Here’s to a working stiff just doing his job. This one made/changed
history. In the early morning of
June 17, 1972 Frank Wills, a $2 an
hour rent-a-cop security guard at
the Washington D.C. Watergate office
building noticed that something was amiss.
While making his rounds Wills noticed tape on a door between a basement
stairwell and the parking garage.
He removed the tape and went on his way.
One of five men inside the building discovered that the tape, which was used to hold back the latch bolt so the door could be opened, was missing. He replaced
the tape. On his next round, around 1:55 AM, Wills saw that the tape had been
replaced. He immediately called D.C. Police who arrested five men wearing surgical gloves and in possession
of electronic monitoring equipment in the offices of the Democratic National Committee (DNC).
The five were James
W. McCord, a former FBI and CIA agent and a security
coordinator for the Republican
National Committee (RNC) and the
Committee for the Re-election of the
President (CREEP); Bernard L. Barker a veteran of the CIA Bay of Pigs invasion of
Cuba and a Miami real estate broker; Frank A. Sturgis, a Miami associate of Barker with connections
to the CIA and Cuban exile community; Eugenio R. Martinez, an
employee of Baker’s real estate firm and an anti-Castro exile; and
another Cuban, locksmith Virgilio R. Gonzales.
Mug shots of the Watergate burglars.
The men were charged with attempted burglary and attempted
interception of telephone and other communications. The incident merited a brief mention on network news programs that evening and short articles buried deep in the pages of most newspapers outside of Washington.
Despite the short
notice of the press, the police
investigation began unwinding a wider
conspiracy pretty quickly. A search of the suspects’ rooms turned up thousands
of dollars in cash. A background check quickly tied McCord to Attorney General John Mitchell, Chairman of President Richard Nixon’s re-election committee.
Mitchell denied involvement and McCord was fired from his RNC and CREEP
positions. On August 1 a $25,000 check made out to CREEP was
found to have been deposited in one
of the burglars’ personal account. Shortly after that another $89,000 in individual donations were found to have
been moved through an account of a company controlled by Barker.
CREEP Treasurer Hugh Sloan told authorities
that he was directed
by Committee Deputy Director Jeb
Magruder and Finance Director
Maurice Stans to turn the checks over to G. Gordon Liddy, a former FBI
agent, prosecutor, and White House aide who had been selected
by Mitchell to run the operational end
of the Plumbers Unit—a secret White House operation to control leaks, conduct intelligence operations, surveillance of political enemies, and play “dirty tricks” on opponents.
Liddy was soon tied to H. Howard
Hunt, the former author of pot-boilers and thrillers
who was a high level undercover agent
and “super spook” for the CIA before
retiring. Hunt had deep
connections with the Cuban exile community and recruited the Cubans to Liddy’s operations.
The first black bag job of the
Plumbers was the botched break-in of
Daniel Ellsberg’s psychiatrist in search of dirt on the man who leaked the Pentagon Papers.
On September 15th a Federal Grand
Jury indicted Liddy, Hunt, and
the five burglars.
On December 8, 1972 Hunt’s wife Dorothy was among those killed in the crash of a United Air Lines jetliner
near Chicago’s Midway Airport. $10,000 in cash was found in her purse.
All were convicted on January
30, 1973 and sentenced to
prison.
Meanwhile investigations by Congress and by the press slowly connected the event to a wider conspiracy that led, ultimately to Richard Nixon’s doorstep. That Byzantine tale is too complex to summarize here, but you know how it ended—lots of suits in prison and a disgraced President waving
farewell to power from the door of a helicopter.
As for Wills, he had his of 15
minutes fame. He soon resigned from the security company unhappy that his service was not rewarded with a raise or even vacation time. Unable to
find steady work, he returned to his
hometown in South Carolina to care for his ailing mother. They lived in poverty. In 1983 he was convicted of shoplifting a pair of sneakers and
sentenced to a year in
prison.
He died penniless of a brain
tumor in 2000 at the age of 52. Bob Woodward one of the investigative reporters who doggedly followed the story
looked back at Wills and said. “He’s the only one in Watergate who did his job
perfectly.”
Great report Murf! Thank you.
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