"A key piece of Watergate history that remains shrouded in secrecy -- former President Richard Nixon's grand jury testimony of 1975 -- should be made public, historical experts have told a court," the press release from Public Citizen stated earlier this week. Public Citizen's Litigation Group, representing a number of prominent American historians and archivists, is seeking this information under a developing body of law that has led to the release of historically-important information, freeing the material from the bonds of traditional grand-jury secrecy when its significance outweighs the reasons for secrecy.It seems that the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia has been requested, by what Dean calls a "Who's Who" of Nixon historians, to order the release of the transcript of Nixon's two-day grand jury testimony in 1975. That's a lot of testimony, and none of it has been seen.
Says Dean about what he expects to find, should the release be ordered:
While the content of the testimony is not known precisely, news reports from that time suggested the general areas explored: what was said during the infamous 18.5 minute gap in the first recorded conversation Nixon had with his chief of staff following the arrests at the Watergate and whether Nixon was involved in erasing the material; Nixon's role, if any, in the alterations of the White House transcripts of the recorded conversations that were submitted to the House Judiciary Committee during its impeachment inquiry; the extent to which Nixon used the IRS to harass his political enemies; and the $100,000 campaign contribution from Howard Hughes to Nixon's friend Bebe Rebozo, which was never received by the campaign, but purportedly instead went to Nixon's brothers and his secretary Rose Mary Woods.As Dean points out, Nixon's key role in the nation's history warrants this release, as does the age of the testimony itself. Let's hope the executive branch freaks don't win this one. It's bad to have a king.
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