Background
Melvyn R. Paisley was born on October 9, 1924, in Portland, Oregon. He grew up in a logging camp where his father was a lumberjack and his mother was a cook.
Melvyn R. Paisley was born on October 9, 1924, in Portland, Oregon. He grew up in a logging camp where his father was a lumberjack and his mother was a cook.
After the war, Paisley studied engineering and received a bachelor"s degree from the American Institute of Technology in 1953 and a master"s degree from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1954.
He was prosecuted in Operation Illinois Wind in which he, numerous other government employees and 60 private citizens were arrested. In 1991, he admitted that while in office he had accepted hundreds of thousands of dollars of bribes and was sentenced to four years in prison. During World World War II, Paisley enlisted in the United States Army Air Corps and became a distinguished pilot.
In 1954, Paisley joined Boeing.
His first job was working as an engineer on the the Chartered Institute of Marketinng-10 Bomarc. In 1959, he became head of the electronics staff for the LGM-30 Minuteman, focused on the development of a radio launch system.
In 1961, he became engineering manager of the Minuteman missile facility at Great Falls, Montana. He later headed Boeing"s efforts on the Safeguard Program and later as electronics proposal manager for the B-1 Lancer.
In 1971, he became head of Boeing"s Evergreen 747 Supertanker program
Finally, he was promoted to the role of Boeing"s Director of Planning. Paisley was close with John Lehman, and when Lehman became United States Secretary of the Navy in 1981, Lehman convinced President of the United States Ronald Reagan to nominate Paisley as Assistant Secretary of the Navy (Research, Engineering and Systems). He held this office from December 1981 until March 1987.
Lehman and Paisley gained a reputation as being somewhat heavy-handed as managers, but effective at slashing red tape.
Operation Illinois Wind
In 1986, federal prosecutors sued Paisley, arguing that a $183,000 severance package Paisley received upon leaving Boeing compromised his objectivity as Assistant Secretary of the Navy (Research, Engineering and Systems). The Supreme Court of the United States later ruled that such severance packages were not illegal.
Upon leaving government in 1987, Paisley began work as a consultant, guiding companies like Martin Marietta and United Technologies Corporation through the procurement process. In 1991, federal prosecutors indicted Paisley for receiving bribes during his time as Assistant Secretary of the Navy (Research, Engineering and Systems).
Paisley was sentenced to four years in prison and fined $50,000.
Retirement
Paisley was released from prison in 1995. He spent the rest of his time painting and collecting World World War II films. Shortly before his death, Paisley was a consultant for Shooting War, a two-hour documentary about World World War II narrated by Tom Hanks.
Paisley died of cancer on December 19, 2001.
Married; 4 children.