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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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the story. Woodward claims to have seen nothing in Russell beyond the obvious "old<br />

drunk." [fn 27]<br />

<strong>The</strong> FBI had questioned Russell after the DNC break-ins, probing his whereabouts on<br />

June 16-17 with the suspicion that he had indeed been one of the burglars. But this<br />

questioning led to nothing. Instead, Russell was contacted by Carmine Bellino, and later<br />

by Bellino's broker Birely, who set Russell up in the new apartment (or safe house)<br />

already mentioned, where one of the Columbia Plaza prostitutes moved in with him.<br />

By 1973, minority Republican staffers at the Ervin committee began to realize the<br />

importance of Russell to a revisionist account of the scandal that might exonerate Nixon<br />

to some extent by shifting the burden of guilt elsewhere. On May 9, 1973, the Ervin<br />

committe accordingly subpoenaed Russell's telephone, job, and bank records. Two days<br />

later Russell replied to the committee that he had no job records or diaries, had no bank<br />

account, made long-distance calls only to his daughter, and could do nothing for the<br />

committee.<br />

On May 16-17, 1973, Deep Throat warned Woodward that "everybody's life is in<br />

danger." On May 18, while the staff of the Ervin committee were pondering their next<br />

move vis-avis Russell, Russell suffered a massive heart attack. This was the same day<br />

that McCord, advised by his lawyer and Russell's, Fensterwald, began his public<br />

testimony to the Ervin committee on the coverup. Russell was taken to Washington<br />

Adventist Hospital, where he recovered to some degree and convalesced until June 20.<br />

Russell was convinced that he had been the victim of an attempted assassination. He told<br />

his daughter after leaving the hospital that he believed that he had been poisoned, that<br />

someone had entered his apartment (the Bellino-Birely safe house in Silver Spring) and<br />

"switched pills on me." [fn 28]<br />

Leaving the hospital on June 20, Russell was still very weak and pale. But now, although<br />

he remained on the payroll of James McCord, he also accepted a retainer from his friend<br />

John Leon, who had been engaged by the Republicans to carry out a counterinvestigation<br />

of the Watergate affair. Leon was in contact with Jerris Leonard, a lawyer associated with<br />

Nixon, the GOP, the Republican National Committee, and with Chairman <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong>.<br />

Leonard was a former assistant attorney general for civil rights in the Nixon<br />

administration. Leonard had stepped down as head of the Law Enforcement Assistance<br />

Administration (LEAA) on March 17, 1973. In June, 1973 Leonard was special counsel<br />

to <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> personally, hired by <strong>Bush</strong> and not by the RNC. Leonard says today that<br />

his job consisted in helping to keep the Republican Party separate from Watergate,<br />

deflecting Watergate from the party "so it would not be a party thing." [fn 29] As Hougan<br />

tells it, "Leon was convinced that Watergate was a set-up, that prostitution was at the<br />

heart of the affair, and that the Watergate arrests had taken place following a tip-off to the<br />

police; in other words, the June 17 buglary had been sabotaged from within, Leon<br />

believed, and he intended to prove it." [fn 30] "Integral to Leon's theory of the affair was<br />

Russell's relationship to the Ervin committee's chief investigator, Carmine Bellino, and<br />

the circumstances surrounding Russell's relocation to Silver Spring in the immediate<br />

aftermath of the Watergate arrests. In an investigative memorandum submitted to GOP

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