THOMAS JOHN KEENAN 
He was born during nineteen thirty in the state of Wisconsin and later graduated from Marquette University amidst nineteen fifty-three. Thomas soon enlisted with the US Navy and joined the Central Intelligence Agency during nineteen fifty-seven. He would perform in the operations officer role for Nicaraguan, Costa Rican, and Cuban surveillance projects. Keenan was assigned to Mexico City Station as nineteen sixty passed and subsequently was the case officer for a notable surveillance effort intercepting enemy diplomatic communications. He received aid from CIA case officer Anne Goodpasture to undertake covert intelligence collection targeting multiple Communist embassies in Mexico City. Thomas was noted in one document to be "case officer for two of the station's technical support projects, one sensitive double agent case, and has other operational responsibilities." Amid that decade Agency officer Desmond FitzGerald would remark on Kennan's aptitude for operations by stating his subordinate performed the tasks of someone multiple agent grades higher. Western Hemisphere Division leader William Broe would highly praise his Mexico City operations under the auspices of its foreign intelligence staff.

By the late nineteen sixties he was an operations officer at Bogota Station within Columbia. During the early nineteen seventies he was promoted to Deputy Chief of Lima Station within Peru and was noted to have an excellent record by Agency officer David Atlee Phillips. In his new leadership role Keenan would attend the US Army War College and subsequently became part of the Latin America Division’s operations staff. He was Chief of Kingston Station by nineteen seventy-three and two years later Keenan became Chief of the Latin American Division’s Mexico and Central American Branch. He was still coordinating division branch operations and staff from Agency headquarters near the end of the nineteen seventies.