- Will Owen
William James Owen (
18 February ,1901 –3 April ,1981 ) was a British miner and politician, whose career as aMember of Parliament was blighted by his trial under theOfficial Secrets Act 1911 for giving secrets to Czechoslovak intelligence. Although found not guilty, it is generally accepted that Owen was a regular contact.Miner
Owen was born in
Bedwellty ,Monmouthshire and went toBlaina Boys' Central School, which he left at the age of 13 to go to work in the local coal mines. However he was determined to better himself and in 1920 left work to study at theLondon Labour College . When his course ended he returned to Blaina to become a Tutor Organiser for the National Council of Labour Colleges, arranging for other local miners to attend further education courses.Co-operative official
Already involved in Labour Party politics, in 1923 Owen was elected to Blaina District Council, on which he served for four years. In 1930 he moved to
Leicester and became Secretary of the Leicester branch of theIndependent Labour Party ; he was elected to Leicester City Council in 1932. He then worked in the Co-operative movement, in the Education and Management section in Leicester, and from 1938 in the Education Office ofBurslem Co-operative north ofStoke-on-Trent .Political advancement
In 1940 Owen moved to London to work in the London Co-operative, followed four years later by transfer to Bristol. The nationalisation of the mines in 1948 led him to a job in the Community Office of the
National Coal Board from 1948. He had further connections with the Co-operative movement. At this stage he was Labour candidate for Dover in the 1950 and 1951 general elections.Parliamentary career
Owen was chosen as Labour and
Co-operative Party candidate for Morpeth at a by-election in 1954. This was a safe seat and Owen was duly elected. Owen remained a backbencher throughout his time at Westminster, although he did introduce a Private Members' Bill to regulate driving tests in 1966. He was allied with the left and wanted the British government to distance itself from the United States over theVietnam war . For many years he served on the Estimates Committee, which gave him access to some secret information about government projects.ecrets trial
A senior Czechoslovak intelligence officer,
Josef Frolik , defected to the United States in 1969. He immediately named several British Labour MPs as having been friendly with Czech intelligence, including Owen. On15 January ,1970 Owen was arrested at his home in Carshalton, and charged with communicating information useful to an enemy. Bail was refused and Owen was held in custody until his trial at the Central Criminal Court (Old Bailey) in April 1970. Owen resigned his seat on2 April by means of the Stewardship of the Manor of Northstead.At trial, it was established that Owen had received cash from Robert Husak, an intelligence officer at the Czechoslovak Embassy; he admitted receiving a regular envelope each month which sometimes contained £10, and sometimes £20 (Owen's bank account details showed that the real figure must have been much higher). In return, Owen discussed political developments, but he denied ever passing on secret information, and the prosecution were unable to find any secret documents in his home. On
6 May , Owen was found not guilty on all charges.Later life
Owen was partially rehabilitated as Chairman of Carshalton and Wallington
Constituency Labour Party from 1974. However, Frolik's memoirs (written in 1975) portrayed him as a major agent. He gives Owen's codename as "Lee". According to Stephen Dorril and Robin Ramsay's book "Smear: Wilson and the Secret State", Owen's handlers nicknamed him "Greedy Bastard" for constantly demanding more money.References
*Rayment
*M. Stenton and S. Lees, "Who's Who of British MPs" Vol. IV (Harvester Press, 1981)
*Stephen Dorril and Robin Ramsay, "Smear: Wilson and the Secret State" (4th Estate, 1991)
*Josef Frolik, "The Frolik Defection" (Corgi, 1976)
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