All the President's Men

Important individuals

The President

  • Richard Nixon

The President's Men

They are listed with their 1972 positions in either the president's executive staff or in his re-election committee, where applicable.

White House

  • Alexander Butterfield, Deputy Assistant to the President
  • Dwight Chapin, Deputy Assistant to the President
  • Ken W. Clawson, Deputy Director of Communications for the President
  • Charles Colson, Chief Counsel for the President
  • John Dean, White House Counsel
  • John Ehrlichman, Counsel and Assistant to the President for Domestic Affairs
  • H. R. Haldeman, White House Chief of Staff
  • E. Howard Hunt Jr., President's Special Investigations Unit ("White House Plumbers")
  • Henry Kissinger, National Security Advisor
  • Egil Krogh, head of the President's Special Investigations Unit ("White House Plumbers")
  • Gerald Warren, White House Press Secretary, succeeding Ziegler
  • David R. Young, special assistant at the National Security Council
  • Ron Ziegler, White House Press Secretary

Committee to Re-elect the President (CRP)

  • Kenneth H. Dahlberg, CRP's Midwest finance chairman
  • Herbert W. Kalmbach, personal attorney to President Richard Nixon and Deputy Finance Chairman of CRP
  • G. Gordon Liddy, CRP employee
  • Clark MacGregor, CRP Chairman
  • Jeb Stuart Magruder, Deputy Director, and assistant to the Director of CRP
  • Robert Mardian, CRP political coordinator
  • John N. Mitchell, Attorney General, and CRP campaign director
  • Robert Odle, Director of Administration ("office manager") for CRP
  • Kenneth Parkinson, CRP counsel
  • Herbert Porter, CRP organizer and former White House aide[4]
  • Donald Segretti, political operative for CRP
  • Hugh W. Sloan Jr., CRP treasurer
  • Judy Hoback Miller, CRP bookkeeper
  • Maurice Stans, CRP finance chairman
  • Gordon C. Strachan, staff assistant to Herbert G. Klein but was assigned to be H. R. Haldeman's liaison to CRP

Rest of the President's Men

  • Alfred C. Baldwin III
  • Jack Caulfield
  • L. Patrick Gray, acting Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation
  • Richard Kleindienst, Attorney General (succeeding John Mitchell)
  • Fred LaRue, no rank, title, salary or even listing in the White House directory
  • Powell A. Moore
  • Kenneth Rietz
  • DeVan L. Shumway

The Burglars

  • Bernard L. Barker
  • Virgilio R. Gonzalez
  • Eugenio R. Martinez
  • James W. McCord, Jr.
  • Frank A. Sturgis

The Prosecutors

  • Henry E. Petersen, United States Assistant Attorney General
  • Earl J. Silbert, United States Attorney for the District of Columbia
  • Donald E. Campbell, Assistant U.S. Attorney[5]
  • Seymour Glanzer, Assistant United States Attorney for the District of Columbia

The Judge

  • John J. Sirica, District Judge for the United States District Court for the District of Columbia

The Washington Post

  • Carl Bernstein, Reporter
  • Bob Woodward, Reporter
  • Benjamin C. Bradlee, Executive Editor
  • Katharine Graham, Publisher
  • Harry M. Rosenfeld, Metropolitan Editor
  • Howard Simons, Managing Editor
  • Barry Sussman, City Desk Editor
  • Brett Gurganious, Local News Reporter

The Senator

  • Sam Ervin (D–NC), chair of the Senate Watergate Committee

The Informant

  • Deep Throat (revealed in 2005 to be Mark Felt)[1]

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