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  1. Nixon White House tapes. United States v. Nixon. Audio recordings of conversations between U.S. President Richard Nixon and Nixon administration officials, Nixon family members, and White House staff surfaced during the Watergate scandal in 1973 and 1974, leading to Nixon's resignation.

    • January 1969. Richard Nixon is inaugurated as the 37th president of the United States.
    • February 1971. Richard Nixon orders the installation of a secret taping system that records all conversations in the Oval Office, his Executive Office Building office, and his Camp David office and on selected telephones in these locations.
    • June 13, 1971. The New York Times begins publishing the Pentagon Papers, the Defense Department's secret history of the Vietnam War. The Washington Post will begin publishing the papers later in the week.
    • 1971. Nixon and his staff recruit a team of ex-FBI and CIA operatives, later referred to as “the Plumbers” to investigate the leaked publication of the Pentagon Papers.
  2. Jun 14, 2012 · The man who revealed the Nixon tapes. By Alicia Shepard. June 14, 2012 at 7:50 p.m. EDT. Alicia Shepard is the author of “ Woodward & Bernstein: Life in the Shadow of Watergate .”. The ...

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  4. Oct 15, 2018 · You know, when the Nixon tapes were first publicly disclosed in 1973 during a Watergate inquiry, as far as we knew, he was the first president to record himself. And then only through digging in various archives and National Archives and Presidential libraries, we realized Nixon wasn’t new having the first president at all taping.

  5. The existence of tape recordings opened the possibility for the Senate to learn, in the words of Senator Howard Baker of Tennessee, “ [w]hat did the president know and when did he know it.”. President Nixon, however, refused to turn over the tapes, either to the Senate or to Special Prosecutor Cox.

  6. Aug 18, 2003 · The Tapes. The Nixon White House Tapes consist of some 3,700 hours of recorded conversations between the President and his staff and visitors in various locations, including the President's Oval Office in the White House, his hideaway office in the Executive Office Building (EOB), the Cabinet Room and Camp David, as well as taped telephone conversations made from telephones in the White House.

  7. President Nixon. John D. Ehrlichman. John B. Connally, Jr. Clifford Hardin. John C. Whitaker. Donald B. Rice. DATE: Friday, June 23, 1972. Cassette Number / Minutes: E - 2 Segment 1 (8 minutes) |. exhibit_01.pdf. Conversation Number: 741-2. Location: White House Oval Office. Exhibit Number: Exhibit 1 – U.S. v. John B. Connally, et al. Abstract:

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