Word: jaworskis
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Meanwhile, Counsel Doar and his staff of 40 are trying to lay hands on the documents, tapes and testimony that Special Prosecutor Leon Jaworski has been accumulating on all phases of Watergate. Without the files, warns Rodino, his hearings could drag on until next year-a prospect appalling to everyone. But Jaworski, who has to worry about charges of partisanship himself, has been carefully insisting that he does not now have the legal right to turn over his files to Rodino...
...Assistant Special Prosecutor Ben-Veniste reported that two Nixon-dictated recordings furnished to Jaworski's staff by the President also contained gaps. Nixon's voice as he summarized conversations with John Mitchell (on June 20, 1972) and John Dean (March 21, 1973) either begins or ends in midsentence. Buzhardt testified that many of Nixon's personal recordings are like that, since he does not always coordinate his hand and speech movements. Sirica ordered the technical experts to examine both tapes for tampering...
...Special Prosecutor Jaworski said in an NBC interview that "discussions" between his office and "more than one" potential defendant in Watergate crimes are under way. Jaworski did not quarrel with the interpretation that this involved plea bargaining, in which some deal might be made to get the person's cooperative testimony...
...Nixon's former Domestic Affairs Adviser John Ehrlichman met for more than an hour in Washington with Special Watergate Prosecutor Leon Jaworski. As explained later by Jaworski, the meeting was called by him to seek information from Ehrlichman. No offer of any kind to settle Ehrlichman's case in return for his testimony was made, Jaworski said, although he conceded that the possibility of an Ehrlichman guilty plea had been raised earlier in a meeting sought by one of Ehrlichman's lawyers. There will be no deal for any defendant unless he makes "a clean breast...
...given to us, break it down into areas, decide what we have, what it means, whether more is needed, and how we should go about getting any more." One area of documentation is off limits to the committee. Though Doar has had two amiable meetings with Special Prosecutor Leon Jaworski, he has not been able to obtain any information. All pertinent White House material received by Jaworski is to be turned over to the grand jury. From that point, it is in the hands of the court and is not available to the House or Senate committees...