"Deep Throat" Uncovered (1 Viewer)

gray

Senior Member
Moderator
Apr 22, 2003
30,260
#1
No, this is not a porn thread.


'Deep Throat' Reportedly Comes Forward
Tuesday, May 31, 2005

(05-31) 11:21 PDT New York (AP) --

A former FBI official claims he was "Deep Throat," the long-anonymous source who leaked secrets about President Nixon's Watergate coverup to The Washington Post, Vanity Fair reported Tuesday.

W. Mark Felt, 91, who was second-in-command at the FBI in the early 1970s, kept the secret even from his family until 2002, when he confided to a friend that he had been Post reporter Bob Woodward's source, the magazine said.

"I'm the guy they used to call Deep Throat," he told lawyer John D. O'Connor, the author of the Vanity Fair article, the magazine said in a news release.

Felt was initially adamant about remaining silent on the subject, thinking disclosures about his past somehow dishonorable.

"I don't think (being Deep Throat) was anything to be proud of," Felt indicated to his son, Mark Jr., at one point, according to the article. "You (should) not leak information to anyone."

Felt is a retiree living in Santa Rosa, Calif., with his daughter, Joan, the magazine said. He could not immediately be reached for comment by The Associated Press. His family members disagreed with their father, feeling that he should receive accolades for his role in Watergate before his death.

The Washington Post had no immediate comment on the report.

O'Connor is a lawyer at the San Francisco firm Howard, Rice, Nemerovski, Canady, Falk & Rabkin. A receptionist there said O'Connor was out of the office but confirmed he was the author of the Vanity Fair article.

The existence of Deep Throat, nicknamed for a popular porn movie of the early 1970s, was revealed in Woodward and Carl Bernstein's best-selling book "All the President's Men." In the hit movie based on the book, Deep Throat was played by Hal Holbrook.

But his identity of the source whose disclosures helped bring down the Nixon presidency remained a mystery.

Among those named over the years as Deep Throat were Assistant Attorney General Henry Peterson, deputy White House counsel Fred Fielding, and even ABC newswoman Diane Sawyer, who then worked in the White House press office. Ron Zeigler, Nixon's press secretary, White House aide Steven Bull, speechwriters Ray Price and Pat Buchanan, and John Dean, the White House counsel who warned Nixon of "a cancer growing on the presidency," also were considered candidates.

And some theorized Deep Throat wasn't a single source at all but a composite figure.

In 1999, Felt denied he was the man.

"I would have done better," Felt told The Hartford Courant. "I would have been more effective. Deep Throat didn't exactly bring the White House crashing down, did he?"

In 2003, Woodward and Bernstein reached an agreement to keep their Watergate papers at the University of Texas at Austin.

At the time, the pair said documents naming "Deep Throat" would be kept secure at an undisclosed location in Washington until the source's death.
 

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Elnur_E65

Senior Member
Feb 21, 2004
10,848
#3
Thanks to this man Bob Woodward is where he is today.

June 17th 1972 is the day a lot of Republicans want to erase from their memories.
 

Bjerknes

"Top Economist"
Mar 16, 2004
115,984
#7
Wow, after 27 years he finally showed himself.

I guess his family convinced him to reveal himself to the media because most think of him as a good man, except for some diehard Republicans.
 

adams

Junior Member
Mar 5, 2005
450
#12
++ [ originally posted by Elnur_E65 ] ++
Thanks to this man Bob Woodward is where he is today.

June 17th 1972 is the day a lot of Republicans want to erase from their memories.

corruption controversies then and now
a part of the republican party then and now
fighting an unpopular war then and now
voting issues then and now
gas prices then and now
 

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