Cornelius Van Schaack Roosevelt (October 23, 1915 – August 3, 1991) was the third child of Theodore Roosevelt, Jr.. He served in the Navy during World War II and was later an officer in the CIA.[1][2] He was a graduate of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.[1]
For part of 1960 and 1961 he was head of the Technical Division of the CIA.[3] Evan Thomas wrote that Roosevelt was the person who originally suggested the CIA project that attempted to poison Fidel Castro.[4] Roosevelt, as a head of the CIA technical division, supervised Sidney Gottlieb, who brought a biological poison to Congo during the autumn of 1960. To friends and family, he said that his work for the CIA mainly involved creating devices to detect listening devices. He also mentioned that he took part as a subject in the CIA experiments on LSD (part of MKULTRA). Roosevelt at various times in his life worked as an electrical engineer and in the Andes as a mining engineer. He also may have worked in the Philippines. Roosevelt had many lifelong hobbies and interests and published about them: the archaeology of Peru, the history of early sugar processing machines in the Caribbean,[5] Japanese Netsuke carvings, and scuba-diving.[6][7][8] He gave a collection of more than 50 M. C. Escher prints to the National Gallery of Art.[9]
He was named after his great-great-grandfather, Cornelius Roosevelt.