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$Unique_ID{USH01619}
$Pretitle{132}
$Title{The Nixon Tapes
April 27, 1973. (5:37pm - 5:43pm)}
$Subtitle{}
$Author{Nixon, Richard M.}
$Affiliation{Senate Judiciary Committee}
$Subject{nixon
peterson
pres
now
president
concerned
bittman
call
get
i'll}
$Volume{}
$Date{1974}
$Log{}
Book: The Nixon Tapes
Author: Nixon, Richard M.
Affiliation: Senate Judiciary Committee
Date: 1974
April 27, 1973. (5:37pm - 5:43pm)
Meeting: President Nixon and Henry Petersen, Oval Office
Pres. Nixon: Come in.
H. Peterson: Hew are you today?
Pres. Nixon: How was your hard day?
H. Peterson: I'm sure no harder than yours, sir.
Pres. Nixon: Sit down, sit down. I was down in Mississippi today. We have
gotten a report that, ah, that really we've got to head them
off at the pass. Because it's so damned - so damn dangerous to
the Presidency, in a sense. There's a reporter by the name of
Hersh of the New York York Times you probably know.
H. Peterson: He's the fellow that did the Vietnam stories.
Pres. Nixon: Right. Who told Bittman, who told O'Brien, apparently that they
have information - Hersh has information I don't know. You
can't ever tell who is saying "this is from Hersh" or "this is
from Bittman." Information indicating that Dean has made
statements to the prosecuting team implicating the President.
And whether - and whether - the Post has heard similar rumors.
Now, Henry, this I've got to know. Now, understand - I have
told you everything I know about this thing.
H. Peterson: I don't have any problem with that, Mr. President, and I'll get
in touch with them immediately, but -
Pres. Nixon: Who?
H. Peterson: With Titus, Silbert and Glanzer and Campbell? Who are
Pres. Nixon: Do you mind calling them right now?
H. Peterson: No, sir.
Pres. Nixon: OK. Say, "Now, look. All of your conversations with Dean and
Bittman, do they implicate the President?" Because we can't -
I've got - if the U.S. Attorney's office and, ah
H. Peterson: Mr. President, (unintelligible) I had them over there - we had a
kind of crisis of confidence night before last. I left to come
over here and I left my two principal assistants to discourse
with Silbert and the other three. And in effect it concerned
me - whether or not they were at ease with my reporting to you,
and I pointed out to them that I had very specific
instructions, discussed that with them before on that subject,
and - well
Pres. Nixon: Yes.
H. Peterson: As a consequence - I kind of laid in to Titus yesterday and it
cleared the air a little bit, but there is a very suspicious
atmosphere. They are concerned and scared. Ah - and I will
check on this but I have absolutely no information at this
point that -
Pres. Nixon: Never heard anything like that -
H. Peterson: No, sir. Absolutely not.
Pres. Nixon: My gosh - As I said -
H. Peterson: Mr. President, I tell you, I do not consider it, you know, I've
said to Titus, "We have to draw the line. We have no mandate
to investigate the President. We investigate Watergate." And
I don't know where that line draws, but we have to draw that
all the time.
Pres. Nixon: Good. Because if Dean is implicating the Presidency - we are
going to damned well find out about it. That's - that's -
because let me tell you the only conversations we ever had with
him, was that famous March 21st conversation I told you about,
where he told me about Bittman coming to him. No, the Bittman
request for $120,000 for Hunt. And I then finally began to get
at them. I explored with him thoroughly, "Now what the hell is
this for?" He said "It's because he's blackmailing
Ehrlichman." Remember I said that's what it's about. And Hunt
is going to recall the seamy side of it. And I asked him,
"Well how would you get it? How would you get it to them?" so
forth. But my purpose was to find out what the hell had been
going on before. And believe me, nothing was approved. I mean
as far as I'm concerned - as far as I'm concerned turned it off
totally.
H. Peterson: Yeah. My understanding of law is - my understanding of our
responsibilities, is that If it Came to that I would have to
come to you and say, "We can't do that." The only people who
have jurisdiction to do that is the House of Representatives,
as far as I'm concerned.
Pres. Nixon: That's right. But I want you to know, you tell me, because as
far as I'm concerned -
H. Peterson: I'll call them. Do you want me to call from here or outside?
Pres. Nixon: Use the Cabinet Room and you will be able to talk freely. And
who will you call, who will you talk to there?
H. Peterson: I'll call Silbert. If he's not there, I'll get Titus.
Pres. Nixon: You'll say that "This is the story some New York Times reporter
has and Woodward of the Post, but Hersh is reporting that Dean
had made a statement to the prosecutors." Now understand that
this is not a Grand Jury thing. Now damnit, I want to know
what it is.
H. Peterson: I'll call right away.
Pres. Nixon: And I need to know.
H. Peterson: Yes, sir.