Westrick left Berlin in January 1940. He was accompanied by his wife and his two sons: Klaus, 9, and Peter, 6. They traveled to the United States via the Soviet Union and Japan, then both neutral, and reached the United States on March 7, 1940. Westrick later said he had gone to the United States on his own initiative and planned to stay there, and his bringing his family lends some support to that assertion. However, according to
Charles Higham's book
Trading with the Enemy,
Sosthenes Behn of ITT arranged the trip and persuaded
Torkild Rieber, CEO of
Texaco, to look after Westrick's local needs. Rieber arranged for offices in New York, a house in
Westchester County, New York, and a Buick. Westrick found support among American business leaders who were hostile to Bolshevism and to President
Franklin D. Roosevelt and were interested in continuing to do business in Europe. Westrick represented many American companies in Germany, including ITT, Ford, General Motors, Standard Oil, the Texas Company, Sterling Products, and the Davis Oil Company. Westrick seems to have expected a friendly reception. He gave press conferences and attended receptions and parties. He presented the view that after the war America, Germany and Japan would dominate the world economy. On June 26, 1940, one day after the
Fall of France, Rieber sponsored a celebratory dinner for Westrick at the
Waldorf Astoria New York. Attendees included
Sosthenes Behn of
ITT,
James D. Mooney of
General Motors,
Edsel Ford of the
Ford Motor Company and
Philip Dakin Wagoner of
Underwood. Westrick told the guests that Britain would be defeated in three months, and there would then be huge opportunities for trade between America and Germany. The British BSC chief in North America,
William Stephenson, found out about Westrick's mission and leaked it to the press. The story was picked up by the
Chicago Daily News,
Time,
Life, and the
New York Herald Tribune. On July 8, 1940,
Time published a hostile story, calling Westrick "Hitler's ambassador-off-the-record to U.S. businessmen". The
Herald Tribune ran stories with headlines like "Hitler's Agent Ensconced in Westchester" and gave his home address. Many of his business associates no longer wished to be associated with him. Westrick's house became a target for angry citizens. An FBI guard was placed around the property. Westrick had disappeared from view by the end of July. The FBI found that Westrick had concealed his disability and obtained a driving license illegally, which was removed on August 1, 1940. Newspapers reported that the FBI had asked the police to record the license numbers of cars that stopped at Westrick's house in Scarsdale. On August 11, the
New York Post said $5 million had been deposited for Westrick in a bank in San Francisco by a source in Germany, followed by additional sums. The paper said the Nazis thought that he was an ace propagandist. Columnists such as
Walter Winchell and
Drew Pearson attacked Westrick, wildly exaggerating his connections with the Nazis. In the face of that storm of hostile publicity, German Chargé d'Affaires
Hans Thomsen asked Westrick to return to Germany. Westrick left the United States on August 23, 1940, returning to Germany via the Pacific route. ==Later career==