Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Aug 14, 2013 · First, he asserts that U.S. District Judge John Sirica, one of the generally accepted heroes of the Watergate story, acted in an unprofessional and unethical manner by meeting with Watergate ...

  2. May 30, 2017 · The trial for the Watergate break-in begins. Jan. 30, 1973 G. Gordon Liddy, a former Nixon aide, and James McCord, a one-time Nixon aide and former CIA operative, are convicted for their role in ...

  3. Nov 4, 2023 · The Watergate cases are further divided into three groups: cases, correspondence, and miscellaneous. Bulking largest, the Watergate cases provide extensive documentation of the court proceedings relating to the break-in at the Democratic National Committee headquarters in the Watergate apartment complex (United States v.

  4. When Judge John Sirica gaveled the trial of the Watergate seven to order on January 8, 1973, federal investigators had already discovered a covert slush fund used to underwrite nefarious activities against Democrats. The money and the men on trial could be linked to the Committee to Re-elect the President (CRP) at whose head sat the former ...

  5. Jul 13, 2023 · The 18-and-a-half-minute gap in the Watergate tapes continues to be a captivating enigma in American political history. Whether the erasure was accidental or intentional, the missing portion represents a tantalizing void where crucial secrets and potentially incriminating evidence may have been concealed. The Watergate tapes and their erasures ...

  6. Watergate Trial Tapes. Transcripts and audio related to White House Tapes played in court as part of Watergate trials. Watergate Special Prosecution Force. Transcripts created by the Special Prosecutor during the course of the investigation. Prisoner of War/Missing in Action Transcripts. Transcripts created as part of a special project.

  7. Aug 9, 2013 · Due process of law requires a trial judge who is both fair and impartial. Central to this tenet is the idea that judges cannot meet in private with just one side (“ex parte”) and without ...