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| Boilerpipe Text | By:
Alice Popovici
Find out what happened to some of the key players in the historical scandal that brought down a U.S. president.
Getty Images
Published: June 15, 2012
Last Updated: May 28, 2025
On June 17, 1972, five burglars were arrested during a break-in at the Democratic National Committee headquarters in the Watergate office complex in Washington, D.C. According to
news reports
of the time, the men wore surgical gloves, carried a walkie-talkie and short-wave police scanner, 40 rolls of unexposed film and $2,300 in crisp $100 bills. They also possessed two sophisticated listening devices, and had removed several ceiling panels in the office. The men emerged from the room with their hands up.
While there was no immediate explanation of their motives, the crime turned out to be the tip of a very dirty icebergâone that would barrel through the White House over the next two years and ultimately topple the presidency of Richard M. Nixon. Below, a look at some of the key players in the
Watergate scandal
and how their lives unfolded in the shadow of a national disgrace. Many wrote books and a few found religion.
Richard Nixon's Paranoia Leads to Watergate Scandal
Richard Nixon's personality and character issues may have led to his involvement in the Watergate scandal.
2:41m watch
THE BURGLARS
James McCord
HIS ROLE:
A former CIA officer and FBI agent, McCord was one of the five burglars arrested at the
Watergate
complex, and the â
chief wiretapper
â of the operation. During the burglary, McCord, then security director of the Committee to Reelect the President (or CREEP),
left
a piece of tape on the latch of a stairwell door, inadvertently alerting a
security guard
to the burglary in progress.
THE UPSHOT:
McCord was
convicted
on charges of conspiracy, burglary and wiretapping, but only served four months of his original sentence of one to five years. His sentence was reduced after he implicated White House officials in the cover-up. âThere was political pressure applied to the defendants to plead guilty and remain silent,â McCord
stated
in the March 19, 1973 letter to Judge John Sirica, who presided over the Watergate trials. âPerjury occurred during the trial in matters highly material to the very structure, orientation and impact of the governmentâs case, and to the motivation and intent of the defendants.â
Locksmith Virgilio Gonzalez sitting in his back of van workshop 20 years after his role as the lock-picking Watergate burglar.Â
Acey Harper/The LIFE Images Collection/Getty Images
Locksmith Virgilio Gonzalez sitting in his back of van workshop 20 years after his role as the lock-picking Watergate burglar.Â
Acey Harper/The LIFE Images Collection/Getty Images
Virgilio Gonzalez
HIS ROLE:
A Cuban refugee and locksmith by trade, Gonzalez was one of the five burglars arrested at the Watergate complex on June 17, 1972. He had been recruited in Miami by E. Howard Hunt, who had played a key role in the CIAâs disastrous Bay of Pigs invasion.
THE UPSHOT:
Gonzalez, an anti-Fidel Castro activist, insisted during his trial that he had been told the Watergate operation would advance Cuban liberation. âI keep feeling about my country and the way people suffer over there,â Gonzalez
told
Judge John Sirica. âThat is the only reason I did my cooperation in that situation.â He spent about a year in prison.
POST-SCANDAL:
After Watergate, Gonzalez returned to Miami and his career as a locksmith. In 1977, he and three other men known as the âfoot soldiersâ of WatergateâBernard L. Barker, Eugenio MartĂnez and Frank Sturgisâ
received
$200,000 from Richard Nixonâs 1972 campaign fund. The payment served as settlement for the four menâs civil suit, in which they claimed they had been tricked into participating in the Watergate burglary. He died in 2021 at age 98.
THE ORGANIZERS
E. Howard Hunt
G. Gordon Liddy at the Watergate Trial in 1973 (left) and speaking on a segment of Fox News in 2005.
Bettmann Archive/Getty Images & Freddie Lee/FOX News/Getty Images
G. Gordon Liddy at the Watergate Trial in 1973 (left) and speaking on a segment of Fox News in 2005.
Bettmann Archive/Getty Images & Freddie Lee/FOX News/Getty Images
G. Gordon Liddy
HIS ROLE:
Liddy, a former FBI agent who served as general counsel for the Committee to Re-elect the Presidentâa campaign that eventually led to the unraveling of the Nixon administrationâwas responsible for planning and supervising the Watergate break-in. According to testimony heard in the trial, he
received
about $332,000 in campaign funds, which he used to carry out a number of intelligence-gathering operations.
THE UPSHOT:
He was convicted of conspiracy, burglary and bugging the Democratic National Committee headquarters, and spent four and a half years in prison.
POST-SCANDAL
: After his release in 1977, Liddy remained in the Washington, D.C. area and
rebranded
himself as a conservative talk-show host and military and weapons expert. He also worked as an actor, appearing on shows such as âMiami Vice.â In his 1980 memoir,
Will
,
he talks about conquering his fears by subjecting himself to gruesome experiments in which he eats rat meat and burns his own flesh. He retired from the airwaves in 2012,
saying
he wanted to spend more time with his grandchildren. He died on March 30, 2021, at age 90.
Charles âChuckâ Colson
Donald Segretti
HIS ROLE:
A former military prosecutor, Segretti was an operative for the Committee to Re-elect the President, known as the architect behind Nixonâs campaign of political
sabotage
against Democratic opponents. In one such smear campaign, he created an anonymous letter falsely claiming that former senator Henry M. "Scoop" Jackson had fathered an illegitimate child with a teenager.
THE WHITE HOUSE INSIDERS
John Ehrlichman
HIS ROLE
: Ehrlichman, Nixonâs advisor for domestic affairs, also served as head of the âPlumbers.â He attempted to cover up the botched Watergate break-in.
Related Stories
John Dean testifying at the Senate hearings on the Watergate break-ins (left) and testifies before the Senate Judiciary Committee regarding NSA wire-tapping in 2006.
Gjon Mili/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images & Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
John Dean testifying at the Senate hearings on the Watergate break-ins (left) and testifies before the Senate Judiciary Committee regarding NSA wire-tapping in 2006.
Gjon Mili/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images & Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
John Dean
HIS ROLE:
Serving as White House counsel from 1970 to 1973, Dean helped cover up the Nixon administrationâs involvement in the Watergate break-in and illegal intelligence-gathering. But as the investigation was closing in, he had
warned
fellow staffers, âThe jig is up. Itâs over,â and reportedly said to Nixon, âWe have a cancer within, close to, the presidency, that is growing.â Nixon fired him shortly thereafter.
THE UPSHOT:
Dean became one of the first administration officials to
reveal
the cover-up,
implicating Nixon
and other officials during his testimony before the Senate Watergate Committee in June 1973. He was charged with obstruction of justice and served four months in prison.
POST-SCANDAL:
After his release, Dean moved to California and reinvented himself as an investment banker. He wrote in his 1976 Watergate memoir,
Blind Ambition
: âI donât want to be known as just the snitch of Watergate,â following up that book in 1983 with a second memoir titled,
Lost Honor
. "I've been inside a cover-up,â he
told
The Los Angeles Times
in 2017. âI know why we could make certain things go away and other things not go away."
John Mitchell
HIS ROLE:
Once
described
as âthe most powerful man in the Cabinet,â the notoriously gruff and fiercely loyal Mitchell was Nixonâs attorney general before he resigned in 1972 to become director of the Committee to Re-elect the President. According to testimony in the Watergate hearings, Mitchell approved the break-in and bugging of the Democratic National Committee headquarters.
Jeb Stuart Magruder testifying at the Watergate hearings (left) and in 2003 at the PBS Televisions Critics Association press tour.
Gjon Mili/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images & Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images
Jeb Stuart Magruder testifying at the Watergate hearings (left) and in 2003 at the PBS Televisions Critics Association press tour.
Gjon Mili/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images & Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images
Jeb Stuart Magruder
HIS ROLE:
A White House communications adviser, Magruder played a key role in planning the Watergate break-in, and later covering it up.
THE UPSHOT:
Convicted
of perjury, Magruder spent seven months in prison. At his sentencing he said it is difficult to deal with the âdisappointment I see in the eyes of my friends, the confusion I see in the eyes of my children, the heartbreak I see in the eyes of my wife and, probably more difficult, the contempt I see in the eyes of others.â
POST-SCANDAL:
After his release in 1976, Magruder left politics and earned a masterâs degree in divinity from Princeton Theological Seminary, which led to leadership roles at churches in Ohio, then Kentucky. Though he wrote two books in the years following the scandalâ
An American Life: One Manâs Road to Watergate
and
From Power to Peace
âhe did not
reveal
until 2003 that he had personally heard Nixon authorize the Watergate break-in. For a time, he led an Ohio commission on ethics, though he
reflected
, âIâm aware that there might be some irony associated with that.â He died in 2014, in Danbury, Connecticut.
Alexander Butterfield testifying during the Watergate hearings (left) and in Washington, D.C. 2015.
Steve Northup/The LIFE Images Collection/Getty Images & Â Nikki Kahn/The Washington Post/Getty Images
Alexander Butterfield testifying during the Watergate hearings (left) and in Washington, D.C. 2015.
Steve Northup/The LIFE Images Collection/Getty Images & Â Nikki Kahn/The Washington Post/Getty Images
Alexander Butterfield
HIS ROLE:
As deputy White House chief of staff to President Nixon from 1969 to 1973, Butterfield controlled the secret taping system Nixon had installed in the Oval Office. He revealed the existence of the tapes when he was questioned by the Senate Watergate Committee, effectively sealing Nixonâs fate.
THE UPSHOT:
Ironically, Butterfield
liked
Nixonâbut he did not want to lie to investigators. âI was facing a true dilemma: I wanted very much to respect Nixonâs wishes and at the same time to be cooperative and forthright with the congressional investigators,â he later
said
. âThe wording of their questions meant everything to me. And when Don Sanders, the deputy minority counselâŚasked the $64,000 question, clearly and directly, I felt I had no choice but to respond in like manner.â With Nixonâs resignation, Butterfield was also dismissed from his post as administrator of the Federal Aviation Administrationâto which heâd been appointed by the president.
HIS ROLE:
Assigned in May of 1973 as special prosecutor to investigate the Watergate scandal, Archibald Cox was
fired
from his post by President Nixon just five months later in what became known as the âSaturday Night Massacreââa White House shake-up that led to the resignation of two other Justice Department staffers. Cox was fired after insisting President Nixon give him unrestricted access to tapes of conversations leading up to the break-in at the Democratic National Committee Headquarters.
THE UPSHOT:
Following his dismissal, Cox said in a statement: "Whether ours shall continue to be a government of laws and not of men is now for Congress and ultimately the American people." Nixonâs firing of Cox
fueled
the Watergate investigation, leading to a public backlash against Nixon and Congressional resolutions calling for his impeachment.
HIS ROLE:
Bork, a conservative judge, solicitor general and acting attorney general in the Nixon administration, carried out President Nixonâs orders to fire special counsel Archibald Cox, who had subpoenaed conversations taped in the Oval Office. Coxâs dismissal, on Oct. 1973, became known as the âSaturday Night Massacre.â
THE UPSHOT:
Despite Borkâs firing of Cox, the Supreme Court eventually ordered Nixon to turn over the tapes.
HIS ROLE:
Known for decades only as âDeep Throat,â the mysterious government source who helped
Washington Post
reporters Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward untangle the Watergate conspiracy, Mark Felt revealed his identity in 2005. A senior FBI official during the Watergate years, Mark Felt met from time to time with Woodwardâalways in deserted parking garages, and always taking extreme precautions to ensure they had not been followedâproviding clues that guided the journalistâs reporting. The Nixon White House was âunderhanded and unknowable,â he once
told
Woodward.
THE UPSHOT:
With the 1974 release of Woodward and Bernsteinâs book about Watergate,
All the Presidentâs Men
, followed by the movie by the same name, Felt became the most famous anonymous source in journalism. But he was unhappy with the nickname he earned in the
Washington Post
newsroom, a combination of âdeep backgroundâ and the titled of a pornographic film released in 1972.
HIS ROLE
: As chairman of the Senate Watergate committee that investigated the affair in
televised hearings
, Ervin became a national hero for serving as a moral compass. The purpose of the hearings, he
said
at the outset, was to "probe into assertions that the very system has been subverted." The hearings showcased Ervinâs folksy demeanor and direct speech. When criticized for being too harsh on the witnesses, he countered, "I'm just an old country lawyer, and I don't know the finer ways to do it. I just have to do it my way."
THE UPSHOT
: More than a year after the hearings began, Nixon became the first U.S. president to
resign
from office. Ervin retired four months later.
THE UPSHOT:
Though Bakerâs initial goal was to prove the accusations against Nixon were unfounded, testimony he heard and evidence he reviewed during the hearings
changed
his views. As he told
The Associated Press
, âit began to dawn on me that there was more to it than I thought, and more to it than I liked.â
Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein in 1973 and in 2005
Bettmann Archive/Getty Images & Win McNamee/Getty Images
Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein in 1973 and in 2005
Bettmann Archive/Getty Images & Win McNamee/Getty Images
Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein
THEIR ROLE:
Young reporters at
The Washington Post
, Woodward and Bernstein (or âWoodsteinâ as they were known in the newsroom) teamed up to cover the burglary at the Watergate complex, and the ensuing scandal. Piecing together the story from dozens of sources, many of them anonymous, they leaned primarily on tips from a mysterious government operative nicknamed âDeep Throat,â who revealed himself in 2005 as FBI agent Mark Felt.
THE UPSHOT:
Woodward and Bernsteinâs coverage of Watergate earned the
Post
a Pulitzer Prize, and cemented the reportersâ reputations.
POST-SCANDAL:
Woodward, who still works at
The Washington Post
and has received numerous journalism awards, went on to write more than a dozen books, many of them on the legacy of Watergate and on U.S. presidentsâincluding a three-book exposĂŠ on the Trump administration:Â
Fear
,
Rage
and
Peril
.
THE UPSHOT:
The
Post
âs relentless reporting on Watergate ultimately led to the resignation of President Richard Nixon. The investigation helped solidify the paperâs reputation for hard-hitting journalism.
POST-SCANDAL:
Bradlee continued to lead the
Post
until his retirement in 1991, overseeing coverage that earned the paper a total of 17 Pulitzer Prizes over the course of his career. Colleagues report that actor Jason Robardsâ onscreen
portrayal
of him as a brash and boisterous newsroom figure, in the 1976 film version of
All the Presidentâs Men
, was spot-on.
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By: Alice Popovici
[1970s](https://www.history.com/topics/1970s)
# Watergate: Who Did What and Where Are They Now?
Find out what happened to some of the key players in the historical scandal that brought down a U.S. president.
[AP Alice Popovici](https://www.history.com/authors/alice-popovici)

Getty Images
Published: June 15, 2012
Last Updated: May 28, 2025
On June 17, 1972, five burglars were arrested during a break-in at the Democratic National Committee headquarters in the Watergate office complex in Washington, D.C. According to [news reports](http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2002/05/31/AR2005111001227.html) of the time, the men wore surgical gloves, carried a walkie-talkie and short-wave police scanner, 40 rolls of unexposed film and \$2,300 in crisp \$100 bills. They also possessed two sophisticated listening devices, and had removed several ceiling panels in the office. The men emerged from the room with their hands up.
While there was no immediate explanation of their motives, the crime turned out to be the tip of a very dirty icebergâone that would barrel through the White House over the next two years and ultimately topple the presidency of Richard M. Nixon. Below, a look at some of the key players in the [Watergate scandal](https://www.history.com/topics/1970s/watergate) and how their lives unfolded in the shadow of a national disgrace. Many wrote books and a few found religion.
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## Richard Nixon's Paranoia Leads to Watergate Scandal
Richard Nixon's personality and character issues may have led to his involvement in the Watergate scandal.
2:41m watch
## THE BURGLARS
### James McCord
**HIS ROLE:** A former CIA officer and FBI agent, McCord was one of the five burglars arrested at the [Watergate](http://www.history.com/topics/watergate) complex, and the â[chief wiretapper](https://www.nytimes.com/1975/04/29/archives/sentence-cut-mccord-may-be-free-in-may.html)â of the operation. During the burglary, McCord, then security director of the Committee to Reelect the President (or CREEP), [left](http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/onpolitics/watergate/james.html) a piece of tape on the latch of a stairwell door, inadvertently alerting a [security guard](https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/retropolis/wp/2017/12/22/the-post-and-the-forgotten-security-guard-who-discovered-the-watergate-break-in/?utm_term=.f5f9b60d8c31) to the burglary in progress.
**THE UPSHOT:** McCord was [convicted](https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/1972-watergate-burglary-piece-tape-astute-night-watchman/story?id=47914192) on charges of conspiracy, burglary and wiretapping, but only served four months of his original sentence of one to five years. His sentence was reduced after he implicated White House officials in the cover-up. âThere was political pressure applied to the defendants to plead guilty and remain silent,â McCord [stated](http://watergate.info/1973/03/19/mccord-letter-to-judge-sirica.html) in the March 19, 1973 letter to Judge John Sirica, who presided over the Watergate trials. âPerjury occurred during the trial in matters highly material to the very structure, orientation and impact of the governmentâs case, and to the motivation and intent of the defendants.â
**POST-SCANDAL:** McCord kept a low profile following his release from prison. In 1974, he published a book about his involvement in Watergate, titled *A Piece of TapeâThe Watergate Story: Fact and Fiction*. He died in 2017 at age 93.
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Locksmith Virgilio Gonzalez sitting in his back of van workshop 20 years after his role as the lock-picking Watergate burglar.
Acey Harper/The LIFE Images Collection/Getty Images

Locksmith Virgilio Gonzalez sitting in his back of van workshop 20 years after his role as the lock-picking Watergate burglar.
Acey Harper/The LIFE Images Collection/Getty Images
### Virgilio Gonzalez
**HIS ROLE:** A Cuban refugee and locksmith by trade, Gonzalez was one of the five burglars arrested at the Watergate complex on June 17, 1972. He had been recruited in Miami by E. Howard Hunt, who had played a key role in the CIAâs disastrous Bay of Pigs invasion.
**THE UPSHOT:** Gonzalez, an anti-Fidel Castro activist, insisted during his trial that he had been told the Watergate operation would advance Cuban liberation. âI keep feeling about my country and the way people suffer over there,â Gonzalez [told](https://www.nytimes.com/1973/01/16/archives/4-more-admit-g-uil-t-a-s-spies-in-wa-ter-ga-te-2-still-on-trial.html) Judge John Sirica. âThat is the only reason I did my cooperation in that situation.â He spent about a year in prison.
**POST-SCANDAL:** After Watergate, Gonzalez returned to Miami and his career as a locksmith. In 1977, he and three other men known as the âfoot soldiersâ of WatergateâBernard L. Barker, Eugenio MartĂnez and Frank Sturgisâ[received](https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/1977/02/23/miami-burglars-of-watergate-to-get-200000/a7e4a047-1b2c-4128-a237-51607b34279b/?utm_term=.53e1c693588d) \$200,000 from Richard Nixonâs 1972 campaign fund. The payment served as settlement for the four menâs civil suit, in which they claimed they had been tricked into participating in the Watergate burglary. He died in 2021 at age 98.
## THE ORGANIZERS
### E. Howard Hunt
**HIS ROLE:** A former CIA operative, Hunt was a member of the so-called âPlumbers,â an informal White House team tasked with preventing and repairing information âleaksâ such as the 1971 release of the top-secret Pentagon Papers. After investigators found his phone number in address books belonging to the Watergate burglars, they connected the dots between the burglary, President Nixon and his re-election campaign.
**THE UPSHOT:** As Hunt [told](https://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/24/obituaries/24hunt.html?mtrref=www.google.com) the Senate Watergate committee during the investigation in 1973, âI cannot escape feeling that the country I have served for my entire life and which directed me to carry out the Watergate entry is punishing me for doing the very things it trained and directed me to do.â He was convicted of burglary, conspiracy and wiretapping, and served 33 months in prison.
**POST-SCANDAL:** After Hunt was released from prison, he [moved](https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/ex-spy-crafted-watergate-other-schemes/2012/05/31/gJQAh80uFV_story.html?utm_term=.7a9ee170dfb7) to Florida, started a new family and continued to write spy novelsâas he had been doing for yearsâtotaling about 80 over the course of his life. He won \$650,000 in a libel suit in 1981, after a right-wing newspaper linked him to the assassination of John F. Kennedy, yet received none of the money when the suit was [overturned](http://articles.latimes.com/1985-02-06/news/mn-4344_1_e-howard-hunt) several years later. Weighed down by legal fees stemming from Watergate, he declared bankruptcy in 1997. He died in 2007, months before the publication of his co-written [memoir](https://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/13/books/review/Weiner-t.html), *American Spy: My Secret History in the CIA, Watergate and Beyond.*
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G. Gordon Liddy at the Watergate Trial in 1973 (left) and speaking on a segment of Fox News in 2005.
Bettmann Archive/Getty Images & Freddie Lee/FOX News/Getty Images

G. Gordon Liddy at the Watergate Trial in 1973 (left) and speaking on a segment of Fox News in 2005.
Bettmann Archive/Getty Images & Freddie Lee/FOX News/Getty Images
### G. Gordon Liddy
**HIS ROLE:** Liddy, a former FBI agent who served as general counsel for the Committee to Re-elect the Presidentâa campaign that eventually led to the unraveling of the Nixon administrationâwas responsible for planning and supervising the Watergate break-in. According to testimony heard in the trial, he [received](https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/national/longterm/watergate/articles/013173-2.htm) about \$332,000 in campaign funds, which he used to carry out a number of intelligence-gathering operations.
**THE UPSHOT:** He was convicted of conspiracy, burglary and bugging the Democratic National Committee headquarters, and spent four and a half years in prison.
**POST-SCANDAL**: After his release in 1977, Liddy remained in the Washington, D.C. area and [rebranded](https://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/news/article/13007648/the-secret-life-of-g-gordon-liddy) himself as a conservative talk-show host and military and weapons expert. He also worked as an actor, appearing on shows such as âMiami Vice.â In his 1980 memoir, [*Will*](https://www.npr.org/2016/05/31/480154120/from-the-fresh-air-archives-g-gordon-liddy-on-conquering-his-fears)*,* he talks about conquering his fears by subjecting himself to gruesome experiments in which he eats rat meat and burns his own flesh. He retired from the airwaves in 2012, [saying](https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/watergates-liddy-reveals-guardian-angel-limbaugh) he wanted to spend more time with his grandchildren. He died on March 30, 2021, at age 90.
### Charles âChuckâ Colson
**HIS ROLE:** As special advisor to the president, Colson was the mastermind behind many of the âdirty tricksâ and political maneuversâincluding spying on political opponentsâthat brought down the Nixon administration. As Colson [told](https://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/22/us/politics/charles-w-colson-watergate-felon-who-became-evangelical-leader-dies-at-80.html?mtrref=www.google.com) E. Howard Hunt in a recorded telephone conversation, he would write in his memoirs that âWatergate was brilliantly conceived as an escapade that would divert the Democratsâ attention from the real issues, and therefore permit us to win a landslide that we probably wouldnât have won otherwise.â
**THE UPSHOT:** Colson pled guilty to obstructing justice in a Watergate-related case involving Daniel Ellsberg, in which he ran a smear campaign seeking [to discredit](https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/whitehouse/chuck-colson-nixons-dirty-tricks-man-dies-at-80/2012/04/21/gIQAaoOHYT_story.html?utm_term=.e04fd5d1fc24) the government contractor who leaked the Pentagon Papers.
**POST-SCANDAL:** After spending seven months in prison, Colson [emerged](https://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/22/us/politics/charles-w-colson-watergate-felon-who-became-evangelical-leader-dies-at-80.html?mtrref=www.google.com) with a new outlook on life: He wrote *Born Again*, a book about his embracing Christianity, and founded Prison Fellowship Ministries, an organization that brings religious messaging to inmates and their families. Years later, he [said](https://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Latest-News-Wires/2012/0421/Charles-Colson-Watergate-master-of-dirty-tricks-became-prison-evangelist) of his transformation, "I shudder to think of what I'd been if I had not gone to prison⌠Lying on the rotten floor of a cell, you know it's not prosperity or pleasure that's important, but the maturing of the soul." Colson died in 2012.
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### Donald Segretti
**HIS ROLE:** A former military prosecutor, Segretti was an operative for the Committee to Re-elect the President, known as the architect behind Nixonâs campaign of political [sabotage](http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/onpolitics/watergate/donaldsegretti.html) against Democratic opponents. In one such smear campaign, he created an anonymous letter falsely claiming that former senator Henry M. "Scoop" Jackson had fathered an illegitimate child with a teenager.
**THE UPSHOT:** After the Watergate investigation revealed the full extent of his activity, he pled guilty to charges of distributing illegal campaign literature, spending four months in prison.
**POST-SCANDAL**: After the scandal, Segretti moved back to California, his home state, and kept a low profile, practicing civil and business law from his Newport Beach office. But in 1995, he ran unsuccessfully for an Orange County judgeship. "They all wanted to talk about Nixon and Watergate," he [said](http://articles.latimes.com/1995-12-12/news/mn-13184_1_donald-segretti) of the public reaction to his campaign. "It really hit a raw nerve." In 2000 he returned to politics briefly, [co-chairing](http://www.shfwire.com/obama-mccain-face-smears-and-lies-politics/) John McCainâs presidential campaign in Orange County.
In 2018, when he visited a U.S. history class at his alma mater, San Marino High School, he had [this](http://sanmarinotribune.com/segretti-has-a-soft-spot-in-his-heart-for-san-marino/) to say about Watergate. âThe ideaâŚsold to me at the beginning was to disrupt the Democratic presidential primary campaign,â he said. âThings morphed from doing a few things to going a little deeper. They were probably things I should not have done.â
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## THE WHITE HOUSE INSIDERS
### John Ehrlichman
**HIS ROLE**: Ehrlichman, Nixonâs advisor for domestic affairs, also served as head of the âPlumbers.â He attempted to cover up the botched Watergate break-in.
**THE UPSHOT**: In 1973, amid the unfolding scandal, Ehrlichman resigned. He was later tried and [convicted](https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=http-3A__www.washingtonpost.com_wp-2Dsrv_onpolitics_watergate_johnehrlichan.html&d=DwMFaQ&c=bHpC9irXhivtSwyVyKc43lLt4-cAwmmH7TeQLPqTb5E&r=3mOEa7BL5xda2RV6aIvf7QcX9yQ1ErhlAnSOFRweDaY&m=ipYkW68BOAmaOYYYPAoQlbeY1d3W-EtPFusRWBz3Vx4&s=bRUAo9S7sYi3NHqTqwQRXIy6d2GrZ6k4vDUBXYcXH4g&e=) of perjury and conspiracy to obstruct justice for his involvement in Watergate, serving 18 months in prison.
**POST-SCANDAL**: After his release, Ehrlichman, who had been disbarred, divorced his wife and moved to New Mexico, where he focused on writing. In addition to several novels, he published a 1982 memoir titled *Witness to Power: The Nixon Years*, in which he [wrote](https://www.nytimes.com/1999/02/16/us/john-d-ehrlichman-nixon-aide-jailed-for-watergate-dies-at-73.html), "I don't miss Richard Nixon very much, and Richard Nixon probably doesn't miss me." He later moved to Atlanta, where he worked as a business consultant to the [hazardous-waste removal](https://www.nytimes.com/1999/02/16/us/john-d-ehrlichman-nixon-aide-jailed-for-watergate-dies-at-73.html) industry and, in 1996, exhibited a collection of pen-and-ink drawings from the Watergate years. He died in 1999, having admitted more than 20 years earlier that his Watergate woes were largely self-inflicted: âIf I had any [advice](https://www.nytimes.com/1999/02/16/us/john-d-ehrlichman-nixon-aide-jailed-for-watergate-dies-at-73.html) for my kids, it would be neverâto never, everâdefer your moral judgments to anybody.â
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## Related Stories

[1970s](https://www.history.com/topics/1970s)
[When President Ford Faced Two Assassination Attempts in One Month](https://www.history.com/articles/gerald-ford-assassination-attempts-1975-lessons)
In September 1975, President Gerald Ford escaped two attempts on his lifeâboth by women and both in California.
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John Dean testifying at the Senate hearings on the Watergate break-ins (left) and testifies before the Senate Judiciary Committee regarding NSA wire-tapping in 2006.
Gjon Mili/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images & Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

John Dean testifying at the Senate hearings on the Watergate break-ins (left) and testifies before the Senate Judiciary Committee regarding NSA wire-tapping in 2006.
Gjon Mili/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images & Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
### John Dean
**HIS ROLE:** Serving as White House counsel from 1970 to 1973, Dean helped cover up the Nixon administrationâs involvement in the Watergate break-in and illegal intelligence-gathering. But as the investigation was closing in, he had [warned](https://www.nytimes.com/2017/04/13/style/john-dean-richard-nixon-watergate-donald-trump.html) fellow staffers, âThe jig is up. Itâs over,â and reportedly said to Nixon, âWe have a cancer within, close to, the presidency, that is growing.â Nixon fired him shortly thereafter.
**THE UPSHOT:** Dean became one of the first administration officials to [reveal](https://www.nytimes.com/2018/08/20/us/politics/john-dean-watergate-facts-bio.html) the cover-up, [implicating Nixon](https://www.history.com/news/watergate-nixon-john-dean-tapes) and other officials during his testimony before the Senate Watergate Committee in June 1973. He was charged with obstruction of justice and served four months in prison.
**POST-SCANDAL:** After his release, Dean moved to California and reinvented himself as an investment banker. He wrote in his 1976 Watergate memoir, *Blind Ambition*: âI donât want to be known as just the snitch of Watergate,â following up that book in 1983 with a second memoir titled, *Lost Honor*. "I've been inside a cover-up,â he [told](http://www.latimes.com/politics/la-pol-ca-on-politics-column-20170602-story.html) *The Los Angeles Times* in 2017. âI know why we could make certain things go away and other things not go away."
### H.R. Haldeman
**HIS ROLE:** The Nixon administration White House chief of staffâ[known](http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/politics/special/watergate/haldeman.html) as the gatekeeperâ to the Oval Office who once called himself "the president's son-of-a-bitch"âbecame a key figure in the Watergate probe as investigators zeroed in on tape-recorded conversations of White House meetings. One of the tapes included a now-famous 18-and-a-half-minute gap, which was later revealed to include a conversation between Haldeman and Nixon. Haldeman was also [implicated](http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/onpolitics/watergate/haldeman.html) in the so-called âsmoking gunâ tape, in which Nixon talked about using the CIA to divert the FBIâs investigation of Watergate.
**THE UPSHOT:** Haldeman resigned on April 30, 1973 along with other top staffers in the Nixon administration. He was tried and convicted of perjury, conspiracy and obstruction of justice for his attempts to cover up the Watergate scandal.
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**POST-SCANDAL:** After serving 18 months in prison, Haldeman worked as a business consultant and focused on his real-estate interests and Florida-based Sizzler steakhouse franchises. In a post-Watergate memoir titled *The Ends of Power*, published in 1978, Haldeman [wrote](https://www.nytimes.com/1978/03/12/archives/the-understanding-of-hr-haldeman-the-ends-of-power-haldeman.html): âI believed in tough campaigning, too, but even from my hardâline standpoint, Nixon went too far at times. But political strategy wasn't my province, only the mechanics.â He died in 1993, six months before the book was published.
### John Mitchell
**HIS ROLE:** Once [described](https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/national/longterm/watergate/stories/mitchobit.htm) as âthe most powerful man in the Cabinet,â the notoriously gruff and fiercely loyal Mitchell was Nixonâs attorney general before he resigned in 1972 to become director of the Committee to Re-elect the President. According to testimony in the Watergate hearings, Mitchell approved the break-in and bugging of the Democratic National Committee headquarters.
**THE UPSHOT:** Mitchell, who was convicted for his role in the conspiracy and ended up serving 19 months, [said](https://www.nytimes.com/1975/02/22/archives/mitchell-haldeman-ehrlichman-are-sentenced-to-2-to-8-years-mardian.html) to a reporter covering the trial, âIt could have been a hell of a lot worse. They could have sentenced me to spend the rest of my life with Martha.â He was referring to [his wife](https://www.history.com/news/martha-mitchell-watergate-kidnapping) from whom he was separated.
**POST-SCANDAL:** After his release, Mitchell [lived](https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/1988/11/10/mitchell-collapsed-near-his-georgetown-home/2dbd8044-e3a9-4476-9947-df70ec63e62b/?utm_term=.76ef6d2da109) in D.C.âs Georgetown neighborhood and founded the consulting firm Global Research International, Inc. While Mitchell reportedly accepted a \$50,000 advance from Simon and Schuster for his memoirs, he ultimately chose to keep quiet on the subjectâand was sued in 1981 for failing to deliver the book. He died in 1988.
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Jeb Stuart Magruder testifying at the Watergate hearings (left) and in 2003 at the PBS Televisions Critics Association press tour.
Gjon Mili/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images & Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images

Jeb Stuart Magruder testifying at the Watergate hearings (left) and in 2003 at the PBS Televisions Critics Association press tour.
Gjon Mili/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images & Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images
### Jeb Stuart Magruder
**HIS ROLE:** A White House communications adviser, Magruder played a key role in planning the Watergate break-in, and later covering it up.
**THE UPSHOT:** [Convicted](https://www.nytimes.com/2014/05/17/us/jeb-magruder-79-nixon-aide-jailed-for-watergate-dies.html) of perjury, Magruder spent seven months in prison. At his sentencing he said it is difficult to deal with the âdisappointment I see in the eyes of my friends, the confusion I see in the eyes of my children, the heartbreak I see in the eyes of my wife and, probably more difficult, the contempt I see in the eyes of others.â
**POST-SCANDAL:** After his release in 1976, Magruder left politics and earned a masterâs degree in divinity from Princeton Theological Seminary, which led to leadership roles at churches in Ohio, then Kentucky. Though he wrote two books in the years following the scandalâ*An American Life: One Manâs Road to Watergate* and *From Power to Peace*âhe did not [reveal](https://www.nytimes.com/2014/05/17/us/jeb-magruder-79-nixon-aide-jailed-for-watergate-dies.html) until 2003 that he had personally heard Nixon authorize the Watergate break-in. For a time, he led an Ohio commission on ethics, though he [reflected](https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/jeb-stuart-magruder-dies-watergate-conspirator-became-a-minister/2014/05/16/11ea6ed2-dd05-11e3-8009-71de85b9c527_story.html?utm_term=.30f309d30fe4), âIâm aware that there might be some irony associated with that.â He died in 2014, in Danbury, Connecticut.
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Alexander Butterfield testifying during the Watergate hearings (left) and in Washington, D.C. 2015.
Steve Northup/The LIFE Images Collection/Getty Images & Nikki Kahn/The Washington Post/Getty Images

Alexander Butterfield testifying during the Watergate hearings (left) and in Washington, D.C. 2015.
Steve Northup/The LIFE Images Collection/Getty Images & Nikki Kahn/The Washington Post/Getty Images
### Alexander Butterfield
**HIS ROLE:** As deputy White House chief of staff to President Nixon from 1969 to 1973, Butterfield controlled the secret taping system Nixon had installed in the Oval Office. He revealed the existence of the tapes when he was questioned by the Senate Watergate Committee, effectively sealing Nixonâs fate.
**THE UPSHOT:** Ironically, Butterfield [liked](https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/style/the-man-who-knew-too-much-about-richard-nixon/2015/10/12/fa87b954-7063-11e5-8d93-0af317ed58c9_story.html?utm_term=.13b6ce53385b) Nixonâbut he did not want to lie to investigators. âI was facing a true dilemma: I wanted very much to respect Nixonâs wishes and at the same time to be cooperative and forthright with the congressional investigators,â he later [said](https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/the-man-who-revealed-the-nixon-tapes/2012/06/14/gJQAsEZUdV_story.html?utm_term=.0eb98546a5f9). âThe wording of their questions meant everything to me. And when Don Sanders, the deputy minority counselâŚasked the \$64,000 question, clearly and directly, I felt I had no choice but to respond in like manner.â With Nixonâs resignation, Butterfield was also dismissed from his post as administrator of the Federal Aviation Administrationâto which heâd been appointed by the president.
**POST-SCANDAL:** Butterfield had trouble finding work for two years following Watergate, but eventually found a job as chief operating officer at an air-transport company, then ran a financial holdings company and a consulting company in California. In 2015, he re-entered the spotlight as the subject of a book by Bob Woodward, titled *The Last of the Presidentâs Men*. In it, Butterfield [describes](https://www.nytimes.com/2015/10/16/books/bob-woodward-last-of-the-presidents-men-review.html) his reaction as he watched Nixonâs farewell address: âI could not believe that people were crying in that room⌠It was sad, yes. But justice had prevailed. Inside I was cheering.â
## THE SPECIAL PROSECUTOR
### Archibald Cox
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**HIS ROLE:** Assigned in May of 1973 as special prosecutor to investigate the Watergate scandal, Archibald Cox was [fired](https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/national/longterm/watergate/articles/102173-2.htm) from his post by President Nixon just five months later in what became known as the âSaturday Night Massacreââa White House shake-up that led to the resignation of two other Justice Department staffers. Cox was fired after insisting President Nixon give him unrestricted access to tapes of conversations leading up to the break-in at the Democratic National Committee Headquarters.
**THE UPSHOT:** Following his dismissal, Cox said in a statement: "Whether ours shall continue to be a government of laws and not of men is now for Congress and ultimately the American people." Nixonâs firing of Cox [fueled](https://timeline.com/saturday-night-massacre-nixon-1f7c2565c0d8) the Watergate investigation, leading to a public backlash against Nixon and Congressional resolutions calling for his impeachment.
**POST-SCANDAL:** After leaving Washington, Coxâwho had previously served as solicitor generalâtaught constitutional law at his alma mater, Harvard Law School. He also worked on the legal team of Common Cause, an advocacy group that lobbies for campaign finance reform. Though he published several books on labor and constitutional law, he did not write about Watergate. But sometime after the scandal, he reportedly [stated](http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A1755-2004May29.html): âone of the important lessons of Watergate was that unless the government trusts the people and conducts itself in an honorable fashion, then the people wonât trust the government.â He died in 2004.
## THE AXE MAN
### Robert Bork
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**HIS ROLE:** Bork, a conservative judge, solicitor general and acting attorney general in the Nixon administration, carried out President Nixonâs orders to fire special counsel Archibald Cox, who had subpoenaed conversations taped in the Oval Office. Coxâs dismissal, on Oct. 1973, became known as the âSaturday Night Massacre.â
**THE UPSHOT:** Despite Borkâs firing of Cox, the Supreme Court eventually ordered Nixon to turn over the tapes.
**POST-SCANDAL:** In addition to his involvement in Watergate, Bork is also remembered for his failed Supreme Court nomination in 1987, when he was rejected by the U.S. Senate for his conservative policies. So significant was the failed nomination that, âmy name became a verb,â ([meaning](https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/Bork) to attack or defeat a candidate for public office) Bork [told](https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-bork-idUSBRE8BI0YA20121219) CNN years later. âAnd I regard that as one form of immortality.â He went on to [serve](https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/obituaries/judge-robert-h-bork-conservative-icon/2012/12/19/49453de4-c5da-11df-94e1-c5afa35a9e59_story.html?utm_term=.a1248c8104ef) as a fellow in conservative think tanks and as an advisor to Mitt Romneyâs presidential campaign. In his 1996 book, *Slouching Towards Gomorrah*, Bork criticizes American society and modern liberalism in particular, [writing](https://archive.nytimes.com/www.nytimes.com/books/97/07/13/bsp/20070.html) that âdecline runs across our entire culture'' and ''the rot is spreading.'' In later years, he married a former Catholic nun and converted to Catholicism. He died in 2012.
## THE WHISTLEBLOWER
### Mark Felt
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**HIS ROLE:** Known for decades only as âDeep Throat,â the mysterious government source who helped *Washington Post* reporters Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward untangle the Watergate conspiracy, Mark Felt revealed his identity in 2005. A senior FBI official during the Watergate years, Mark Felt met from time to time with Woodwardâalways in deserted parking garages, and always taking extreme precautions to ensure they had not been followedâproviding clues that guided the journalistâs reporting. The Nixon White House was âunderhanded and unknowable,â he once [told](https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/fbis-no-2-was-deep-throat-mark-felt-ends-30-year-mystery-of-the-posts-watergate-source/2012/06/04/gJQAwseRIV_story.html?utm_term=.f7af95b6b979) Woodward.
**THE UPSHOT:** With the 1974 release of Woodward and Bernsteinâs book about Watergate, *All the Presidentâs Men*, followed by the movie by the same name, Felt became the most famous anonymous source in journalism. But he was unhappy with the nickname he earned in the *Washington Post* newsroom, a combination of âdeep backgroundâ and the titled of a pornographic film released in 1972.
**POST-SCANDAL:** Though many guessed that Felt was Deep Throat, he repeatedly denied the speculations, including in his 1979 memoir, *The FBI Pyramid*, in which he contrasted his time under J. Edgar Hoover, whom he revered, with his service under Nixon, whom he disliked. He revealed himself as the Watergate source in a 2005 *Vanity Fair* [article](https://www.vanityfair.com/news/politics/2005/07/deepthroat200507) which led to a memoir published a year later, titled *A G-Man's Life: The FBI, Being 'Deep Throatâ and the Struggle for Honor in Washington*. In the book, Felt [writes](http://www.nbcnews.com/id/28306346/ns/politics/t/w-mark-felt-watergates-deep-throat-dies/), "People will debate for a long time whether I did the right thing by helping Woodward⌠The bottom line is that we did get the whole truth out, and isn't that what the FBI is supposed to do?" He died in 2008, at the age of 95.
## THE SENATORS
### Sam Ervin
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**HIS ROLE**: As chairman of the Senate Watergate committee that investigated the affair in [televised hearings](https://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/televised-watergate-hearings-begin), Ervin became a national hero for serving as a moral compass. The purpose of the hearings, he [said](http://articles.latimes.com/1985-04-24/news/mn-7139_1_sam-ervin) at the outset, was to "probe into assertions that the very system has been subverted." The hearings showcased Ervinâs folksy demeanor and direct speech. When criticized for being too harsh on the witnesses, he countered, "I'm just an old country lawyer, and I don't know the finer ways to do it. I just have to do it my way."
**THE UPSHOT**: More than a year after the hearings began, Nixon became the first U.S. president to [resign](https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/national/longterm/watergate/articles/080974-3.htm) from office. Ervin retired four months later.
**POST-SCANDAL**: After Watergate, Ervin returned to his hometown, Morgantown, N.C., where he wrote three books and occasionally appeared in television ads for American Express. As he [wrote](https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/entertainment/books/1981/01/11/play-it-again-sam/1b0fc72e-78b7-4c73-bc7a-f4d92f4a4e8b/?utm_term=.94126a8933d0) in *The Whole Truth: The Watergate Conspiracy*, published in 1980, "Nixon's memoirs insinuate that he was driven from the presidency by a hostile press and vindictive partisans, and not by his own misdeedsââa statement Ervin said is "totally incompatible" with the facts. All his books, including the subsequent *Humor of a Country Lawyer* and *Preserving the Constitution: The Autobiography of Sen. Sam Ervin*, were first drafted in pencil on yellow legal pads. Ervin died in 1988.
### Howard Baker
**HIS ROLE:** A Republican senator from Tennessee, Baker was vice chairman of the Senate Watergate committee that investigated the scandal, and is famously [remembered](https://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Politics/Decoder/2014/0626/Howard-Baker-the-real-story-of-his-famous-Watergate-question) for asking former White House counsel John Dean on June 29, 1973: âWhat did the President know, and when did he know it?â
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**THE UPSHOT:** Though Bakerâs initial goal was to prove the accusations against Nixon were unfounded, testimony he heard and evidence he reviewed during the hearings [changed](https://www.brennancenter.org/blog/curious-history-%E2%80%98what-did-president-know-and-when-did-he-know-it%E2%80%99) his views. As he told *The Associated Press*, âit began to dawn on me that there was more to it than I thought, and more to it than I liked.â
**POST-SCANDAL:** Baker, who unsuccessfully ran for the Republican presidential nomination in 1980, continued to serve in the U.S. Senate until 1985, when he retired to practice law. He [returned](https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/sen-howard-baker-majority-leader-and-reagans-chief-of-staff-dies-at-88/2014/06/26/2e84ff30-c5da-11df-94e1-c5afa35a9e59_story.html?utm_term=.306feee4f751) to Washington two years later to serve as Ronald Reaganâs White House chief of staff and later served as ambassador to Japan under President George W. Bush. Baker particularly took pride in his skill as an âeloquent listener,â [saying](https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2014/06/howard-baker-the-eloquent-listener/442872/), "There is a difference between hearing and understanding what people say. You don't have to agree, but you have to hear what they've got to say. And if you do, the chances are much better you'll be able to translate that into a useful position and even useful leadership." He died in 2014.
## THE JOURNALISTS
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Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein in 1973 and in 2005
Bettmann Archive/Getty Images & Win McNamee/Getty Images

Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein in 1973 and in 2005
Bettmann Archive/Getty Images & Win McNamee/Getty Images
### Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein
**THEIR ROLE:** Young reporters at *The Washington Post*, Woodward and Bernstein (or âWoodsteinâ as they were known in the newsroom) teamed up to cover the burglary at the Watergate complex, and the ensuing scandal. Piecing together the story from dozens of sources, many of them anonymous, they leaned primarily on tips from a mysterious government operative nicknamed âDeep Throat,â who revealed himself in 2005 as FBI agent Mark Felt.
**THE UPSHOT:** Woodward and Bernsteinâs coverage of Watergate earned the *Post* a Pulitzer Prize, and cemented the reportersâ reputations.
**POST-SCANDAL:** Woodward, who still works at *The Washington Post* and has received numerous journalism awards, went on to write more than a dozen books, many of them on the legacy of Watergate and on U.S. presidentsâincluding a three-book exposĂŠ on the Trump administration: [*Fear*](https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/Fear/Bob-Woodward/9781501175527)*,* [*Rage*](https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/Rage/Bob-Woodward/9781982131746) and [*Peril*](https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/Peril/Bob-Woodward/9781982182915).
Bernstein, who was [married](http://gawker.com/551859/carl-bernstein) to writer and filmmaker Nora Ephron for several years, left the *Post* in 1977. He went on to publish magazine articles, and held a senior position at ABC News. In his 1989 book, *Loyalties: A Sonâs Memoir*, he revealed that his parents were members of the Communist Party of America. In 2007, he published a biography of Hillary Clinton, [*A Woman In Charge: The Life of Hillary Rodham Clinton*](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Woman_in_Charge), and in 2021 published a memoir, *Chasing History: A Kid in the Newsroom*.
### Benjamin Bradlee
**HIS ROLE:** As executive editor of *The Washington Post* from 1965 to 1991, Bradlee oversaw the paperâs Pulitzer Prize-winning coverage of the Watergate scandalâdespite facing fierce criticism for the aggressive investigation. A year earlier, Bradlee had defied the Nixon administration in his decision to publish stories based on the [Pentagon Papers](https://www.history.com/topics/vietnam-war/pentagon-papers), a series of top-secret files detailing the U.S. governmentâs activities in Vietnam.
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**THE UPSHOT:** The *Post*âs relentless reporting on Watergate ultimately led to the resignation of President Richard Nixon. The investigation helped solidify the paperâs reputation for hard-hitting journalism.
**POST-SCANDAL:** Bradlee continued to lead the *Post* until his retirement in 1991, overseeing coverage that earned the paper a total of 17 Pulitzer Prizes over the course of his career. Colleagues report that actor Jason Robardsâ onscreen [portrayal](https://www.washingtonian.com/2014/10/06/from-the-archives-the-book-on-ben-bradlee/) of him as a brash and boisterous newsroom figure, in the 1976 film version of *All the Presidentâs Men*, was spot-on.
In his 1995 memoir, *A Good Life: Newspapering and Other Adventures*, Bradlee [recalls](https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/style/ben-on-ben-in-memoir-bradlee-shared-thoughts-about-himself/2014/10/22/a72c8324-5891-11e4-bd61-346aee66ba29_story.html?utm_term=.5d45f2fbba8a) the moment when Nixon announced his resignation: âI remember folding my hands together between my knees and laying my forehead down on my desk for a very private âHoly Moly.â... Nixonânot the *Post*ââgotâ Nixon, but the *Post*âs reporting forced the story onto the national agenda, and kept it there until the world understood how grievously the Constitution was being undermined.â Bradlee died in 2014.
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## About the author
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## Fact Check
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## Citation Information
Article Title
Watergate: Who Did What and Where Are They Now?
Author
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History
URL
<https://www.history.com/articles/watergate-where-are-they-now>
Date Accessed
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Original Published Date
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| Readable Markdown | By: Alice Popovici
Find out what happened to some of the key players in the historical scandal that brought down a U.S. president.

Getty Images
Published: June 15, 2012Last Updated: May 28, 2025
On June 17, 1972, five burglars were arrested during a break-in at the Democratic National Committee headquarters in the Watergate office complex in Washington, D.C. According to [news reports](http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2002/05/31/AR2005111001227.html) of the time, the men wore surgical gloves, carried a walkie-talkie and short-wave police scanner, 40 rolls of unexposed film and \$2,300 in crisp \$100 bills. They also possessed two sophisticated listening devices, and had removed several ceiling panels in the office. The men emerged from the room with their hands up.
While there was no immediate explanation of their motives, the crime turned out to be the tip of a very dirty icebergâone that would barrel through the White House over the next two years and ultimately topple the presidency of Richard M. Nixon. Below, a look at some of the key players in the [Watergate scandal](https://www.history.com/topics/1970s/watergate) and how their lives unfolded in the shadow of a national disgrace. Many wrote books and a few found religion.
## Richard Nixon's Paranoia Leads to Watergate Scandal
Richard Nixon's personality and character issues may have led to his involvement in the Watergate scandal.
2:41m watch
## THE BURGLARS
### James McCord
**HIS ROLE:** A former CIA officer and FBI agent, McCord was one of the five burglars arrested at the [Watergate](http://www.history.com/topics/watergate) complex, and the â[chief wiretapper](https://www.nytimes.com/1975/04/29/archives/sentence-cut-mccord-may-be-free-in-may.html)â of the operation. During the burglary, McCord, then security director of the Committee to Reelect the President (or CREEP), [left](http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/onpolitics/watergate/james.html) a piece of tape on the latch of a stairwell door, inadvertently alerting a [security guard](https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/retropolis/wp/2017/12/22/the-post-and-the-forgotten-security-guard-who-discovered-the-watergate-break-in/?utm_term=.f5f9b60d8c31) to the burglary in progress.
**THE UPSHOT:** McCord was [convicted](https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/1972-watergate-burglary-piece-tape-astute-night-watchman/story?id=47914192) on charges of conspiracy, burglary and wiretapping, but only served four months of his original sentence of one to five years. His sentence was reduced after he implicated White House officials in the cover-up. âThere was political pressure applied to the defendants to plead guilty and remain silent,â McCord [stated](http://watergate.info/1973/03/19/mccord-letter-to-judge-sirica.html) in the March 19, 1973 letter to Judge John Sirica, who presided over the Watergate trials. âPerjury occurred during the trial in matters highly material to the very structure, orientation and impact of the governmentâs case, and to the motivation and intent of the defendants.â

Locksmith Virgilio Gonzalez sitting in his back of van workshop 20 years after his role as the lock-picking Watergate burglar.
Acey Harper/The LIFE Images Collection/Getty Images

Locksmith Virgilio Gonzalez sitting in his back of van workshop 20 years after his role as the lock-picking Watergate burglar.
Acey Harper/The LIFE Images Collection/Getty Images
### Virgilio Gonzalez
**HIS ROLE:** A Cuban refugee and locksmith by trade, Gonzalez was one of the five burglars arrested at the Watergate complex on June 17, 1972. He had been recruited in Miami by E. Howard Hunt, who had played a key role in the CIAâs disastrous Bay of Pigs invasion.
**THE UPSHOT:** Gonzalez, an anti-Fidel Castro activist, insisted during his trial that he had been told the Watergate operation would advance Cuban liberation. âI keep feeling about my country and the way people suffer over there,â Gonzalez [told](https://www.nytimes.com/1973/01/16/archives/4-more-admit-g-uil-t-a-s-spies-in-wa-ter-ga-te-2-still-on-trial.html) Judge John Sirica. âThat is the only reason I did my cooperation in that situation.â He spent about a year in prison.
**POST-SCANDAL:** After Watergate, Gonzalez returned to Miami and his career as a locksmith. In 1977, he and three other men known as the âfoot soldiersâ of WatergateâBernard L. Barker, Eugenio MartĂnez and Frank Sturgisâ[received](https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/1977/02/23/miami-burglars-of-watergate-to-get-200000/a7e4a047-1b2c-4128-a237-51607b34279b/?utm_term=.53e1c693588d) \$200,000 from Richard Nixonâs 1972 campaign fund. The payment served as settlement for the four menâs civil suit, in which they claimed they had been tricked into participating in the Watergate burglary. He died in 2021 at age 98.
## THE ORGANIZERS
### E. Howard Hunt

G. Gordon Liddy at the Watergate Trial in 1973 (left) and speaking on a segment of Fox News in 2005.
Bettmann Archive/Getty Images & Freddie Lee/FOX News/Getty Images

G. Gordon Liddy at the Watergate Trial in 1973 (left) and speaking on a segment of Fox News in 2005.
Bettmann Archive/Getty Images & Freddie Lee/FOX News/Getty Images
### G. Gordon Liddy
**HIS ROLE:** Liddy, a former FBI agent who served as general counsel for the Committee to Re-elect the Presidentâa campaign that eventually led to the unraveling of the Nixon administrationâwas responsible for planning and supervising the Watergate break-in. According to testimony heard in the trial, he [received](https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/national/longterm/watergate/articles/013173-2.htm) about \$332,000 in campaign funds, which he used to carry out a number of intelligence-gathering operations.
**THE UPSHOT:** He was convicted of conspiracy, burglary and bugging the Democratic National Committee headquarters, and spent four and a half years in prison.
**POST-SCANDAL**: After his release in 1977, Liddy remained in the Washington, D.C. area and [rebranded](https://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/news/article/13007648/the-secret-life-of-g-gordon-liddy) himself as a conservative talk-show host and military and weapons expert. He also worked as an actor, appearing on shows such as âMiami Vice.â In his 1980 memoir, [*Will*](https://www.npr.org/2016/05/31/480154120/from-the-fresh-air-archives-g-gordon-liddy-on-conquering-his-fears)*,* he talks about conquering his fears by subjecting himself to gruesome experiments in which he eats rat meat and burns his own flesh. He retired from the airwaves in 2012, [saying](https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/watergates-liddy-reveals-guardian-angel-limbaugh) he wanted to spend more time with his grandchildren. He died on March 30, 2021, at age 90.
### Charles âChuckâ Colson
### Donald Segretti
**HIS ROLE:** A former military prosecutor, Segretti was an operative for the Committee to Re-elect the President, known as the architect behind Nixonâs campaign of political [sabotage](http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/onpolitics/watergate/donaldsegretti.html) against Democratic opponents. In one such smear campaign, he created an anonymous letter falsely claiming that former senator Henry M. "Scoop" Jackson had fathered an illegitimate child with a teenager.
## THE WHITE HOUSE INSIDERS
### John Ehrlichman
**HIS ROLE**: Ehrlichman, Nixonâs advisor for domestic affairs, also served as head of the âPlumbers.â He attempted to cover up the botched Watergate break-in.
Related Stories


John Dean testifying at the Senate hearings on the Watergate break-ins (left) and testifies before the Senate Judiciary Committee regarding NSA wire-tapping in 2006.
Gjon Mili/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images & Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

John Dean testifying at the Senate hearings on the Watergate break-ins (left) and testifies before the Senate Judiciary Committee regarding NSA wire-tapping in 2006.
Gjon Mili/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images & Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
### John Dean
**HIS ROLE:** Serving as White House counsel from 1970 to 1973, Dean helped cover up the Nixon administrationâs involvement in the Watergate break-in and illegal intelligence-gathering. But as the investigation was closing in, he had [warned](https://www.nytimes.com/2017/04/13/style/john-dean-richard-nixon-watergate-donald-trump.html) fellow staffers, âThe jig is up. Itâs over,â and reportedly said to Nixon, âWe have a cancer within, close to, the presidency, that is growing.â Nixon fired him shortly thereafter.
**THE UPSHOT:** Dean became one of the first administration officials to [reveal](https://www.nytimes.com/2018/08/20/us/politics/john-dean-watergate-facts-bio.html) the cover-up, [implicating Nixon](https://www.history.com/news/watergate-nixon-john-dean-tapes) and other officials during his testimony before the Senate Watergate Committee in June 1973. He was charged with obstruction of justice and served four months in prison.
**POST-SCANDAL:** After his release, Dean moved to California and reinvented himself as an investment banker. He wrote in his 1976 Watergate memoir, *Blind Ambition*: âI donât want to be known as just the snitch of Watergate,â following up that book in 1983 with a second memoir titled, *Lost Honor*. "I've been inside a cover-up,â he [told](http://www.latimes.com/politics/la-pol-ca-on-politics-column-20170602-story.html) *The Los Angeles Times* in 2017. âI know why we could make certain things go away and other things not go away."
### John Mitchell
**HIS ROLE:** Once [described](https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/national/longterm/watergate/stories/mitchobit.htm) as âthe most powerful man in the Cabinet,â the notoriously gruff and fiercely loyal Mitchell was Nixonâs attorney general before he resigned in 1972 to become director of the Committee to Re-elect the President. According to testimony in the Watergate hearings, Mitchell approved the break-in and bugging of the Democratic National Committee headquarters.

Jeb Stuart Magruder testifying at the Watergate hearings (left) and in 2003 at the PBS Televisions Critics Association press tour.
Gjon Mili/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images & Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images

Jeb Stuart Magruder testifying at the Watergate hearings (left) and in 2003 at the PBS Televisions Critics Association press tour.
Gjon Mili/The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images & Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images
### Jeb Stuart Magruder
**HIS ROLE:** A White House communications adviser, Magruder played a key role in planning the Watergate break-in, and later covering it up.
**THE UPSHOT:** [Convicted](https://www.nytimes.com/2014/05/17/us/jeb-magruder-79-nixon-aide-jailed-for-watergate-dies.html) of perjury, Magruder spent seven months in prison. At his sentencing he said it is difficult to deal with the âdisappointment I see in the eyes of my friends, the confusion I see in the eyes of my children, the heartbreak I see in the eyes of my wife and, probably more difficult, the contempt I see in the eyes of others.â
**POST-SCANDAL:** After his release in 1976, Magruder left politics and earned a masterâs degree in divinity from Princeton Theological Seminary, which led to leadership roles at churches in Ohio, then Kentucky. Though he wrote two books in the years following the scandalâ*An American Life: One Manâs Road to Watergate* and *From Power to Peace*âhe did not [reveal](https://www.nytimes.com/2014/05/17/us/jeb-magruder-79-nixon-aide-jailed-for-watergate-dies.html) until 2003 that he had personally heard Nixon authorize the Watergate break-in. For a time, he led an Ohio commission on ethics, though he [reflected](https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/jeb-stuart-magruder-dies-watergate-conspirator-became-a-minister/2014/05/16/11ea6ed2-dd05-11e3-8009-71de85b9c527_story.html?utm_term=.30f309d30fe4), âIâm aware that there might be some irony associated with that.â He died in 2014, in Danbury, Connecticut.

Alexander Butterfield testifying during the Watergate hearings (left) and in Washington, D.C. 2015.
Steve Northup/The LIFE Images Collection/Getty Images & Nikki Kahn/The Washington Post/Getty Images

Alexander Butterfield testifying during the Watergate hearings (left) and in Washington, D.C. 2015.
Steve Northup/The LIFE Images Collection/Getty Images & Nikki Kahn/The Washington Post/Getty Images
### Alexander Butterfield
**HIS ROLE:** As deputy White House chief of staff to President Nixon from 1969 to 1973, Butterfield controlled the secret taping system Nixon had installed in the Oval Office. He revealed the existence of the tapes when he was questioned by the Senate Watergate Committee, effectively sealing Nixonâs fate.
**THE UPSHOT:** Ironically, Butterfield [liked](https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/style/the-man-who-knew-too-much-about-richard-nixon/2015/10/12/fa87b954-7063-11e5-8d93-0af317ed58c9_story.html?utm_term=.13b6ce53385b) Nixonâbut he did not want to lie to investigators. âI was facing a true dilemma: I wanted very much to respect Nixonâs wishes and at the same time to be cooperative and forthright with the congressional investigators,â he later [said](https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/the-man-who-revealed-the-nixon-tapes/2012/06/14/gJQAsEZUdV_story.html?utm_term=.0eb98546a5f9). âThe wording of their questions meant everything to me. And when Don Sanders, the deputy minority counselâŚasked the \$64,000 question, clearly and directly, I felt I had no choice but to respond in like manner.â With Nixonâs resignation, Butterfield was also dismissed from his post as administrator of the Federal Aviation Administrationâto which heâd been appointed by the president.
**HIS ROLE:** Assigned in May of 1973 as special prosecutor to investigate the Watergate scandal, Archibald Cox was [fired](https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/national/longterm/watergate/articles/102173-2.htm) from his post by President Nixon just five months later in what became known as the âSaturday Night Massacreââa White House shake-up that led to the resignation of two other Justice Department staffers. Cox was fired after insisting President Nixon give him unrestricted access to tapes of conversations leading up to the break-in at the Democratic National Committee Headquarters.
**THE UPSHOT:** Following his dismissal, Cox said in a statement: "Whether ours shall continue to be a government of laws and not of men is now for Congress and ultimately the American people." Nixonâs firing of Cox [fueled](https://timeline.com/saturday-night-massacre-nixon-1f7c2565c0d8) the Watergate investigation, leading to a public backlash against Nixon and Congressional resolutions calling for his impeachment.
**HIS ROLE:** Bork, a conservative judge, solicitor general and acting attorney general in the Nixon administration, carried out President Nixonâs orders to fire special counsel Archibald Cox, who had subpoenaed conversations taped in the Oval Office. Coxâs dismissal, on Oct. 1973, became known as the âSaturday Night Massacre.â
**THE UPSHOT:** Despite Borkâs firing of Cox, the Supreme Court eventually ordered Nixon to turn over the tapes.
**HIS ROLE:** Known for decades only as âDeep Throat,â the mysterious government source who helped *Washington Post* reporters Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward untangle the Watergate conspiracy, Mark Felt revealed his identity in 2005. A senior FBI official during the Watergate years, Mark Felt met from time to time with Woodwardâalways in deserted parking garages, and always taking extreme precautions to ensure they had not been followedâproviding clues that guided the journalistâs reporting. The Nixon White House was âunderhanded and unknowable,â he once [told](https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/fbis-no-2-was-deep-throat-mark-felt-ends-30-year-mystery-of-the-posts-watergate-source/2012/06/04/gJQAwseRIV_story.html?utm_term=.f7af95b6b979) Woodward.
**THE UPSHOT:** With the 1974 release of Woodward and Bernsteinâs book about Watergate, *All the Presidentâs Men*, followed by the movie by the same name, Felt became the most famous anonymous source in journalism. But he was unhappy with the nickname he earned in the *Washington Post* newsroom, a combination of âdeep backgroundâ and the titled of a pornographic film released in 1972.
**HIS ROLE**: As chairman of the Senate Watergate committee that investigated the affair in [televised hearings](https://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/televised-watergate-hearings-begin), Ervin became a national hero for serving as a moral compass. The purpose of the hearings, he [said](http://articles.latimes.com/1985-04-24/news/mn-7139_1_sam-ervin) at the outset, was to "probe into assertions that the very system has been subverted." The hearings showcased Ervinâs folksy demeanor and direct speech. When criticized for being too harsh on the witnesses, he countered, "I'm just an old country lawyer, and I don't know the finer ways to do it. I just have to do it my way."
**THE UPSHOT**: More than a year after the hearings began, Nixon became the first U.S. president to [resign](https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/national/longterm/watergate/articles/080974-3.htm) from office. Ervin retired four months later.
**THE UPSHOT:** Though Bakerâs initial goal was to prove the accusations against Nixon were unfounded, testimony he heard and evidence he reviewed during the hearings [changed](https://www.brennancenter.org/blog/curious-history-%E2%80%98what-did-president-know-and-when-did-he-know-it%E2%80%99) his views. As he told *The Associated Press*, âit began to dawn on me that there was more to it than I thought, and more to it than I liked.â

Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein in 1973 and in 2005
Bettmann Archive/Getty Images & Win McNamee/Getty Images

Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein in 1973 and in 2005
Bettmann Archive/Getty Images & Win McNamee/Getty Images
### Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein
**THEIR ROLE:** Young reporters at *The Washington Post*, Woodward and Bernstein (or âWoodsteinâ as they were known in the newsroom) teamed up to cover the burglary at the Watergate complex, and the ensuing scandal. Piecing together the story from dozens of sources, many of them anonymous, they leaned primarily on tips from a mysterious government operative nicknamed âDeep Throat,â who revealed himself in 2005 as FBI agent Mark Felt.
**THE UPSHOT:** Woodward and Bernsteinâs coverage of Watergate earned the *Post* a Pulitzer Prize, and cemented the reportersâ reputations.
**POST-SCANDAL:** Woodward, who still works at *The Washington Post* and has received numerous journalism awards, went on to write more than a dozen books, many of them on the legacy of Watergate and on U.S. presidentsâincluding a three-book exposĂŠ on the Trump administration: [*Fear*](https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/Fear/Bob-Woodward/9781501175527)*,* [*Rage*](https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/Rage/Bob-Woodward/9781982131746) and [*Peril*](https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/Peril/Bob-Woodward/9781982182915).
**THE UPSHOT:** The *Post*âs relentless reporting on Watergate ultimately led to the resignation of President Richard Nixon. The investigation helped solidify the paperâs reputation for hard-hitting journalism.
**POST-SCANDAL:** Bradlee continued to lead the *Post* until his retirement in 1991, overseeing coverage that earned the paper a total of 17 Pulitzer Prizes over the course of his career. Colleagues report that actor Jason Robardsâ onscreen [portrayal](https://www.washingtonian.com/2014/10/06/from-the-archives-the-book-on-ben-bradlee/) of him as a brash and boisterous newsroom figure, in the 1976 film version of *All the Presidentâs Men*, was spot-on.

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