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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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was." Certain elements of this infamous "campaign" are known. Banking Committee<br />

member Frank Brasco, a lieral Democratic Congressman from New York, voted to stop<br />

the probe. New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller had arranged a meeting between<br />

Brasco and U.S. Attorney General John Mitchell. Brasco was a target of a Justice<br />

Department investigation for alleged fraud and bribery since 1970, and Mitchell<br />

successfully warned Brasco not to back Patman. Later, in 1974, Brasco was convicted of<br />

bribery.<br />

Before Watergate, both John Mitchell and Henry Kissinger had FBI reports implicating<br />

California Congressman Richard Hanna in the receipt of illegal campaign contributions<br />

from the Korean Central Intelligence Agency. Hanna surprised Patman by voting against<br />

the investigation. Hanna was later (1978) convicted for his role in the Koreagate scandal<br />

in 1978. <strong>The</strong> secretary of Congressman William Chappell complained in 1969 that the<br />

Florida Democrat had forced her to kick back some of her salary. <strong>The</strong> Justice<br />

Department, holding this information, had declined to prosecute. Chappell, a member of<br />

the Banking Committee, voted to stop Patman's investigation. Kentucky Democratic<br />

Congressman William Curlin, Jr., revealed in 1973 that "certain members of the<br />

committee were reminded of various past political indiscretions, or of relatives who<br />

might suffer as a result of [a] pro-subpoena vote." <strong>The</strong> Justice Department worked<br />

overtime to smear Patman, including an attempt to link him to "Communist agents" in<br />

Greece. [fn 19]<br />

<strong>The</strong> day before the Committee vote, the Justice Department released a letter to Patman<br />

claiming that any Congressional investigation would compromise the rights of the<br />

accused Watergate burglars before their trial.<br />

House Republican leader Gerald Ford led the attack on Patman from within the Congress.<br />

Though he later stated his regrets for this vicious campaign, his eventual reward was the<br />

U.S. Presidency.<br />

Cancelling the Patman probe meant that there would be no investigation of Watergate<br />

before the 1972 Presidential election. <strong>The</strong> Washington Post virtually ended reference to<br />

the Watergate affair, and spoke of Nixon's opponent, <strong>George</strong> McGovern, as unqualified<br />

for the Presidency. <strong>The</strong> Republican Party was handed another four year Administration.<br />

<strong>Bush</strong>, Kissinger, Rockefeller and Ford were the gainers. But then Richard Nixon became<br />

the focus of all Establishment attacks for Watergate, while the money trail that Patman<br />

had pursued was forgotten. Wright Patman was forced out of his Committee<br />

chairmanship in 1974. On the day Nixon resigned the Presidency, Patman wrote to Peter<br />

Rodino, chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, asking him not to stop investigating<br />

Watergate. Though Patman died in 1976, his advice still holds good. ***<br />

As the late FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover told the journalist Andrew Tully in the days<br />

before June, 1972, "By God, he's [Nixon's] got some former CIA men working for him<br />

that I'd kick out of my office. Someday, that bunch will serve him up a fine mess." [fn 20]<br />

<strong>The</strong> CIA men in question were among the Plumbers, a unit allegedly created in the first<br />

place to stanch the flow of leaks, including the Jack Anderson material about such

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