May 16, 2013 ¡ thompson, the lawyer turned lobbyist turned actor turned politician, wrote a watergate memoir called âat that point in timeâ in 1975, served as special counsel to then-tennessee gov. lamar...
Served 18 months in federal prison. Moved to New Mexico, where he became a writer, painter and business consultant. Disbarred in Washington state. JD âŚ
Jun 15, 1992 ¡ With Bob Woodward, Mr. Bernstein was half of the Washington Post reporting team that uncovered the Watergate scandal and earned a Pulitzer Prize. The scandal thrust the pair into the limelight,...
The Watergate scandal was a major political scandal in the United States involving the administration of U.S. President Richard Nixon from 1972 to 1974 that led to Nixon's resignation. The scandal stemmed from the Nixon administration's continual attempts to cover up its involvement in the June 17, 1972, break-in of the Democratic National Committee headquarters âŚ
But five months later, in what became known as the "Saturday Night Massacre," Mr. Cox was fired, on Mr. Nixon's orders, by Acting Attorney General Robert Bork after Mr. Richardson resigned rather than execute the President's order. He was replaced by Leon Jaworski, a Texas lawyer. Mr.
Although he said he still admired some of the former President's attributes, he added, "On the issue of morality, I just give Richard Nixon the lowest possible marks.". Charles W. Colson Special counsel to Nixon.
The discovery of an attempted burglary of the office of the Democratic National Committee on June 17, 1972 -- an incident President Richard M. Nixon referred to as "that pipsqueak Watergate" -- led to disclosures that unraveled over the next two years like a ball of twine. Entangled in that skein were dozens of men implicated in the scandal, ...
Mr. Kalmbach was associate finance chairman of the 1968 Nixon for President campaign and was an unoffical fund-raiser for the Committee for the Re-election of the President, controlling several secret funds. Mr.
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Address book of Watergate burglar Bernard Barker, discovered in a room at the Watergate Hotel, June 18, 1972. Within hours of the burglars' arrests, the FBI discovered E. Howard Hunt 's name in Barker and MartĂnez's address books.
The Watergate scandal was a major political scandal in the United States involving the administration of U.S. President Richard Nixon from 1972 to 1974 that led to Nixon's resignation. The scandal stemmed from the Nixon administration's continuous attempts to cover up its involvement in the June 17, 1972 break-in of the Democratic National ...
v. t. e. The Watergate scandal was a major political scandal in the United States involving the administration of U.S. President Richard Nixon from 1972 to 1974 that led to Nixon's resignation.
The scandal stemmed from the Nixon administration's continuous attempts to cover up its involvement in the June 17, 1972 break-in of the Democratic National Committee headquarters at the Washington, D.C. Watergate Office Building.
The resulting Senate Watergate hearings were broadcast "gavel-to-gavel" nationwide by PBS and aroused public interest. Witnesses testified that the president had approved plans to cover up administration involvement in the break-in, and that there was a voice-activated taping system in the Oval Office.
Minority counsel Fred Thompson, ranking member Howard Baker, and chair Sam Ervin of the Senate Watergate Committee in 1973. On February 7, 1973, the United States Senate voted 77-to-0 to approve 93 S.Res. 60 and establish a select committee to investigate Watergate, with Sam Ervin named chairman the next day.
On March 1, 1974, a grand jury in Washington, D.C., indicted several former aides of Nixon, who became known as the " Watergate Seven "â H. R. Haldeman, John Ehrlichman, John N. Mitchell, Charles Colson, Gordon C. Strachan, Robert Mardian, and Kenneth Parkinson âfor conspiring to hinder the Watergate investigation. The grand jury secretly named Nixon as an unindicted co-conspirator. The special prosecutor dissuaded them from an indictment of Nixon, arguing that a president can be indicted only after he leaves office. John Dean, Jeb Stuart Magruder, and other figures had already pleaded guilty. On April 5, 1974, Dwight Chapin, the former Nixon appointments secretary, was convicted of lying to the grand jury. Two days later, the same grand jury indicted Ed Reinecke, the Republican Lieutenant Governor of California, on three charges of perjury before the Senate committee.
In 1973, Thompson was appointed minority counsel to assist the Republican senators on the Senate Watergate Committee, a special committee convened by the U.S. Senate to investigate the Watergate scandal. Thompson was sometimes credited for supplying Republican Senator Howard Baker's famous question, "What did the President know, and when did he know it?" This question is said to have helped frame the hearings in a way that eventually led to the downfall of President Richard Nixon. The question remains popular and is often invoked by pundits commenting on political scandals.
He worked as an assistant U.S. attorney from 1969 to 1972, successfully prosecuting bank robberies and other cases. Thompson was the campaign manager for Republican U.S. Senator Howard Baker 's re-election campaign in 1972, and was minority counsel to the Senate Watergate Committee in its investigation of the Watergate scandal (1973â1974).
The resulting film, Marie, was Thompson's first acting role and was released in 1985. Roger Donaldson then cast Thompson in the part of CIA director in the 1987 film No Way Out. He played the head of FBI special-agent training in the 1988 comedy Feds; in the trailer, the FBI disclaimed any connection with the film.
In 1977, Thompson represented Marie Ragghianti, a former Tennessee Parole Board chair, who had been fired for refusing to release felons after they had bribed aides to Democratic Governor Ray Blanton to obtain clemency. With Thompson 's assistance, Ragghianti filed a wrongful termination suit against Blanton's office. During the trial, Thompson helped expose the cash-for-clemency scheme that eventually led to Blanton's removal from office. In July 1978, a jury awarded Ragghianti $38,000 ($139,165.09 in 2016 inflation rate) in back pay and ordered her reinstatement.
Thompson said that federalism was his " lodestar ", which provides "a basis for a proper analysis of most issues: 'Is this something government should be doing? If so, at what level of government?'"
Obituary writer. Email Bio Follow. September 29, 2017. Herbert W. Kalmbach, a personal attorney to President Richard M. Nixon who was drawn into the Watergate scandal as an alleged bagman and later went to prison for illegal political fundraising that included the peddling of an ambassadorship, died Sept. 15 in Newport Beach, Calif. He was 95.
Herbert W. Kalmbach, a personal attorney to President Richard M. Nixon who was drawn into the Watergate scandal as an alleged bagman and later went to prison for illegal political fundraising that included the peddling of an ambassadorship, died Sept. 15 in Newport Beach, Calif. He was 95. The death was announced by the family in ...
Mr. Kalmbach said that he might have been used by Dean , former White House chief of staff H.R. "Bob" Haldeman, former domestic policy adviser John D. Ehrlichman and former attorney general John N. Mitchell, all of whom went to prison for their roles in the misconduct collectively referred to as the Watergate scandal.
Anne Jeffreys, vivacious âghostess with the mostestâ on TVâs âTopper,â dies at 94. Zuzana Ruzickova, Holocaust survivor who rediscovered lifeâs beauty in Bach, dies at 90. Hugh Hefner, visionary editor who founded Playboy magazine, dies at 91.
Piecing together the story from dozens of sources, many of them anonymous, they leaned primarily on tips from a mysterious government operative nicknamed âDeep Throat,â who revealed himself in 2005 as FBI agent Mark Felt.
H.R. Haldeman. HIS ROLE: The Nixon administration White House chief of staffâ known as the gatekeeperâ to the Oval Office who once called himself "the president's son-of-a-bitch"âbecame a key figure in the Watergate probe as investigators zeroed in on tape-recorded conversations of White House meetings.
On June 17, 1972, five burglars were arrested during a break-in at the Democratic National Committee headquarters in the Watergate office complex in Washington, D.C. According to news reports of the time, the men wore surgical gloves, carried a walkie-talkie and short-wave police scanner, 40 rolls of unexposed film and $2,300 in crisp $100 bills.
James McCord. HIS ROLE: A former CIA officer and FBI agent, McCord was one of the five burglars arrested at the Watergate complex, and the â chief wiretapper â of the operation. During the burglary, McCord, then security director of the Committee to Reelect the President (or CREEP), left a piece of tape on the latch of a stairwell door, ...
HIS ROLE: A former CIA officer and FBI agent, McCord was one of the five burglars arrested at the Watergate complex, and the â chief wiretapper â of the operation. During the burglary, McCord, then security director of the Committee to Reelect the President (or CREEP), left a piece of tape on the latch of a stairwell door, ...
HIS ROLE: Known for decades only as âDeep Throat,â the mysterious government source who helped Washington Post reporters Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward untangle the Watergate conspiracy, Mark Felt revealed his identity in 2005. A senior FBI official during the Watergate years, Mark Felt met from time to time with Woodwardâalways in deserted parking garages, and always taking extreme precautions to ensure they had not been followedâproviding clues that guided the journalistâs reporting. The Nixon White House was âunderhanded and unknowable,â he once told Woodward.
HIS ROLE: As chairman of the Senate Watergate committee that investigated the affair in televised hearings, Ervin became a national hero for serving as a moral compass. The purpose of the hearings, he said at the outset, was to "probe into assertions that the very system has been subverted.".
Sirica was the chief judge of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia when the cases of the early Watergate defendants landed in his lap. Sirica took the unusual step of publicly stating that the defendants were not being completely truthful. He approached the trials more like a prosecutor than as a judge, promising to impose the maximum sentence on the Watergate burglars. But his diligence paid off when one of the burglars, James McCord, wrote to Sirica in March of 1973 that political pressure was being put on the burglars to plead guilty and keep quiet. (The other burglars: Bernard Barker, Virgilio Gonzalez, Eugenio Martinez and Frank Sturgis.) Time magazine named Sirica its "Man of the Year" for 1973.
1, 1973, after the firing of Archibald Cox in what was known as the "Saturday Night Massacre." Once thought by some to be less vigorous in investigating alleged White House crimes, Jaworski proved the doubters wrong when he got a unanimous Supreme Court to order Nixon to turn over the Oval Office tapes.
The 37th president of the United States, Nixon became the first to resign his office in the wake of the Watergate scandal. Had he not resigned, he would have been impeached by the House of Representatives and convicted by the Senate.
Rodino was a fairly obscure Democratic member of Congress from Newark, N.J., who became chairman of the House Judiciary Committee in 1973. His first major order of business came later that year when he headed the House confirmation hearings of Republican House Minority Leader Gerald Ford to be vice president. But once the demand to impeach President Nixon grew, it was the committee's responsibility to open up an impeachment inquiry, which it did in October of 1973.
Mitchell was Richard Nixon's former law partner and 1968 campaign manager when he was named as Attorney General in 1969. He quit the Justice Department shortly after the Watergate break-in to head up the president's re-election campaign in '72. In 1974 Mitchell was convicted on charges related to the Watergate break-in and subsequent cover-up. Testimony showed that Mitchell approved of both the break-in and the hush money for the defendants. He served 19 months in prison. Mitchell died on Nov. 9, 1988, at the age of 75.
Ehrlichman was President Nixon's assistant for domestic affairs. He also was closely involved with the Watergate "plumbers," and was instrumental in the earlier White House "dirty trick" -- the break-in at the office of the psychiatrist to Daniel Ellsberg, the man who leaked the Pentagon Papers to the media. Ehrlichman resigned his White House post in April of 1973 and was later convicted of conspiracy in both the Watergate and Ellsberg cases. He served 18 months in prison. He lived for a while in Santa Fe, N.M., later becoming a business consultant in Atlanta. He died on Feb. 14, 1999, at the age of 73.
The head of the Federal Aviation Administration and an ex-Haldeman aide, Butterfield disclosed the existence of a tape-recording device in the Oval Office. The disclosure, made in July 1973 during the Senate Watergate Committee hearings, ultimately led to Nixon's resignation.