”

On orders night, when newly minted special agents find out where they will be heading for their first assignment, Misko had hoped for Miami. She drew St. Louis instead. But who was she to complain? “It was an assignment and I was going to be a special agent,” the enthusiastic rookie remembered. “It’s a new adventure, right?”

Misko said her boss in the St. Louis Division accepted her immediately and assigned her to a white-collar crime squad, where she spent 10 months, then to a squad that tracked down wanted fugitives and military deserters. She fondly remembers one case where a scofflaw she collared was insulted that the FBI had the temerity to send a woman after him.

“In St. Louis, they just let me be an agent and do my work like everybody else,” Misko said. “That’s the way you prove yourself—by doing the job you were sent to do.”

In early 1973, Misko was deployed to Wounded Knee, South Dakota, working 12-hour days for seven weeks during the American Indian Movement siege. At one point she found herself in an armored personnel carrier, taking hostile fire and feeding rounds into her fellow agents’ M16 rifles.

“At the time it’s going on you don’t think about it,” she said. “But afterwards, when you go back, you think, ‘My God, what could have happened?’”

Misko was later sent to the Pittsburgh Division, where she met her husband. She went on to become one of the first female supervisors at FBI Headquarters, where she ran the unit in charge of new agent applications.

Misko was an agent for 22 years before retiring in 1994. She then became an audit investigator for a major bank, relying heavily on her extensive experience working white-collar crimes. Though it’s been 18 years since she wore an FBI shield, she remains close to many of her fellow agents to this day.

“The hardest thing about leaving the Bureau is leaving the people,” she said. “The FBI is a family and you get very, very close and you feel part of an organization and part of that group. It was a privilege, really, and it was a wonderful career.”

Susan Roley Malone was one of the first two women special agents in 1972. This interview was conducted on June 21, 2012.

malone300_videoSusan Roley Malone, Special Agent, 1972-1979
Interviewed June 21, 2012

When I was in the eighth grade, my civics class instructor gave us a year project that lasted most of the year to examine and look at one of the federal agencies. We were to pick a federal agency, do the research on the agency, meet some of the people in the agency, and talk about career opportunities. How could one become a career—have a career in federal government in that particular agency.

The agency that I chose, of course, was the FBI. I lived in the suburbs of Washington, D.C., and again, I said I had a number of family friends and had a great desire, read a number of books, I remember, of course, seeing that very famous movie, I think 1959, “The FBI Story” with Jimmy Stewart, and had a desire to serve my country and, of course, wanted to be an FBI agent, but at that time, of course, the agent position was closed to women.

In May of 1972, Mr. J. Edgar Hoover died, and my admiral gave me the opportunity to be a representative, one of many, to go to Mr. Hoover’s funeral in Washington, D.C. And then shortly thereafter, L. Patrick Gray was named as the acting director of the FBI and they opened up the position of special agent to women. And I was encouraged by my friends and my own desires. I applied. I was interviewed and I came through the Norfolk Field Office and was selected as one of the first two women entered into duty on July 17, 1972.

We were sworn in at the FBI Headquarters in Washington and then taken down to Quantico to the Academy, and Joanne Pierce, who was my fellow female agent, we got to know each other, we roomed together, we supported each other, we were complementary, and knew that we were the first two and, you know, we’re allies. We worked together, we would, you know, practice the run at night, we would, you know, go to the gym and work out. We were just colleagues, we would—there’s that bond there when you’re someone’s roommate and you’re going through the same training it’s whether there’s a bond that’s formed. That’s a lifelong bond.

Having the first two women FBI agents was publicized in all the newspapers in America and I laughingly now say I’m a footnote in history. A footnote in history about being one of the first two agents, female FBI agents.

Of course, everybody wanted to see who we were. Sometimes I felt like I was an exhibit in a museum because everybody would say, “Which one are you? Are you the Marine or the nun?” My colleague Joanne Pierce had been a former nun and then was a teacher and a Bureau clerk with the FBI when she was appointed with me. So she came with a very well-developed background as well also. And so it was, you felt like you were under a microscope at times. Everybody was, they were very, um, watching you intently; the staff, they treated us with respect, they wanted us to succeed.

Some of the agents that were already in the FBI Academy for training would come and one of the agents sat down and came during the day and sat down next to me at lunch and was a little bit hostile and, “Why are you here?”

He wanted to find out, ‘Why are you here, who are you, why do you want to be here, what makes you want to be an FBI, what makes you think you can be an FBI agent?’ And I sat down and talked with him and I said, ‘You know, I love my country just like you, I want to serve in federal law enforcement, I know the Bureau, have always cherished the good work that the Bureau does. And I want to be here for the same reasons you want to be here.’

And he looked at me and I remember he sort of leaned back and he said, ‘Oh, okay.’ And once I talked to him and said I have the same goals and desires to serve my nation, to work in federal law enforcement, and for the same reason that he was there, then he was very accepting and he realized that, yes, that we had the same desires.

You know, let me say it’s like any organization. When you’re the first and you’re a pioneer, you know, you’re going to get push back from some people. But I got a lot people that helped, a lot of people that held out their hands, and were colleagues and allies to help. Those people that didn’t help or were maybe nasty to me, they have to walk in their own skin and you know they probably didn’t feel good about themselves, I can’t say. But it’s any organization, when you’re on the leading edge and you’re one of the, you’re standing out because you are new or it’s something different, there’s people that can’t accept change.

There was, if I recall, announcements when we went in, was well written up in Time and all the different magazines and newspapers and of course when we were I think the Bureau received news queries as we were going through training and said yes the women were still in training and still moving along with their male counterparts.

But they wanted to minimize, I think, a media frenzy about this event because we were agents in training with our fellow agents. I think that was very important at the time. We wanted to be another agent, just another agent who happened to be a woman.

We graduated in the fall and then we went to our field offices. My first office was the Omaha field division in Omaha, Nebraska.

So I get my cases and I’m looking at my cases and one case was cattle rustling, and you are thinking the 1970s—cattle rustling? But it was a big business, because in Omaha and Iowa and big slaughterhouses and lots of money and they take them across state lines. But I looked at these two cases among the many cases I had and I wondered if my squad supervisor or the ASAC or somebody was teasing me about giving me a case that involved train wrecking and cattle rustling all on the same initial batch of cases. But they were real cases which the FBI investigates as one of the violations of federal law.

Other cases involved, I’d have a case, I made an arrest right away in my first office with our team of agents—you always worked together as a team. But arrested a deserter and then had another fugitive arrest which so I immediately came to my field office and the next day or so made an arrest. That first case we went out and worked and worked joint but was able to make that first FBI arrest by a woman agent.

You know, I am where I am today because of the talents and gifts of many people that have opened doors for me, that have assisted me along on my journey. And especially some of the people that I recall that were FBI agents. And to recall Bill Stapleton, to recall Charles Bates, Hank Sloan, Bob Grant, who was in my FBI office in San Francisco, he and Walker Anderson and I worked many cases together, Carroll Garnett in my first office. These people had such talent and they were willing to share it. They were willing to take a young agent, whether it was a man or women, and share that talent. And for that I am grateful.

It was a great opportunity. I will cherish my service with the FBI for the rest of my life.

https://www.fbi.gov/news/stories/2012/july/celebrating-women-special-agents-part-2-the-pioneers/joanne-pierce-misko-interview

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