Terry Lenzner, Sleuth With a Broad-Ranging Profession, Dies at 80

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Terry Lenzner, Sleuth With a Broad-Ranging Profession, Dies at 80

Terry F. Lenzner, a bulldog investigator with a Harvard pedigree whose profession took him from pursuing civil rights violators within the South vi


Terry F. Lenzner, a bulldog investigator with a Harvard pedigree whose profession took him from pursuing civil rights violators within the South via the Watergate hearings and many years of generally controversial non-public investigations, died on Thursday in Washington. He was 80.

His daughter, Emily Lenzner, confirmed the demise, saying he had pneumonia and leukemia.

In 1964, after an uninspiring stint with a significant legislation agency, Mr. Lenzner took a accomplice’s suggestion and utilized for a job within the civil rights division on the Division of Justice. He was employed and despatched to the South, the place he helped examine the murders of the civil rights employees Michael Schwerner, James Chaney and Andrew Goodman and helped handle the grand jury inquiry into the beatings of protesters on what got here to be known as “Bloody Sunday” at the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Ala.

He learned to sleep on the floor in Southern hotels, with the mattress propped up against the window in case anyone decided to take a shot at him in the night.

As that job ended, Mr. Doar gave him some advice that Mr. Lenzner found startling: Get a job in Richard M. Nixon’s administration. In his memoir, “The Investigator: Fifty Years of Uncovering the Truth” (2013), Mr. Lenzner recalled: “The new president was anathema to almost everyone I knew. I wasn’t much of a fan myself.”

“Terry, do what I do,” he recalled Mr. Doar saying. “Zig when others zag.”

Mr. Lenzner, with a colleague, delivered subpoenas to Nixon administration officials demanding documents and the tapes that the president had secretly recorded. The revelations in the tapes led to Nixon’s resignation in August 1974 before an impeachment vote could be held.

After government service, Mr. Lenzner practiced law for a while before deciding to focus on investigative work. “He relished the opportunity to uncover facts that powerful interests didn’t want uncovered,” his son Jonathan said. “He had no problem ruffling feathers.”

Jim Mintz, with whom Mr. Lenzner founded the firm Investigative Group International, said in a phone interview that Mr. Lenzner had “pioneered a new kind of investigation.” The field had traditionally used people from law enforcement to focus on narrow questions; Mr. Lenzner enlisted lawyers, former news reporters, forensic accountants and others.

But some of the work Mr. Lenzner took on tarnished his reputation. The Wall Street Journal published an article in February 1996 about a leaked copy of a 500-page dossier on the tobacco industry whistle-blower Jeffrey Wigand that Mr. Lenzner’s firm had compiled for the Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corporation. The memo made Mr. Wigand appear to be dishonest and a shoplifter, but much of the information was unsubstantiated or proved to be untrue.

His company also earned public scorn for paying a building’s janitor to give it Microsoft’s discarded trash in a fight with a client, the computer technology company Oracle.

Mr. Lenzner did opposition research for Bill Clinton’s 1992 presidential campaign and continued to work for Mr. Clinton through his presidency, including investigating a sexual misconduct lawsuit brought by Paula Jones. During the Monica Lewinsky scandal, the independent counsel Kenneth Starr called him to testify before a grand jury over his work for Mr. Clinton.

Terry Falk Lenzner was born in Manhattan on Aug. 10, 1939, to Joseph and Eleanor (Falk) Lenzner. His father was a dentist whose parents had come to the United States from Lithuania; his mother was a homemaker. Joseph Lenzner had played football for the University of Pennsylvania.

Terry Lenzner attended Phillips Exeter Academy, Harvard College and Harvard Law School and was captain of both Exeter’s and Harvard’s football teams.

In 1969 he married Margaret Rood, who had worked with him in the Justice Department’s civil rights division. She survives him. In addition to her, his son Jon and his daughter, Emily, he is survived by another son, William; four grandchildren; and an older brother, Robert.

One of his defining moments, Mr. Lenzner recalled in his book, was a childhood illness. After playing football poorly one day in seventh grade, he showed his demanding and unpredictable father his swollen ankles, saying they had slowed him down. His father “kicked my legs, furious at the excuse,” he wrote. It was rheumatic fever, and bedridden months lay ahead. As he recovered, he said, “I felt there was a clock ticking, telling me I had to move forward before time ran out.

“I guess I still haven’t slowed down.”



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