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$Unique_ID{bob01193}
$Pretitle{}
$Title{Nixon Tapes, The
April 14, 1973. (1:55pm - 2:13pm)}
$Subtitle{}
$Author{Various}
$Affiliation{}
$Subject{nixon
haldeman
hr
pres
john
now
strachan
silbert
dean
get}
$Date{1974}
$Log{}
Title: Nixon Tapes, The
Author: Various
Date: 1974
April 14, 1973. (1:55pm - 2:13pm)
Meeting: President Nixon and HR Haldeman, Oval Office
Pres. Nixon: Well, you chatted and decided not to take (unintelligible)
HR Haldeman: Yes sir, he said stay on standby - It may be better if it looks
like a good idea for you to be there if you can just be
available because I may want you to come up fast so I am on
standby.
Pres. Nixon: Magruder
HR Haldeman: He has had him in there for forty-five minutes, but he still
(unintelligible). I called Magruder - it took a long time to
get him - he was not available - and I was trying to get him
through his office but his lawyer said he could reach him in
about an hour which he did and had him call me. Jeb said - I
started out by saying now there have been some developments and
we have reviewed this whole thing with the President and he
thought it was important to have you and your lawyer meet with
John Ehrlichman right away and get up-to-date on where things
stand from this side. He said - fine, I can do that, I can't
make it until about four o'clock. That was the way it was left
- but he then said - you know this whole thing - I don't know
the situation but it is all done now. I said, what do you
mean? He said I decided late last night with my lawyers that I
am going to go ahead - you told me to do what my lawyers told
me to do. You said you couldn't advise me.
Pres. Nixon: Is that what you told him?
HR Haldeman: Yes. You see he called saying, what does Bob want me to do? I
told Larry to tell him that I was not in a position to tell him
what to do, that that was last week, that that was a decision
he had to make and work out with his own advisers. You know -
that I wasn't cutting him off - it was simply that it was his
area. Well anyway, he said they had decided last night that he
would have to tell all and his lawyers met with Silbert today
and informed Silbert that Magruder was ready to tell all and
requested an opportunity for him to do so. He doesn't know
what the timing is but the plan is that he will meet first with
Silbert and review what he is going to say and then Silbert
will take him to the Grand Jury. Now, the kind of a deal -
first - Jeb said I did not ask for immunity - I did not feel I
was entitled to it. He said the reason that I tell everything
is because they are going to get it anyway. They have
witnesses on witnesses now and there is no reason for me to be
quiet because they've got everything anyhow.
Pres. Nixon: How does he know that? Did Silbert tell him?
HR Haldeman: I guess Silbert told his lawyers.
Pres. Nixon: Uh, huh.
HR Haldeman: It is a damn good prosecuting lawyer like Silbert to get a key
witness to tumble, but -
Pres. Nixon: Immediately?
HR Haldeman: Sure, they've got the facts - they may not be able to prove them
but they've got them. Magruder is set to give them the proof.
He says the only thing I gain out of this is the hope that I
don't go up for all the counts they've got me. He says they've
got me for six or eight counts perjury, two counts of
conspiracy and two counts of obstruction of justice essentially
and that ends up with sentences of 135 to 160 years in jail.
He says my lawyers feel that if I open up on this and they have
had discussion - they haven't made a deal apparently with
Silbert - as to what they will do - that he has been told the
way the process will work is that he will give his information
and they will determine from the information what counts they
will seek to indict him on. They will then take him before the
Grand Jury and go forward with Grand Jury indictments on a
limited number of counts and they will try to work on
cooperation and that sort of stuff to lighten his load and he
will then plead guilty on all counts. He will not stand trial
- he will not testify in public court - he will only testify to
the Grand Jury and whatever they bring as indictments he will
take guilty pleas on and go to jail.
Pres. Nixon: It isn't a fair trial is it?
HR Haldeman: He told me that whole thing in a broken voice and showed more
strength than I thought he had, to be perfectly frank. He
obviously groped his way through in his own mind.
Pres. Nixon: It is terribly hard.
HR Haldeman: It is awfully hard - particularly if you are very sharp.
Pres. Nixon: You don't know what is involved -
HR Haldeman: He understands it - he said the other thing that you have to
understand, Bob, is that this whole thing is going down the
drain - he said everybody is going to crumble. At this point I
would suspect these lawyers have talked to each other. He said
LaRue, everybody involved here is going to blow with the
exception of John -
Pres. Nixon: Mitchell?
HR Haldeman: Unfortunately, I had this conversation just as John Mitchell was
driving up the driveway - I held Mitchell - had him go up to
John Ehrlichman's office but then Ehrlichman heard all of this
before he went into Mitchell. Jeb has not told Mitchell of his
decision yet - he said, I want to make my decision and then my
lawyers are working it out with Silbert this morning and then
my next step is to tell John Mitchell which I want to do.
Pres. Nixon: How the hell can John Mitchell deny it? He was right on the
(unintelligible) spot.
HR Haldeman: Jeb says unfortunately I will to a degree implicate John Dean
and to possibly to some degree Bart and I hate to do it, but he
said where I am now there is nothing - I can't pull any
punches. He said there is no way that anything I do will get
to you.
Pres. Nixon: John Dean will have to testify (unintelligible)
HR Haldeman: Well, John Dean - that doesn't trouble me - I don't think it
troubles Dean - where he gets John Dean is on his attendance at
those meetings.
Pres. Nixon: That meeting Saturday night?
HR Haldeman: No - the problem there is that the discussion at those meetings
clearly and specifically did involve bugging.
Pres. Nixon: Oh, Dean never denied it as it has turned out. That's John
Dean's stand - but what about the aftermath? Does the
aftermath hold on Dean?
HR Haldeman: I don't think Magruder knows about the aftermath.
Pres. Nixon: Where does he get to Gordon Strachan?
HR Haldeman: He says he gets Gordon on -
Pres. Nixon: Sending material to him -
HR Haldeman: He still implies at least that Gordon know about it before you
know - he knew everything they did. Larry tells me he did not.
Pres. Nixon: He will testify that he sent materials to the White House?
HR Haldeman: If he is asked, he will, yes.
Pres. Nixon: He'll be asked - is that something he will say he sent to the
White House. What would Strachan say?
HR Haldeman: Strachan has no problem with that. He will say that after the
fact there are materials that I can now surmise were what he is
referring to but they were not at the time identified in any
way as being the result of wiretaps and I did not know they
were. They were amongst tons of stuff. Jeb makes the point.
He said, I am sure Gordon never sent them to Bob because they
were all trash. There was nothing in them. He said the
tragedy of this whole thing is that it produced nothing.
Pres. Nixon: Who else did he send reports to - Mitchell?
HR Haldeman: I don't know. The thing I got before was that he sent them
either to - that one wet to him and one went to Strachan.
Pres. Nixon: What our problem there is if they claim that the reports came to
the White House - basically to your office - what will you say
then?
HR Haldeman: They can. This doesn't ever have to come out.
Pres. Nixon: I know, but they will ask it in the Grand Jury.
HR Haldeman: If they do ask it in the Grand Jury - the Grand Jury is secret.
The only way it will come out is if they decide to indict
Strachan and put him up for trial. He, Jeb, is totally
convinced that they have no interest in Strachan at all - and
they have all this stuff. And I can see how they feel -
Strachan is like a secretary - he is useful as a witness.
Pres. Nixon: (Unintelligible)
HR Haldeman: Yeah, he implies - or has in earlier stuff - he doesn't now
directly. He doesn't say anything now directly - but did in
the earlier stuff that Strachan knew about it beforehand. That
Strachan knew they were bugging the Watergate. Strachan says
he didn't. Jeb has implied a lot of things that I know aren't
true, but I know that a lot of things that other people are
saying aren't true so I would have no idea whether he believes
now that - one of the problems Jeb has is that he's not sure
what is true at this hint.
Pres. Nixon: He tells you this?
HR Haldeman: He tells me that he is sorry about this because it will probably
hurt Dean and it may hurt Bart. You see that is the kind of
thing - you know - from his judgment he is looking at things a
little different now.
--------------------------
Material not related to Presidential actions deleted
--------------------------
Pres. Nixon: Has anything come out yet - something implies that there are
copies of a bill from the Watergate to the White House or not
or has that not been said? He could have had - but I suppose
not (unintelligible)
HR Haldeman: I am sure that it is the thing that follows - all of them had
access to everything - involvement - implication is clearly
there.
Pres. Nixon: Everybody is sure trying to get in the act now. I see a message
here from Steve that John (unintelligible) had thought about
the Watergate and had some ideas he would like to pass along.