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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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press conference could be held, however, Leon suffered a heart attack on July 13, 1973,<br />

and died the same day." [fn 32 ]<br />

Two important witnesses, each of whom represented a threat to reopen the most basic<br />

questions of Watergate, dead in little more than a week! <strong>Bush</strong> is likely to have known of<br />

the import of Russell's testimony, and he is proven to have known of the content of<br />

Leon's. Jerris Leonard later told Hougan that the death of John Leon "came as a complete<br />

shock. It was...well, to be honest with you, it was frightening. It was only a week after<br />

Russell's death, or something like that, and it happened on the very eve of the press<br />

conference. We didn't know what was going on. We were scared." [fn 33] Hougan<br />

comments: "With the principal witness against Bellino no longer available, and with<br />

Russell dead as well, Nixon's last hope of diverting attention from Watergate--slim from<br />

the beginning--was laid to rest forever."<br />

But <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> went ahead with the press conference that had been announced, even if<br />

John Leon, the principal speaker, was now dead. According to Nixon, <strong>Bush</strong> had been<br />

"privately pleading for some action that would get us off the defensive" since back in the<br />

springtime. [fn 34] On July 24, 1973, <strong>Bush</strong> made public the affidavits by Leon, Jones,<br />

and Shimon which charged that the Ervin committee chief investigator Carmine Bellino<br />

had recruited spies to help defeat Nixon back in 1960. "I cannot and do not vouch for the<br />

veracity of the statements contained in the affidavits," said <strong>Bush</strong>, "but I do believe that<br />

this matter is serious enough to concern the Senate Watergate committee, and particularly<br />

since its chief investigator is the subject of the charges contained in the affidavits. If these<br />

charges are true, a taint would most certainly be attached to some of the committee's<br />

work." <strong>Bush</strong>'s statement to the press prediscounted Democratic charges that his<br />

revelations were part of a Nixon Administration counter-offensive to deflect Watergate.<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> specified that on the basis of the Shimon and Leon affidavits, he was "confident"<br />

that Jones and Angelone "had bugged the Nixon space or tapped his phones prior to the<br />

television debate." He conceded that "there was corruption" in the ranks of the GOP. "But<br />

now I have presented some serious allegations that if true could well have affected the<br />

outcome of the 1960 presidential race. <strong>The</strong> Nixon- Kennedy election was a real cliffhanger,<br />

and the debates bore heavily on the outcome of the people's decision." <strong>Bush</strong><br />

rejected any charge that he was releasing the affidavits in a bid to "justify Watergate." He<br />

asserted that he was acting in the interest of "fair play."<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> said that he had taken the affidavits to Sen. Sam Ervin, the chairman of the Senate<br />

Watergate Committee, and to GOP Sen. Howard Baker, that committee's ranking<br />

Republican, but that the committee had failed to act so far. "I haven't seen much action on<br />

it," <strong>Bush</strong> added. When the accuracy of the affidavits was challenged, <strong>Bush</strong> replied,<br />

"We've hear a lot more hearsay bandied about the [Watergate] committee than is<br />

presented here. I'd like to know how serious it is. I'd like to see it looked into," said <strong>Bush</strong>.<br />

He called on Sam Ervin and his committee to probe all the charges forthwith. <strong>Bush</strong> was<br />

"convinced that there is in fact substance to the allegations."

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