The Great Cover-Up: Extract 2
by Barry Sussman
Page 86
In the summer of 1973, when John Dean made public the
enemies list with the names of 21 organizations and more than 200
people on it, it became natural to think of Nixon politics as the
politics of revenge. The enemies list was part of a plan to "use
the available federal machinery to screw our political enemies,"
as Dean explained it. The concept, involving fundamental abuse of
government power for the basest ends, was obviously repugnant and
offended many Americans. But it would be a mistake to reason that
Nixon considered Congress as loaded with his enemies. Exactly the
opposite is true.
Very few senators and congressmen were considered enemies.
The list included mainly representatives of the media, civil
rights or citizens group activists, labor leaders, celebrities,
academics, businessmen, and antiwar leaders. There were only ten
U.S. senators on the list, and, aside from the black members of
the House only six representatives. Those whose names were not on
the enemies list were not necessarily considered friends. But
most assuredly, with few exceptions they were considered
politicians who could be reasoned with in a normal manner. So one
implication of the list was that, by their absence on it, 90
senators and 417 representatives were not thought of as enemies
by Richard Nixon.
Perhaps nothing better illustrates the relationship between
Nixon and those supposedly partisan politicians, the Democrats on
Capitol Hill, than the public testimony of White House aide
Gordon Strachan at the Senate Watergate hearings on July 23,
1973. Strachan said that the White House had a list of one
hundred Democratic members of the House and Senate who were
running for re-election in 1972 "who would not receive very
strong opposition from Republicans....The goal was not to give a
tremendous amount of support to Republicans that would oppose
these congressmen."
In 1972, a total of 10 Democratic senators and 235 Democrats
in the House ran for re-election nationwide. If Strachan's figure
was correct---and he was questioned about it repeatedly by
Senator Lowell Weicker of the Watergate Committee---then Nixon
was lending encouragement or support to 42.5 percent of the
opposition party's incumbent candidates. The Democrats favored,
Strachan said, were selected for having supported Nixon's
Indochina policies or because they had won the backing of labor
interests that also were aiding Nixon.
Weicker was so upset at Strachan's testimony that he
reflected on "Republicans doing in Republicans" and asked
rhetorically, "Did we have any sort of an election contest...was
there a contest in 1972 for the House or Senate?"
Throughout the Watergate scandal, Nixon sought assistance
from more or less friendly members of both parties. And from the
moment Wright Patman announced his plans to investigate
Watergate, through the most intensive states of the Senate
Watergate Committee hearings and the later drive for his
impeachment, the President time after time was rescued by leaders
of both political parties.
Watergate was first and foremost the scandal of Richard
Nixon, but it was a scandal that could have ended quickly if not
for the help powerful men on Capitol Hill extended to their
president.
Page 100
By the end of September, 1972, Woodward and Bernstein took
the trail of Watergate funding all the way up to John Mitchell.
Bernstein called the former campaign director at home late on the
night of September 29 to ask his comments on a report that he
controlled the "secret fund" while he was Attorney General.
Bernstein read aloud the first several paragraphs.
"All that crap you're putting in the paper!" Mitchell said.
"It's all been denied. Katie Graham's gonna get her tit caught in
a big fat wringer if that's published. Good Christ! That's the
most sickening thing I've ever heard."
Bernstein said he wanted to ask Mitchell a few questions.
"What time is it?" Mitchell asked.
"Eleven-thirty. I'm sorry to call so late," Bernstein said.
"Eleven thirty? Eleven-thirty when?"
"Eleven-thirty at night."
"Oh."
Page 131
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John J. Sirica, the chief U.S. District Court judge who liked to take the big cases himself, and who became a key figure in exposing the great cover up. (ASSOCIATED PRESS)
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On Monday, January 8, 1973, some 250 potential jurors were
gathered in the U.S. District Courthouse in Washington. The
Watergate trial was about to get under way. On the first day
Judge John J. Sirica excused more than 150 people who said that a
lengthy trial would cause them personal hardship. On the second
morning Sirica asked those remaining to stand if they had heard,
read, or seen anything about the Watergate case, and eight people
remained seated. The judge asked one of them, "You didn't hear
about the Watergate case?" She said, "No."
"Incredible," Sirica said.
He then proceeded to select twelve jurors and six alternates
before the day was out, and had marshals accompany them home for
some belongings and return them to the courthouse. They were
sequestered on upper floors in modest rooms with windows they
could not see through for the following three weeks, the length
of the trial.
Two defense attorneys charged that Sirica had ignored
standard procedures in selecting a jury so rapidly, without
giving them an adequate chance to ask questions. They said his
actions would be grounds for appeal if their clients were
convicted. But Sirica did things his own way and refused to be
disturbed by such criticism; he had established quite a record
for receiving criticism long before the trial began.
Sirica's reputation was that of a very tough sentencer,
something of a publicity hound. In a court noted for its
thoughtful and progressive jurists, he was regarded near the
bottom in depth of legal knowledge, more a Sancho Panza than a
Solomon. The son of an Italian immigrant, Sirica had the looks,
manner, and speech mannerisms of a bus driver.
By 1972, Sirica's court had begun following new guidelines
recommended by Chief Justice Warren Burger on the handling of
major cases. Included was a procedure through which the chief
judge was to assign the best available jurist, replacing the
previous practice of selecting a judge at random. Sirica
proceeded to assign himself to Watergate, saying it would be a
time-consuming case and that while other judges had a backlog to
contend with, he didn't. He had appointed himself to the last
sensational case in his court, a bizarre murder that captured the
attention of a blasé city. So it was not a total surprise that
Sirica chose to try he liked the big ones.
Nevertheless, because of the political overtones, one of the
first questions asked about Sirica's conduct had to do with why
he took the Watergate case.
On October 4, 1972, Sirica issued a broad, possibly
unprecedented order prohibiting all law enforcement agencies, the
defendants, witnesses, potential witnesses "including complaining
witnesses and alleged victims, their attorneys and all persons
acting for or with them in connection with this case" from making
statements about the matter to anyone outside the court.
The motion requesting the order had been filed by defense
attorneys and approved by prosecutor Earl Silbert, with both
sides doing their best to end all Watergate publicity at the
time. Sirica, who was ill when the order was prepared, signed it
at home. It was so sweeping yet so vague that the judge couldn't
explain exactly who was restricted by it and was himself
uncertain of its legality.
Lawrence Meyer of the Post called the judge to ask whether
the order meant that George McGovern could no longer discuss
Watergate in campaign speeches. "That's a good question," Sirica
said. "I tried to make it as broad as I could. I hadn't thought
about it. I frankly hadn't given that a thought. I'll have to
deal with that at some time, I suppose, but I'd rather not answer
that question now."
Sirica agreed that the order might create problems where "we
get into free speech and all that business," but he said that
"was something we have to meet at the proper time. I have no
comment. It may be raised, it may never be raised."
Compliance with Sirica's order would have forced the Post
and other news agencies to stop reporting all Watergate
developments except those that took place in court. By not
talking to investigators, witnesses, or potential witnesses,
reporters would be left to talk only to themselves. They could
write columns of opinion, but they couldn't investigate.
Two days later, under widespread criticism, Sirica modified
his order, striking the restrictions on witnesses, potential
witnesses, and alleged victims. This action was proper, but it
made the judge subject to the charge that he was erratic and
hadn't really know what he was doing in the first place.
In December, 1972, Sirica jailed the Washington bureau chief
of the Los Angeles Times when that newspaper refused to turn over
to the court the tapes of an interview two of its reporters had
conducted with Alfred Baldwin, the man who had monitored the
Democrats' telephones form the Howard Johnson's across from the
Watergate. The editor, John Lawrence, was the second person
Sirica had jailed for contempt, the first being attorney Douglas
Caddy, who had refused to testify before the grand jury.
Both the newspaperman and the attorney had noted an appeal
of Sirica's ruling to a higher court before he ordered them
incarcerated, and there were many who felt that Sirica had acted
with improper haste. Neither man was detained more than a few
hours, but, especially in the case of Lawrence, there was a sense
that Sirica was unnecessarily exacerbating tension, felt highly
at the time, over the rights of a free press.
The courtroom was Sirica's bus, and he did what he wanted
with the passengers. His conduct of the Watergate trial in
January, 1973, was every bit as arbitrary as his handling of
pretrial activities. Had the trial of the Watergate Seven been a
sensational civil rights case instead, Sirica probably would have
been criticized as much as was Chicago federal judge Julius
Hoffman for his handling of the Chicago Eight, which involved
nationally known antiwar and civil rights leaders.
But the Watergate was not such a trial, and many who
otherwise would have lashed out at Sirica for his bluster on the
bench or his disregard for normal courtroom procedures were
hushed by his obvious sincerity, his disgust at the coverup, and
his incontrovertible leading role in bringing to light the
enormity of the Watergate scandal.
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