Word: ulasewicz
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...ULASEWICZ ther also was, forsooth, Koud wel hide gold in any olde phone booth. Koud gette Hernya (shold watch hys steppen). From so much hevy laundry bags y-schleppen...
UNDISPUTED FACTS. Dean (through intermediaries John Caulfield and Anthony Ulasewicz) sent word to convicted Wiretapper James McCord that he could expect Executive clemency after perhaps a year in prison if he remained silent about any higher involvement in the burglary. McCord was told that the suggestion was coming "from the very highest levels of the White House." Even before the convicted wiretappers were sentenced, Ehrlichman and Dean asked Attorney General Richard Kleindienst at what point "Executive pardons" could be granted to convicted criminals...
...Ehrlichman testimony wound up in a fascinating clash between Weicker and the witness over Ehrlichman's contention that the political investigations conducted by Anthony Ulasewicz, a former New York City cop who had been given secret assignments for a time by Ehrlichman, were proper. Ulasewicz has testified that his gumshoe chores amounted to "dealing in allegations of dirt"-the sexual activities, drinking habits and domestic problems of candidates. Ehrlichman, a teetotaling Christian Scientist, launched into an animated defense of the relevance of such personal habits to politics...
KALMBACH. Drawing on a surplus of $1.1 million from the 1968 Nixon campaign funds, Kalmbach (see box following page) began in mid-1969 to finance secret White House investigations. Directed by Haldeman and carried out by Special White House Investigators John Caulfield and Anthony Ulasewicz, these projects included probes into the backgrounds of such "enemies" as Senator Edward Kennedy, New York Mayor John Lindsay, and House Speaker Carl Albert...
...suggestion of John Dean and with the approval of Ehrlichman, Kalmbach on June 29 of last year began raising money for the defense of the seven arrested Watergate burglars. By late in the year, the defendants had been paid $460,000. Kalmbach used Ulasewicz for many of the hush-money deliveries; the two conversed from public telephone booths and used code names ("Mr. Rivers" for Ulasewicz, "the Writer" for Hunt, "the Brush" for Haldeman). Kalmbach decided to pull out of this illegal activity and did so in September...