The FBI watched J. Robert Oppenheimer for months after he helped make the WWII-ending atomic bomb.
Reports from the FBI show Oppenheimer was accused of Communism and spreading information to Russia.
During the investigation, though, Pitzer said he had new doubts about Oppenheimer's loyalty to the country, due to his initial reservations about the development of the H-bomb.
The Atomic Heritage Foundation does consider Oppenheimer likely to have held communist sympathies, but maintains that information in the report was exaggerated.
At the end of the inquest, Oppenheimer's top-level security clearances were revoked, a devastating blow to the scientist.
Persons:
Robert Oppenheimer, Oppenheimer, J, Christopher Nolan's, Edgar Hoover, Lewis Strauss, Hoover, Strauss, Kenneth Pitzer, Pitzer, Ward Evans, Jean Tatlock, Bernard Peters, Oppenheimer's, Jennifer Granholm, Granholm, AHF
Organizations:
FBI, Congress, Service, US Atomic Energy, Los Alamos National Laboratory, UC, Loyola University , Chicago, Atomic Energy, German Communist Party, Atomic Heritage Foundation, USA, US, Department of Energy, DOE
Locations:
Russia, Wall, Silicon, Soviet Union, UC Berkeley's