Walter Schneir
Walter Schneir was an American journalist, editor and author. He is best known for his research into the Rosenberg espionage case.
Early life
Walter Daniel Schneir was born in Brooklyn in 1927. His father, David Schneir, was an attorney practicing law in New York City. In 1941, he was appointed to the State Public Service Commission, and the Schneir family relocated to Albany, New York.Career
Walter graduated from Syracuse University with a degree in journalism. He worked in New York City for many years as editor of MD Medical News magazine. He also pursued freelance journalism, authoring articles on science, health, politics, education, and law. His writings appeared in The Reporter, The Nation, The New York Times Magazine, Ramparts, The Progressive, and The New York Times op-ed page. He did news reporting for the pacifist journal, Liberation, and served in the late 1950s as Chairman of the Queens County Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy.In 1959 he and his wife Miriam began to research and write about the trial of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, who had been convicted along with Morton Sobell as atomic spies for the Soviet Union. The Rosenbergs were executed by electric chair in 1953, while Sobell received a lengthy prison sentence. Walter quit his editor job to devote himself fully to the Rosenberg project. He and Miriam used the attic of their house in Queens as an office. The resulting book, Invitation to an Inquest, was published in summer of 1965. Subsequent editions with new chapters appeared in 1968, 1973, and 1983. In the latter year, controversies erupted when Ronald Radosh and Joyce Milton published The Rosenberg File: A Search for Truth, which attacked the conclusions of the Schneirs' book. The two sets of authors argued about the Rosenberg case both in the press and in an in-person debate.
Walter also covered political events in the late 1960s. His anthology about the protests at the 1968 Democratic National Convention, Telling it Like It Was: The Chicago Riots, was published in 1969. In the 1980s, he became interested in the Westmoreland v. CBS libel suit filed by Vietnam War General William Westmoreland against CBS. Schneir believed the case constituted an attack by political conservatives on the freedom of the press. As an aid to legal scholars and to students of broadcast journalism, he indexed the voluminous material disclosed in the months leading up to the civil trial, and published Westmoreland v. CBS: Guide to the Microfiche Collection in 1987.
Over the decades, as additional information was released about the Rosenbergs, both from Freedom of Information Act requests and from documents out of the former Soviet Union, Schneir modified some of his earlier positions from Invitation to an Inquest. He was initially swayed by the "Venona" transcripts, which indicated that Julius had engaged in espionage, while Ethel had not. But shortly before his death, Schneir began to be skeptical that the Venona releases represented the last word on Cold War spying. His 2010 book, Final Verdict: What Really Happened in the Rosenberg Case, with Preface and Afterword by Miriam Schneir, was published posthumously. It concluded that Ethel's brother David Greenglass and his wife Ruth "were indeed guilty of trying to steal secrets of the atomic bomb but Julius and Ethel were not."