U.S. V. Richard M. Nixon: The Final CrisisExamines the Office of the Special Prosecutor, the House Judiciary Committees, the press, and the Nixon White House, the people comprising them, and how they functioned during the constitutional crisis of 1973-74. |
Contents
Introduction 39 | 3 |
The Scholar as Prosecutor | 9 |
The Prosecutor as Scholar | 53 |
Copyright | |
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18 USC Section Alsop American Archibald Cox argument articles of impeachment Attorney Attorney-General began burglary Chairman Clair columnists Congress constitutional conversations count of conspiracy cover-up Cox's criminal decision defense Democratic Doyle Ehrlichman Ervin Committee Evans and Novak evidence executive privilege finally Grand Jury grounds for impeachment H. R. Haldeman Haig Haldeman hearings high crimes House of Representatives illegal campaign contribution impeachment proceeding information charging investigation involved James John Dean John Doar Judge Sirica Judiciary Committee Kleindienst Kraft later lawyers Leon Jaworski matter ment mittee obstruction of justice offenses peachment Petersen Pleaded guilty political President's press conference question refusal Republican resignation Richard Nixon Richardson Rodino Saturday Night Massacre Senate Special Prosecutor staff statement Stennis Stennis compromise subpoena Supreme Court talk tapes testimony thought tion told transcripts trial turned USC Section 610 violation of 18 vote Watergate White House