FBI DIRECTOR ROBERT S. MUELLER iii TODAY
ANNOUNCED THE APPOINTMENT OF CHARLES J. CUNNINGHAM AS SPECIAL
AGENT IN CHARGE OF THE FBI'S RICHMOND FIELD OFFICE
Contact: Lawrence J. Barry
804-627-4406
July 7, 2006
FBI Director
Robert S. Mueller III today announced the appointment of Charles
J. Cunningham as Special Agent in Charge of the FBI's Richmond
Field Office. The Richmond Division is made up of a headquarters
city and six resident agencies in Bristol, Charlottesville,
Fredericksburg, Lynchburg, Roanoke and Winchester, Virginia.
Mr.
Cunningham is a graduate of Temple University in Philadelphia.
He served in the U.S. Air Force from 1972 until 1976. Before
joining the FBI, he was a local police officer in Pennsylvania
from 1978-80 and a State Trooper with the Pennsylvania State
Police, from 1981-86.
Mr.
Cunningham brings to the position extensive management experience,
informed by over 20 years of service in the FBI. . He has
worked in Albany; New York City; Washington D.C.; Miami; and
New Orleans Field Offices. He joined the FBI as a Special
Agent in January 1986, he completed his Agent training at
Quantico, VA, and was subsequently assigned to the Albany,
N.Y. Field Office where he worked a variety of criminal matters
including Bank Frauds, Gangs, Drugs and White Collar Crimes.
Mr.
Cunningham transferred to the New York Field Office in which
he was assigned to Queens, N.Y. He worked on the Squad handling
the Luchese Organized Crime Family and assisted in the famous
"Windows" case, which brought down the hierarchy
of the Luchese family. Mr. Cunningham was later assigned to
a Colombian Drug Squad where he worked many large scale drug
investigations. He was the case agent on several cases, utilizing
extensive wiretaps and undercover operations to advance the
investigations which resulted in large seizures of money and
drugs.
In April
1995, Mr. Cunningham was promoted to Supervisory Special Agent
(SSA). He was transferred to FBI Headquarters and was assigned
to the Criminal Investigative Division. He was later transferred
to the Special Operations Division (SOD), a joint DEA, FBI
and USCS effort aimed at addressing the largest Mexican Drug
Cartels.
Mr.
Cunningham subsequently transferred to the Miami Field Office
in October 1997, and assumed Supervisory responsibilities
of an Italian Organized Crime Squad. He was later given the
duties as the Miami Drug Program Coordinator and Supervisor
of a Colombian Drug Squad in 1999 until October 2001. In 2002,
he was awarded the OCDETF Case of the Year Award, for his
supervision of the Colombian Drug investigation entitled,
"Operation Resurrection".
In October 2001, Mr. Cunningham was promoted to Assistant
Special Agent in Charge (ASAC) of the New Orleans Field Office.
In the aftermath of 9/11/2001, he was assigned to oversee
all FBI Counterterrorism, Counterintelligence, Cyber Crime,
Public Corruption, White Collar Crime and Administrative matters
for the FBI in the State of Louisiana. He expanded the JTTF,
formed the first Field Intelligence Group (FIG) and Counterintelligence
Squad and oversaw sensitive Public Corruption matters. He
also supervised the recovery efforts related to the Space
Shuttle Discovery after it exploded over parts of Louisiana.
Mr.
Cunningham was promoted to Senior Executive Service in June
2004 and assumed the duties of Section Chief in the Bureau's
Violent Crimes Section (VCS), which had national oversight
regarding Bank Robberies, Fugitives, Transportation Crimes,
Kidnapping, Crimes Against Children, and Indian Country matters.
In November 2004, he was reassigned as the Section Chief of
the FBI's Organized Crime Section (OCS) which has national
oversight of all Organized Crime matters to include the La
Cosa Nostra (LCN), Italian OC, Eurasian/Balkan OC, Middle
Eastern Criminal Networks and Asian/African criminal enterprises.
He was instrumental in establishing several new initiatives
and he oversaw several overseas missions that included the
Pantheon Project, Southeast Asia Initiative, Budapest Project
and the Southeast European Cooperative Initiative (SECI).
In addition, he hosted numerous international working groups
that included FBI/RCMP; Japanese; Russian; Chinese; Central
European Working Group; Thailand; Vietnam; and the Italian
National Police Working Group.
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