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1973
* January 8 The trial of the Watergate Seven (Barker, Gonzalez, Hunt, Liddy, Martinez, McCord and Sturgis) begins in Washington. It is presided over by Judge John Sirica.
* January 11 Hunt pleads guilty.
* January 15 Barker, Gonzalez, Martinez and Sturgis plead guilty.
* January 30 Former Nixon aides G. Gordon Liddy and James W. McCord Jr. are convicted of conspiracy, burglary and wiretapping in the Watergate incident. Both had pleaded not guilty.
* February 7 The Senate votes (77-0) to create the Select Committee on Presidential Campaign Activities.
# March 19/23 James W. McCord WRITES A LETTER to Judge John Sirica in which he claims that the defendants had pleaded guilty under duress. He says they committed perjury and that others are involved in the Watergate break-in. He claims that the burglars lied at the urging of John Dean, Counsel to the President, and John Mitchell, the Attorney-General.
# April 6 John Dean, the White House Counsel, begins co-operating with the Watergate prosecutors.
# April 17 Nixon announces that White House staff will appear before the Senate Committee. He promises "major new developments" in the investigation and says there has been real progress towards finding the truth.
# April 17 An official statement from the White House claims Nixon had no prior knowledge of the Watergate affair.
# Easter Sunday Nixon asks John Dean to prepare a report about the Watergate affair. He sends Dean to Camp David to write the report.
# April 30 Nixon appears on national television and announces the dismissal of Dean and the resignations of Haldeman and Erlichman, describing them as two of his "closest advisers". The Attorney-General, Richard Kleindienst, also resigns and is replaced by Elliot Richardson.
# May 17 The Senate Watergate Committee begins public hearings.
Charges which implicate Bush or Cheney in an impeachable crime really need to originate outside of the Congress for there to be enough of a wave of opposition within the present one to get a conviction. Interesting to note that Congress didn't begin to investigate and hold hearings on Watergate until after the principals were convicted and Nixon implicated in court; and that hearings and investigations have already begun in our own effort to hold this administration accountable without the benefit of any outside prosecution or conviction to buttress them.
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