in washington. many have tried to dissect the events of watergate. i lived them. this room and the next contain my archives. it s magazines and newspaper articles, depositions, documents, everything related to watergate. i was 31 when i went to the nixon white house to work. i had no intention of ever walking away from the job that the people elected me to do. the job forever changed the trajectory of my life. we re not on the road to fascism, but we re dangerously close to it. these are the events that are going to follow me to my grave. i told the president that there was a cancer growing on the presidency. we will never give up. we will never concede. we will stop the steal. here we are 50 years later, and the events of watergate are as relevant as they have ever been. there will not be a cover-up. there will not be an abuse of power. weapons of mass destruction. my name is john dean. i was richard nixon s white house counsel. the morning of
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psychiatrist office looking for prescription drugs, and then they leave. the beverly hills police come in and they begin to look for suspects and they have someone in jail as part of a plea dole who said he did it. how this person would could have been responsible for a break-in when he was actually in custody, one doesn t know but the case is solved even though the plumbers and the white house did it. nixon would go to any lengths to get something done and whether or not it s legal would just have nothing to do with it. a year before the watergate break-in, there is a discussion with nixon, haldeman and kissinger, and they are talking about fire bombing and breaking into the brookings institution to get some papers that are in brookings that would make lyndon
the high winds whipping sharp around take their toll. fatigue sets in. i didn t want to push it any more than i already had. and i was exhausted. i was ready to come down. i think that people were really excited and proud that she was doing this. and that they were there to see it. so much so that when the police came, people were cheering for her and showing their support. i wanted people to see that i was being arrested not for breaking the law but for breaking tradition. sharp is arrested and charged with multiple felonies. she s locked up in rikers island for three days before she s released on bail. sharp is offered a plea dole and