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  1. Aug 3, 2014 · Forty years ago, on Aug. 8, 1974, President Richard Nixon resigned from office following the Watergate scandal. Despite four decades of literature from historians, journalists, academics and politi…

  2. Nov 10, 2011 · Former President Richard Nixon told a U.S. grand jury "I practically blew my stack" when he learned of the long gap on a White House tape sought in the Watergate scandal investigation, according ...

  3. Jun 14, 2017 · But those tapes contain a mysterious 18.5-minute gap -- a patch of buzzes and clicks of missing audio -- in the middle of a recording made June 20, 1972, three days after the break-in.

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  5. Nov 11, 2011 · Richard Nixon, the disgraced US president at the heart of the Watergate scandal, told a grand jury "I practically blew my stack" when he discovered sections of taped White House conversations had ...

  6. The White House released the subpoenaed tapes on August 5. One tape, later known as the "Smoking Gun" tape, documented the initial stages of the Watergate coverup. On it, Nixon and Haldeman are heard formulating a plan to block investigations by having the CIA falsely claim to the FBI that national security was involved.

  7. Nov 10, 2011 · Nixon shed no light on Watergate tape gap to grand jury ... incredible Watergate break-in" and claims "I practically blew my stack" when he learned that 18 1/2 minutes of a post-Watergate White ...

  8. Nov 21, 1973 · On this day in 1973, J. Fred Buzhardt, a lawyer defending President Richard Nixon in the Watergate case, revealed that a key White House tape had an 18 1/2-minute gap.