Close to Home: Felt Represented the Integrity of the Ordinary Citizen
by John D. O’Connor
The following is an article originally published in the Santa Rosa Press Democrat. It is available for purchase through the paper’s archives HERE.
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Winston Churchill once said, "History will treat me kindly, because I intend to write it."
Famed Washington Post reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein followed in Churchill's footsteps, telling the world that their indefatigable reporting broke the Watergate scandal. They now take umbrage with a new movie, Mark Felt: The Man who Brought Down the White House, starring Liam Neeson and Diane Lane, which is based on the book I co-authored, because it shows that FBI Associate Director Mark Felt was the true moving cause exposing our country's most significant political scandal.
There are certainly those whose confirmation bias will bring them to Woodstein's defense, several of the early movie reviews so proving. But Woodward and Bernstein should be content to savor 43 years of unchallenged exaggeration. Woodward, to be sure, was Felt's daily-circulation megaphone, a resource on which the cub reporter capitalized to stay on the story. But as the new movie explains, Woodward was only the puppet of a master puppeteer.
I was a young federal prosecutor in 1974 when the book All the President's Men was published. I followed the Washington Post reporting intensely, convinced that the reporters were simply tailgating on Department of Justice (prosecutors, FBI) sources. The revelation of the Deep Throat character in the reporters' bestselling book only confirmed my thesis, because Deep Throat was so obviously a Department of Justice official. Woodward's claim to "protect" his source's identity was mostly fig leaf and feint, because anyone with a brain and an attention span could have sussed out Felt immediately. If Felt had been ratting out the Mafia, he would quickly have been fitted for concrete overshoes.
One problem faced by any of the movie's reviewers is the conventional but incomplete and distorted view of how the Watergate cover-up was eventually punctured, which the movie seeks to remedy. Most remember the vivid explosion — John Dean's Senate testimony, James McCord's dramatic letter to Judge John Sirica. But few have made the effort to determine the cause of the explosion.
The movie, directed by Peter Landesman, shows the bombs, the fuses and the timer, all put in place by Felt. He was originally ordered by his political hack boss, L. Patrick Gray, to shut down the Watergate investigation in 48 hours, which Felt easily handled by whispering in the ear of Time magazine's Sandy Smith, who in turn questioned a stunned Gray. So much for his 48-hour order.
On Sept. 15, 1972, U.S. Attorney General Richard Kleindienst indicted only the seven original suspects, while a Department of Justice lawyer told reporters the investigation was "in a state of repose." Now Felt went to work, not to take down the White House, but to keep his investigation open and avoid charges of whitewash. He gave the Post reporters Donald Segretti's nationwide dirty tricks program on a silver platter. When the newspaper hesitated, he hauled Woodward into the garage for an all-night cram course on how to connect the dots. The result was an article so forceful that it resulted in the formation of the Select Committee on Presidential Campaign Activities chaired by Sen. Sam Ervin, D-North Carolina, just two days later. In late February 1973, the White House was still keeping its leaky ship afloat, hoping to solidify its defenses by the Senate confirmation of L. Patrick Gray as the FBI's permanent director. But Felt set up the Senate with key questions, via his latest leak-induced Time article, expecting that Gray would reveal White House interference in the investigation. His plan succeeded, perhaps excessively, as the hapless Gray self-destructed. But in the process, Gray revealed enough about John Dean to send him into prosecutors' arms, followed by Dean's cohort Jeb Magruder.
McCord, a CIA plant who had not retired, as was alleged, sensing White House vulnerability with the Dean and Magruder defections, and wishing to protect his deeply-involved agency, now piled on. Well before the Ervin committee began hearings, the Nixon White House was bread in the toaster.
Woodward and Bernstein helped the process by dramatically portraying these events daily, riveting the nation while giving backbone to legislators. But to claim that the reporters caused the uncovering of White House guilt would send Thomas Aquinas revolving in his grave. The ultimate, primary or moving cause, as you may choose , was one Mark Felt.
Because the true story of Watergate's resolution comes 45 years after the scandal, it challenges strongly held but erroneous beliefs of many who claim to "know" Watergate and, therefore, criticize Landesman's take.
For those with open minds, though, the movie's exploration of the courageous integrity of a virtually anonymous civil servant can be both enlightening and hopeful. Power always corrupts, but truth spoken to power eventually prevails.
Felt represents the integrity of the ordinary citizen — and the enduring strength of democratic systems. This is a civics lesson that the movie dramatically enshrines. In a sense, it speaks truth to power, in this case the powerful Washington Post, which has often been Nixonian in pushing an incomplete version of our country's most significant scandal. For the intellectually curious, that wrong has been remedied.
John D. O'Connor is a San Francisco lawyer who represented Santa Rosa resident W. Mark Felt as he revealed his identity as Deep Throat. O'Connor and Felt collaborated on the 2006 book, A G-Man's Life, which has been made into the film Mark Felt: The Man who Brought Down the White House, which debuted in Santa Rosa on Oct. 13. O'Connor is a former federal prosecutor who worked in the U.S. Attorney's Office in San Francisco with now Special Prosecutor Robert Mueller.