FIGURES IN THE EVENTS OF 1973–1974

Robert Abplanalp: New York businessman and friend of President Nixon.

Spiro T. Agnew: Vice-President of the United States

Howard Baker (Republican of Tennessee): vice-chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Presidential Campaign Activities

Bernard L. Barker: participant in the break-ins at the Watergate and the office of Daniel Ellsberg’s psychiatrist

Richard Ben-Veniste: Assistant Special Prosecutor

Robert H. Bork: U.S. Solicitor General, and later Acting Attorney General of the United States

Jack Brooks (Democrat of Texas): member of the House Judiciary Committee

Patrick J. Buchanan: special assistant to the President (speechwriter)

Stephen B. Bull: White House staff assistant

Dean Burch: counsellor to the President

Warren E. Burger: Chief Justice of the United States

M. Caldwell Butler (Republican of Virginia): member of the House Judiciary Committee

Alexander P. Butterfield: deputy assistant to the President, and later administrator, Federal Aviation Administration

J. Fred Buzhardt, Jr.: special counsel to the President

John J. Caulfield: private investigator retained by the White House

Dwight L. Chapin: deputy assistant to the President

Ken W. Clawson: deputy director, and later director of White House Office of Communications

William S. Cohen (Republican of Maine): member of the House Judiciary Committee

Charles W. Colson: special counsel to the President

John B. Connally: former Democratic governor of Texas, chairman of Democrats for Nixon, Secretary of the Treasury and then special adviser to the President

John Conyers, Jr. (Democrat of Michigan): member of the House Judiciary Committee

Archibald Cox: Special Prosecutor

George E. Danielson (Democrat of California): member of the House Judiciary Committee

John W. Dean, III: counsel to the President

David W. Dennis (Republican of Indiana): member of the House Judiciary Committee

Felipe de Diego: participant in the break-in of Daniel Ellsberg’s psychiatrist’s office

John M. Doar: special counsel, House Judiciary Committee impeachment inquiry

Harold D. Donohue (Democrat of Massachusetts): member of the House Judiciary Committee

Robert F. Drinan (Democrat of Massachusetts): member of the House Judiciary Committee

Don Edwards (Democrat of California): member of the House Judiciary Committee

John D. Ehrlichman: assistant to the President for domestic affairs

Joshua Eilberg (Democrat of Pennsylvania): member of the House Judiciary Committee

Sam J. Ervin, Jr. (Democrat of North Carolina): chairman, Senate Select Committee on Presidential Campaign Activities

Hamilton Fish, Jr. (Republican of New York): member of the House Judiciary Committee

Walter Flowers (Democrat of Alabama): member of the House Judiciary Committee

Gerald R. Ford (Republican of Michigan): House Minority Leader, and later Vice-President of the Unites States

Harold V. Froehlich (Republican of Wisconsin): member of the House Judiciary Committee

Leonard Garment: special consultant to the President, and later assistant to the President

Gerhard A. Gesell: judge, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia

L. Patrick Gray, III: acting F.B.I. director

General Alexander M. Haig, Jr.: White House chief of staff

H. R. (Bob) Haldeman: White House chief of staff

Bryce N. Harlow: counsellor to the President

Richard Helms: C.I.A. director, and later ambassador to Iran

Lawrence J. Hogan (Republican of Maryland): member of the House Judiciary Committee

Elizabeth Holtzman (Democrat of New York): member of the House Judiciary Committee

William L. Hungate (Democrat of Missouri): member of the House Judiciary Committee

E. Howard Hunt, Jr.: consultant to the White House, and participant in the break-ins at the Watergate and the office of Daniel Ellsberg’s psychiatrist

Tom Charles Huston: associate counsel to the President

Edward Hutchinson (Republican of Michigan): member of the House Judiciary Committee

Leon Jaworski: Special Prosecutor

Albert E. Jenner, Jr.: minority counsel, House Judiciary Committee impeachment inquiry

Barbara C. Jordan (Democrat of Texas): member of the House Judiciary Committee

Herbert W. Kalmbach: the President’s personal attorney and associate chairman of the Finance Committee to Re-Elect the President

Robert W. Kastenmeier (Democrat of Wisconsin): member of the House Judiciary Committee

Henry A. Kissinger: Secretary of State and National Security Adviser to the President

Richard G. Kleindienst: Attorney General of the United States

Rabbi Baruch Korff: chairman, National Citizens Committee for Fairness to the Presidency

Egil Krogh, Jr.: deputy assistant to the President for domestic affairs, and co-director of the Social Investigations Unit (the “Plumbers”)

Philip Lacovara: counsel to the Special Prosecutor

Melvin R. Laird: Secretary of Defense, and later counsellor to the President for domestic affairs

Frederick C. LaRue: special counsel to the President, and later special assistant to the Committee for the Re-Election of the President

Delbert L. Latta (Republican of Ohio): member of the House Judiciary Committee

G. Gordon Liddy: White House staff assistant and later counsel to the Finance Committee for the Re-Election of the President, and participant in the break-ins at the Watergate and the office of Daniel Ellsberg’s psychiatrist.

Trent Lott (Republican of Mississippi): member of the House Judiciary Committee

Jeb Stuart Magruder: deputy director, Committee for the Re-Election of the President

James R. Mann (Democrat of South Carolina): member of the House Judiciary Committee

Joseph J. Maraziti (Republican of New Jersey): member of the House Judiciary Committee

Robert C. Mardian: Assistant Attorney General in charge of the Internal Security Division of the Justice Department, and later political coordinator for the Committee for the Re-Election of the President

Eugenio R. Martinez: participant in the break-ins at the Watergate and the office of Daniel Ellsberg’s psychiatrist

Wiley Mayne (Republican of Iowa): member of the House Judiciary Committee

Robert McClory (Republican of Illinois): member of the House Judiciary Committee

James W. McCord, Jr.: security coördinator for the Committee for the Re-Election of the President, and participant in the break-ins at the Watergate and the office of Daniel Ellsberg’s psychiatrist

George Meany: President, A.F.L.-C.I.O.

William H. Merrill: Associate Special Prosecutor

Edward Mezvinsky (Democrat of Iowa): member of the House Judiciary Committee

John N. Mitchell: Attorney General of the United States, and later chairman of the Committee for the Re-Election of the President

Rev. Sun Myung Moon: Korean evangelist and supporter of President Nixon

Carlos J. Moorhead (Republican of California): member of the House Judiciary Committee

Richard M. Nixon: President of the United States

Wayne Owens (Democrat of Utah): member of the House Judiciary Committee

Kenneth W. Parkinson: attorney for the Committee for the Re-Election of the President

Henry E. Petersen: Assistant Attorney General in charge of the Criminal Division of the Justice Department

Herbert L. Porter: White House staff assistant, and later scheduling director, Committee for the Re-Election of the President

Tom Railsback (Republican of Illinois): member of the House Judiciary Committee

Charles B. Rangel (Democrat of New York): member of the House Judiciary Committee

Charles G. (Bebe) Rebozo: Miami banker and friend of President Nixon

Elliot L. Richardson: Attorney General of the United States

Peter W. Rodino, Jr. (Democrat of New Jersey): chairman of the House Judiciary Committee

William D. Ruckelshaus: Deputy Attorney General

James D. St. Clair: special counsel to the President

Charles W. Sandman, Jr. (Republican of New Jersey): member of the House Judiciary Committee

Paul S. Sarbanes (Democrat of Maryland): member of the House Judiciary Committee

William B. Saxbe: Attorney General of the United States

James R. Schlesinger: Secretary of Defense

Donald H. Segretti: attorney employed by the President’s aides to engage in political tricks

John F. Seiberling (Democrat of Ohio): member of the House Judiciary Committee

John J. Sirica: judge, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia

Henry P. Smith, III (Republican of New York): member of the House Judiciary Committee

Maurice H. Stans: Secretary of Commerce, and later chairman of the Finance Committee for the Re-Election of the President

Gordon C. Strachan: White House staff assistant (aide to H. R. Haldeman)

Ray Thornton (Democrat of Arkansas): member of the House Judiciary Committee

Anthony Ulasewicz: private investigator retained by the White House

Robert L. Vesco: financier

Jill Wine Volner: Assistant Special Prosecutor

Jerome R. Waldie (Democrat of California): member of the House Judiciary Committee

Lieutenant-General Vernon A. Walters: C.I.A. deputy director

Gerald L. Warren: deputy press secretary to the President

Charles E. Wiggins (Republican of California): member of the House Judiciary Committee

Rose Mary Woods: the President’s personal secretary

Charles Alan Wright: professor, University of Texas Law School, and special consultant to the counsel to the President

David R. Young, Jr.: aide to Henry Kissinger on the National Security Council, and later co-director of the Special Investigations Unit (the “Plumbers”)

Ronald L. Ziegler: press secretary to the President