Word: hundley
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Cross-examined by William Hundley, Mitchell's lawyer, Colson struck back by recalling an incident shortly after the 1972 Watergate breakin. Colson said he had told Mitchell that he hoped Hunt was not involved. According to Colson, Mitchell replied: "He is up to his ears in it." That indicated an early knowledge that Mitchell has repeatedly denied...
...approved the bugging plan rests on the testimony of Magruder and the hearsay claim by LaRue that one of the burglars, G. Gordon Liddy, had named Mitchell as having authorized the project. Mitchell also has the advantage of being defended by the most engaging lawyer in the courtroom, William Hundley. When another attorney asked Judge Sirica to expel anyone from the courtroom who laughed during one tape-playing, Hundley asked brightly. "How do you feel about crying, Judge?" Said Sirica: "I can't answer that...
Under rough cross-examination by Mitchell's attorney, William Hundley, Hunt refused to characterize his demands for money as either "extortion" or "blackmail." Asked Hundley sarcastically: "What was it, investment planning?" Showing a secret agent's preference for euphemisms, Hunt insisted that he was merely making a "reiteration of requests for keeping commitments . . . in the tradition of a bill collector." Defense attorneys pounced on a reference in early galleys of Hunt's book to what he described as attempts by Ben-Veniste to get him to give false testimony. According to Hunt, this occurred when Ben-Veniste...
Clearly more troublesome was Sirica's declaration that he would pursue truth rather than follow tight rules. What most critics failed to note was that the remark came in favor of the defense, as Sirica upheld the wide-ranging manner in which Mitchell's attorney, William Hundley, was quizzing Dean despite objections raised by the chief prosecutor, James Neal. Sirica has, in fact, frequently ignored objections by both sides in giving all attorneys great latitude in their questioning. Massachusetts Trial Lawyer Richard K. Donahue observes that Sirica has "broadened the ability of the defense to cross-examine beyond...
...white man is still regarded warily; a black can never be entirely sure what he is up to. Even when he is no longer overtly dominating, he is often thought to be pulling strings behind the scenes. "Many whites are still seen as 'the Man,' " notes Walter Hundley, director of Seattle's Office of Management and Budget. "The really basic control, the entry into professionalism or the middle class is through the white system, and that is the only way you are going to get there." In Phoenix, a black Air Force master sergeant who investigates cases...