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<text id=89TT1922>
<title>
July 24, 1989: Washington's Man From Nowhere
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
July 24, 1989 Fateful Voyage:The Exxon Valdez
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
NATION, Page 24
Washington's Man from Nowhere
</hdr><body>
<p>Who is Craig Spence, and why were all those VIPs at his parties?
</p>
<p> "Hang a lamb chop in the window," was the advice legendary
hostess Perle Mesta gave those who wanted to make a place for
themselves in the capital. Craig Spence, a would-be power
broker with a taste for Edwardian suits, took that advice to
heart when he arrived in Washington in the late 1970s and hurled
himself into high-intensity party-giving at his elegant town
house in the fashionable Kalorama section of town.
</p>
<p> Before long, the man from nowhere (he was, in fact, briefly
a reporter for ABC in Viet Nam, and was said to have ties to
Asian businessmen who were paying for his house, two bodyguards
and Mercedes) had reportedly been host to John Mitchell and
William Casey, journalists Ted Koppel and William Safire, and
several Congressmen. By 1982 he had served enough lamb chops to
merit a profile in the New York Times. The story trumpeted his
ability to open doors all over town, even though the paper could
not quite put its finger on who he was. It called him an
international business consultant, party host, foreign agent and
research journalist.
</p>
<p> A city that remakes itself every four years is perfect for
a Gatsbyesque creature like Spence, with a past he is unwilling
to talk about and a present that consists of convincing
mysterious clients that he has plenty of influence. Spence would
probably still be throwing dinners at the posh Four Seasons
Hotel for people like Donald Gregg, U.S. Ambassador to South
Korea, as he did last spring, if the police had not raided a
male prostitution service in February. The raid turned up
thousands of dollars' worth of credit-card receipts signed by
Spence. Though he was not the only Washington figure to use the
service (the Washington Times, which broke the story, says some
White House and congressional aides will be implicated), Spence
must have been among its best customers. He ran up a $1,525 tab
in one day, $20,000 in a month.
</p>
<p> To show off his clout last year, Spence took two clients
and a pair of male prostitutes on a midnight July 4 tour of the
White House. That same weekend, Spence gave Secret Service agent
Ronald deGueldre, who arranged the tour, his $8,000 Rolex;
deGueldre gave Spence his $22 Casio -- all out of friendship,
says deGueldre. The agent's house in Virginia was searched last
week for pieces of Truman china, a set of presidential cuff
links and a tie-pin that disappeared mysteriously after the
tour. Officials will not say if anything was found.
</p>
<p> Evidence is being presented to a grand jury that will
decide whether indictments are warranted. But Spence's days of
trading on his guest list have ended, and he has gone
underground. Those who once dined at his table are wondering out
loud about the curious 8-ft.-long two-way mirror in his house,
and the young men, and what exactly Craig Spence did to earn all
the money he was throwing around. They wonder only now that the
party is over.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>