Ray Cline, 56, was at his mother-in-law's apartment on LaGuardia Place when the gunfire interrupted their dessert.
Curly Ray Cline (fiddle) (part-time)
Another leading Bush supporter was Ray Cline.
During 1979, it was Ray Cline who had gone virtually public with a loose and informal, but highly effective, campaign network mainly composed of former intelligence officers.
Heading up the Bush campaign muckraking "research" staff was Stefan Halper, Ray Cline's son-in-law and a former official of the Nixon White House.
The Ray Cline, Halper, and Gambino operations were all continued.
"I don't think people like George should be indicted," said Ray Cline, a former deputy director of intelligence.
Ray Cline, former Deputy Director of Intelligence at CIA, wrote how he saw the agency under Helms during the Nixon years:
Ray Cline, a former deputy director of the Central Intelligence Agency who now teaches at Georgetown University, said he had detected some exaggeration of the spy cases.
Among other figures, Fellows during that period included McGeorge Bundy and Ray Cline, who were quite influential in national security and intelligence.