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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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the Anglo-American financier elite. This includes the presence among the Plumbers of<br />

numerous assets of the Central Intelligence Agency, and specifically of the CIA bureaus<br />

traditionally linked to <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong>, such as the Office of Security- Security Research<br />

Staff and the Miami Station with its pool of Cuban operatives.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Plumbers were created at the demand of Henry Kissinger, who told Nixon that<br />

something had to be done to stop leaks in the wake of the "Pentagon Papers" affair of<br />

1971. But if the Plumbers were called into existence by Kissinger, they were funded<br />

through a mechanism set up by Kissinger clone <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong>. A salient fact about the<br />

White House Special Investigations Unit (or Plumbers) of 1971-72 is that the money used<br />

to finance it was provided by <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong>'s business partner and lifelong intimate friend,<br />

Bill Liedtke, the president of Pennzoil. Bill Liedtke was a regional finance chairman for<br />

the Nixon campaigns of 1968 and 1972, and he was one of the most successful,<br />

reportedly exceeding his quota by the largest margin among all his fellow regional<br />

chairmen. Liedtke says that he accepted this post as a personal favor to <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong>. In<br />

1972, Bill Liedtke raised $700,000 in anonymous contributions, including what appears<br />

to have been a single contribution of $100,000 that was laundered through a bank account<br />

in Mexico. According to Harry Hurt, part of this money came from <strong>Bush</strong>'s bosom crony<br />

Robert Mosbacher, now Secretary of Commerce. According to one account, "two days<br />

before a new law was scheduled to begin making anonymous donations illegal, the<br />

$700,000 in cash, checks, and securities was loaded into a briefcase at Pennzoil<br />

headquarters and picked up by a company vice president, who boarded a Washington-<br />

bound Pennzoil jet and delivered the funds to the Committee to Re- elect the President at<br />

ten o'clock that night." [fn 14]<br />

<strong>The</strong>se Mexican checks were turned over first to Maurice Stans of the CREEP, who<br />

transferred them in turn to Watergate burglar Gordon Liddy. Liddy passed them on to<br />

Bernard Barker, one of the Miami station Cubans arrested on the night of the final<br />

Watergate break- in. Barker was actually carrying some of the cash left over from these<br />

checks when he was apprehended. When Barker was arrested, his bank records were<br />

subpoenaed by the Dade County, Florida district attorney, Richard E. Gerstein, and were<br />

obtained by Gerstein's chief investigator, Martin Dardis. As Dardis told Carl Bernstein of<br />

the Washington Post, about $100,000 in four cashier's checks had been issued in Mexico<br />

City by Manuel Ogarrio Daguerre, a prominent lawyer who handled Stans' moneylaundering<br />

operation there. [fn 15] Liedtke eventually appeared before three grand juries<br />

investigating the different aspects of the Watergate affair, but neither he nor Pennzoil was<br />

ever brought to trial for the CREEP contributions. But it is a matter of more than passing<br />

interest that the money for the Plumbers came from one of <strong>Bush</strong>'s intimates and at the<br />

request of <strong>Bush</strong>, a member of the Nixon Cabinet from February, 1971 on. How much did<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> himself know about the activities of the Plumbers, and when did he know it?<br />

<strong>The</strong> U.S. House of Representatives Banking and Currency Committee, chaired by Texas<br />

Democrat Wright Patman, soon began a vigorous investigation of the money financing<br />

the break-in, large amounts of which were found as cash in the pockets of the burglars.<br />

Chairman Patman opened the following explosive leads: Patman confirmed that the<br />

largest amount of the funds going into Miami bank account of Watergate burglar Bernard

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