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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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Lou Russell, in the period between June 20 and July 2, 1973, was working for a detective<br />

agency that was helping <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> prepare for an upcoming press conference. In this<br />

sense, Russell was working for <strong>Bush</strong>.<br />

Russell is relevant because he seems (although he denied it) to have been the fabled sixth<br />

man of the Watergate break-in, the burglar who got away. He may also have been the<br />

buglar who tipped off the police, if indeed anyone did. Russell was a harlequin who had<br />

been the servant of many masters. Lou Russell had once been the chief investigator for<br />

the House Committee on Un-American Activities. He had worked for the FBI. He had<br />

been a stringer for Jack Anderson, the columnist. In December, 1971 he had been an<br />

employee of General Security Services, the company that provided the guards who<br />

protected the Watergate buildings. In March of 1972 Russell had gone to work for James<br />

McCord and McCord Associates, whose client was the CREEP. Later, after the scandal<br />

had broken, Russell worked for McCord's new and more successful firm, Security<br />

Associates. Russell had also worked directly for the CREEP as a night watchman. Russell<br />

had also worked for John Leon of Allied Investigators, Inc., a company that later went to<br />

work for <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> and the Republican National Committee. Still later, Russell found<br />

a job with the headquarters of the McGovern for President campaign. Russell's lawyer<br />

was Bud Fensterwald, and sometimes Russell performed investigative services for<br />

Fensterwald and for Fensterwald's Committee to Investigate Assassinations. In<br />

September, 1972, well after the scandal had become notorious, Russell seems to have<br />

joined with one Nick Beltrante in carrying out electronic countermeasures sweeps of the<br />

DNC headquarters, and during one of these he appears to have planted an electronic<br />

eavesdropping device in the phone of DNC worker Spencer Oliver which, when it was<br />

discovered, re-focussed public attention on the Watergate scandal at the end of the<br />

summer of 1972.<br />

Russell was well acquainted with Carmine Bellino, the chief investigator on the staff of<br />

Sam Ervin's Senate Select Committee on Presidential Campaign Practices. Bellino was a<br />

Kennedy operative who had superintended the seamy side of the JFK White House,<br />

including such figures as Judith Exner, the president's alleged paramour. Later, Bellino<br />

would become the target of <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong>'s most revealing public action during the<br />

Watergate period. Bellino's friend William Birely later provided Russell with an<br />

apartment in Silver Spring, Maryland, (thus allowing him to leave his room in a rooming<br />

house on Q Street in the District), a new car, and sums of money.<br />

Russell had been a heavy drinker, and his social circle was that of the prostitutes, whom<br />

he sometimes patronized and sometimes served as a bouncer and goon. His familiarity<br />

with the brothel milieu faciliatated his service for the Office of Security, which was to<br />

oversee the bugging and other surveillance of Columbia Plaza and other locations.<br />

Lou Russell was incontestably one of the most fascinating figures of Watergate. How<br />

remarkable, then, that the indefatigable ferrets Woodward and Bernstein devoted so little<br />

attention to him, deeming him worthy of mention in neither of their two books.<br />

Woodward and met with Russell, but had ostensibly decided that there was "nothing to

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