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    Nixon's long-secret Watergate testimony coming out

    WASHINGTON (AP) — Richard Nixon's grand jury testimony about the Watergate scandal that destroyed his presidency is finally coming to light.

    Four months after a judge ordered the June 1975 records unsealed, the government's Nixon Presidential Library was making them available online and at the California facility Thursday. Historians dared hope that the testimony would form Nixon's most truthful and thorough account of the circumstances that led to his extraordinary resignation 10 months earlier under threat of impeachment.

    "This is Nixon unplugged," said historian Stanley Kutler, a principal figure in the lawsuit that pried open the records. Still, he said, "I have no illusions. Richard Nixon knew how to dodge questions with the best of them. I am sure that he danced, skipped, around a number of things."

    Nixon was interviewed near his California home for 11 hours over two days, when a pardon granted by his successor, Gerald Ford, protected him from prosecution for any past crimes. Despite that shield, he risked consequences for perjury if he lied under oath.

    It was the first time an ex-president had testified before a grand jury and it is rare for any grand jury testimony to be made public. Historians won public access to the transcript over the objections of the Obama administration, which argued in part that too many officials from that era are still alive for secret testimony involving them to be made public.

    The library is also releasing thousands of pages of other Watergate-era documents, several oral histories from that time and 45 minutes of recordings made by Nixon with a dictating machine.

    The recordings include his dictated recollections of an odd episode late one night in May 1970 when Nixon impulsively had the Secret Service take him to the Lincoln Memorial so he could meet anti-war protesters there. He lingered with the astonished crowd and, according to accounts of that time, asked the protesters to "keep it peaceful. Have a good time in Washington, and don't go away bitter."

    On the grand jury testimony, U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth sided with the historians in his ruling in July. He decided that with the investigation long over, Nixon dead for 17 years and most of the surviving Watergate figures having written or talked about the scandal at length, the historical importance of the transcript outweighed arguments for secrecy. "The court is confident that disclosure will greatly benefit the public and its understanding of Watergate without compromising the tradition and objectives of grand jury secrecy," he wrote.

    Even so, certain portions of the testimony that deal with people still living or that are considered still relevant to national security will remain classified for now, possibly to come out after further review, said the National Archives, which operates the Nixon library and 12 other presidential libraries.

    One of the topics covered with Nixon in the grand jury probe was the famous 18 ½-minute gap in a tape recording of a June 20, 1972, meeting between the president and his chief of staff, H.R. Haldeman. The meeting came three days after the break-in at Democratic Party headquarters at the Watergate complex by burglars linked to Nixon's re-election committee.

    The questions of what Nixon knew and when were at the core of the investigation of the Watergate cover-up that ultimately implicated the president and brought him down.

    Kutler expressed doubt Wednesday that people will learn much more about Watergate from the new records. "The grand jury after that testimony had a chance to sit and indict but they did not," he said, "so I don't expect it to be that important." But he said the opening of grand jury records is a milestone by itself, "another precedent for opening up secretiveness in public life."

    How do you feel about this article?

     
    • Murphy  •  6 months ago
      "Richard Nixon knew how to dodge questions with the best of them. I am sure that he danced, skipped, around a number of things."

      Sounds like a generic description of every politician that ever lived, is living, or will live.
      • KitKat 6 months ago
        Actually, if you look at Nixon's background, you'll find that he was highly intelligent. More intelligent that the current idiots running us into the ground (by that I mean politicians from either party). So whatever dancing and dodging he did is bound to be more sophisticated than what's currently going on.
    • Molly  •  Spokane, United States  •  6 months ago
      OMG! Are people really so quick to point fingers and stand in judgment? "Our current president is so bad and has broken about every law in government" PLEASE! Any way to get the heat off of the Bush years........Lets talk about 911 and Iraq! We are in the mess we are in because of all the Bush years.....both of them! So.......what did happen to ALL the missing gold from the World Bank after 911......Hmmmm.......Right.......No one seems to know!
      • Cheez 6 months ago
        Name one.
      • Squirrelly 6 months ago
        Illegal wire tapping of u.s. citizens phones.
        The vice president receiving a pay check from a major defense contractor long after he is in office.
        Said contractor installing sub-par wiring on military barracks overseas that results in the deaths of several troops.
        Said contractor charging 150% the going price for fuel when they are issued a no-bid contract to supply the military.
        Said contractor landing many no-bid contracts for everything from schools to hospitals, then failing to finish most of them.
        The government air-lifting bundles of money totaling billions, with no attempt to track who got what or where it went.
        A mysterious fire in the v.p.s office shortly before leaving office.
        And I am still waiting to see W's discharge papers from the 'champagne squadron'.
        The LONG form, thank you.
      • Lakes Lady 6 months ago
        Your statements are about as idiotic as they come. The laws broken were from Bush/Cheney and of course Nixon was the top GOP crook. But you can't cite specifics so get a grip. And keep in mind that CONGRESS is responsible for most problems regardless of who is president.
    • Bellevue Local  •  6 months ago
      Nixon would be a RINO to the current GOP and Teabaggers.
    • The Major  •  Jacksonville, United States  •  6 months ago
      What is wrong with us knowing all the facts, about the public conduct of government folk?
      • Kevin P 6 months ago
        Lets start with the current Administration. Exactly where is Obama's massive campaign fund going? Has a penny of it gone to the OWs movement or the women accuing Cain?
      • CoolWisdomPrevails 6 months ago
        In theory, the people should know what the government is doing in a
        democracy. Our founders would be astonished to find how huge and how
        secretive our government has become.
      • C 6 months ago
        Embarrassment, and possibly legal ramifications? The politicians know our country's so big, and there are too many people who don't care, that they can pretty much do what they want. As long as we have our football on Sunday and enough for our own little world, they know we won't make too much of a fuss.
    • Tatiana  •  Warsaw, Poland  •  6 months ago
      And in 30-40 years we'll find out the truth about the current leaders, when they're dead and don't care. That's democracy.
      • John 6 months ago
        Tatiana, You will never find the truth about the current leaders, they are Democrats and are protected by the media.
      • The voice of reason 6 months ago
        And just what hidden truth do you think you do not know already about Obama? Read his books! The man is a racist who hates America and what it stands for! Not my words, but his if you believe what he writes!
      • A Yahoo! User 6 months ago
        Tatiana - In time, we will. Technology continues to gain momentum.
    • Flachlander  •  6 months ago
      I trust our government as far as I can throw a hundred pound anvil--and that ain't far! In my opinion, they're all crooks, all of them, no matter what party they come from. I think we should become the Loosely Affiliated States Of America, hold our politicians under constant scrutiny, and throw them out of office by public referendum if they are dishonest or renege on campaign promises. Washington may have been accessible when American civilization had not advanced that far west of the Alleganies, but today it is about as remote as the planet Pluto from the real needs and desires of ordinary Americans.
      • C 6 months ago
        Agree--we are too big a country to be governed by 545 people, 535 of which are heavily influenced by lobbyists.
      • Americanfirst 6 months ago
        Flachlander we haven't had an honest government or politician since Jefferson.
        They are all owned by their big campaign donors, banks, wall street and big oil.
      • Tim 6 months ago
        Uh, the original intent of the founding fathers was that the states were supposed to have more control and power. Lincoln changed all that during the Civil War. I like your idea, since that was a founding principle of hte coutnry.
    • William  •  6 months ago
      "Historians won public access to the transcript over the objections of the Obama administration, which argued in part that too many officials from that era are still alive for secret testimony involving them to be made public" A HUGE problem with the government right here folks no different than catus thorn stuck in our #$%$ and the government only removing the part that shows. Americans got to reform this government.
    • Ed  •  Dallas, United States  •  6 months ago
      The main thing about this release is that it takes years after everyone is dead that was envolved before the taxpayers can see the truth. The gov. hiding everything they do makes everyone wonder whats going on. This way the gov. doesnt have to answer to us. Of course we are serving our politicians not them serving us like it is suppose to be.
    • John  •  6 months ago
      It's a good thing it has been years since this guy was president. Being republican, all we would hear from republicans posting here is:
      It's the liberal media.
      It's all a lie.
      Anyone questioning him should leave the USA.
      Etc., etc.
    • Dave T  •  Washington, United States  •  6 months ago
      Money bought and paid for all the corruption and we're still paying for it?
    • remington  •  Wallingford, United States  •  6 months ago
      JFK was an "inside the beltway" assassination....we will never find out the truth.
    • terrius  •  6 months ago
      Watergate was small compared to the shenanigans that go on today from both parties.
    • old vet  •  Fort Lauderdale, United States  •  6 months ago
      Watergate and Nixon was the biggest story in the world for years . I was in college then fresh home from the war and saw every single minute of the hearings on watergate and folllowed every detail of the story . It was fascinating beyond belief that it all actually happened . It's old news now but back then it was earth shattering .
      I believe that war was the beginning of the end of the old american culture . It's hard to explain to those born later but we once had an almost universal unquestionable respect for authority in general and the government most of all . hard to believe but true .
    • Doug J  •  Baltimore, United States  •  6 months ago
      " Let me make this perfectly clear !. I am not a crook "
    • OldTex  •  6 months ago
      It must be getting very warm in the white house....barry Holder and company are pulling out all the stops to fade the heat away from their corrupt administration
    • Kenneth  •  6 months ago
      we need to know everything about polotitians as it happens not 30 years from now, if we knew everything as it happens maybe we could get these guys out or keep them in office, if we could throw all the crooked ones out then maybe the next ones would think twice before they do anything to hurt us. if someone was working for me aqnd was ruining my company id wanna stop them and fire them, same should go for government, THEY ARE SUPPOSE TO WORK FOR US, not hide everything form us
    • Carol  •  6 months ago
      What an enigmatic man! Did so many outstanding progressive things such as establishing the Environmental Protection Agency...Title IX giving Women's sports in schools and colleges equality with Men's sports...initiated Revenue Sharing giving local governments funding and decision making on spending on community development and other areas...was the greatest proponent of self-determination and sovereignty for American Indian Communities and followed through..not just rhetorical commitment...and then there were the lies and bombings and destruction in Southeast Asia...and finishing off with Watergate...Should be given credit where credit is due...
    • Stephen  •  6 months ago
      At least in Nixon's day, he felt compelled to say "I'm not a crook!" Today's politicians no longer understand that concept.
    • Shlumgullya  •  6 months ago
      ".........late one night in May 1970 when Nixon impulsively had the Secret Service take him to the Lincoln Memorial so he could meet anti-war protesters there. He lingered with the astonished crowd and, according to accounts of that time, asked the protesters to "keep it peaceful. Have a good time in Washington, and don't go away bitter........"

      WOW ! This guy is STILL full of surprises.
    • Big Voice  •  6 months ago
      We can't get the White House to even release e-mails about Solyndra. The ones that are coming out, show much more information at the White House level than they want to admit.
      This is the one we need information about today.

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