top of page

Frank McCulloch - A brother to remember

WWII Marine CC Frank McCulloch, who was Time Mag.'s bureau chief in Vietnam, is in a retirement home (as opposed to a nursing home) in Santa Rosa, CA. Frank is totally blind now.  (Contact  CCHQ if you would like to contact Frank)-- Steve Stibbons

Frank McCulloch enlisted in the U.S. Marine Corps in 1942, but what he calls a "bogus" heart condition kept him stateside.

McCulloch spent the war writing up the heroic deeds of soldiers for the Marines' public information office in San Francisco. After the war, McCulloch returned to Reno to write for the Reno Evening Gazette, where he got his first taste of investigative reporting, delving into how the mafia was surreptitiously acquiring gambling licenses in Las Vegas.

It was where McCulloch learned his legendary ability to cultivate sources--"I started out covering the police beat, which taught me how to talk to people who could become sources," he says. "I made a lot of good friends in the FBI." Sources handed him gambling license applications as they came in and McCulloch investigated them for mob ties. "We had a lot of lovely stuff, death threats," he says. " 'You be careful,' Johnny Roselli said to me one day. 'You keep going with this story, you will be very sorry.' " -- Jason Felch & Marlena Telvick, American Journalism Review

To read the entire article click here: http://www.ajr.org/article.asp?id=3699

Recent Posts

See All
Looking for Vietnam Vet Sternberg

New member Mike Harmon ( gmharmon@gmail ) seeking info on former combat correspondent Staff Sergeant (or Sgt.) Sternberg who was last known to be in Vietnam  probably with 1st Marine Division at Chu

 
 
Pride in a Black Tee Shirt

There is one way to get seats at the weekly Sunset Parade at Arlington's US Marine Corps War Memorial: Be a Marine Combat Correspondent, have your World War II dog tag and be ready to quote the rifle

 
 
Looking for Sgt R. E. Staff

I need your assistance in locating a Marine Corps combat correspondent, and  an article in the old SEA TIGER.  Hopefully, the correspondent is still  alive. During January 1969, in Vietnam, he was kno

 
 
bottom of page