G. Gordon Liddy, whose 1980 autobiography Will was a dubious influence on my adolescence, wrote about going to the Justice Department for a meeting in late-April 1971, as anti-war protestors converged on Washington. Liddy, then a Treasury official, was about to be reassigned at the behest of Attorney General John Mitchell to the White House “Plumbers” unit, where he’d oversee the Watergate burglary that, in time, would land various Nixon administration officials, including him and Mitchell, in prison. Читать дальше...