Friday, July 19, 2019
The Watergate Scandal :: American History Papers
The Watergate Scandal      The Watergate Scandal was a series of crimes committed by the President and  his staff, who were found to spied on and harassed political opponents,  accepted illegal campaign contributions, and covered up their own misdeeds.  On June 17, 1972, The Washington Post published a small story. In this  story the reporters stated that five men had been arrested breaking into  the headquarters of the Democratic National Committee. The headquarters was  located in a Washington, D.C., building complex called Watergate. These  burglars were carrying enough equipment to wiretap telephones and take  pictures of papers.    The Washington Post had two reporters who researched deep into the story.  There names were Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward, they discovered that one  of the suspects had an address book with the name and phone number of a  White House official who could have been involved in the crime. The  reporters suspected that the break-in had been ordered by other White House  officials.    In a press conference on August in 1972, President Nixon said that nobody  on the White House Staff was involved in the crime. Most of the public  accepted Nixon's word and dropped the questioning. But when the burglars  went to trial four months later, the story changed rapidly from a small  story to a national scandal. It ended only when Richard Nixon was forced  from office.    Watergate was connected to Vietnam, it eventually exposed a long series of  illegal activities in the Nixon administration. Nixon and his staff were  found to have spied on and harassed political opponents, planned  contributions to the campaign, and tried to cover-up their illegal acts.  These crimes that they did were called the Watergate scandal, named after  the building that it happened.    For years Nixon was carrying on the crimes and they were not noticed until  now. 1969 was the really date in which Watergate was really beginning. It  all started when the White House staff made up a list called "enemies list".  Nixon had enemies which include 200 liberal politicians, journalists and  actors. Most of these people made a public speech against the Vietnam war.  Nixon's aides formed a conducts tax audits on these people that he thought  were enemies. He also had agents find out secret information that would  harm them.    Nixon was always worried about govt. Employees revealing secret info. To  the news paper or any sort of press. The presidents agents helped him by  wiretapping phone lines that belonged to reporters in order to find any  revealing some material. Nixon was so worried that during the Cambodia  bombing he had to wiretap his own staff members.    On June in 1971, The New York Times formed work that was published about    					    
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