In 1960, Maureen's by-then divorced parents became concerned about her. Ronald Reagan used his connections at the FBI − established during his work as an
anti-communist informant − to request the agency to investigate her romantic life. The agency did so on condition that the FBI not be cited as a source, and reported that she was living with an older, married man who was a police officer. Maureen Reagan was married three times: • John Filippone, a policeman; they were married in 1961 and divorced the following year. •
David G. Sills, a lawyer and Marine Corps officer; they married on February 28, 1964; the couple divorced in 1967. She and Revell adopted one daughter, Margaret "Rita" Mirembe Revell, who was born in Uganda. The Revells became Rita's guardians in 1994. They adopted her in 2001. Rita was the beneficiary of a private bill to facilitate her adoption as Maureen and Dennis Revell were unable to complete the necessary paperwork and other requirements by the Ugandan government, including a personal visitation to that country, due, in large part, to Maureen Reagan Revell's terminal cancer. Together with her adopted brother
Michael, Maureen, unlike her more liberal half-siblings
Patti and
Ron, was the only of Ronald Reagan's children who was a Republican and who agreed more with her father's conservative political views. In 2004, the
San Francisco Chronicle described Maureen as the child who Reagan was "closest -- politically and personally - - with." However, she would differ from her father when it came to support for
women's rights issues such as the
Equal Rights Amendment and
abortion rights. ==Death==