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The secret audio recording system maintained in the White House during Richard Nixon’s presidency provided critical evidence that shaped the outcome of the Watergate investigation. Its disclosure in July 1973 transformed the ongoing inquiry, creating a definitive constitutional confrontation over access to presidential records. The tapes became the objective record at the center of a legal struggle that reached the Supreme Court and ultimately documented the president’s involvement in obstructing justice. This analysis examines the system’s operation, the constitutional conflict it generated, the evidentiary significance of its content, and the institutional consequences, assessing how a mechanism for preserving administrative history…
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In the early hours of June 17, 1972, five men were arrested inside the offices of the Democratic National Committee in the Watergate office complex in Washington, D.C. They carried wiretapping equipment, cameras, and tear-gas pens. When a night watchman called the police, he set in motion a chain of events that would topple a presidency, send dozens of government officials to prison, and fundamentally shatter the American public’s faith in its own government. What began as a “third-rate burglary,” in the dismissive words of President Richard Nixon’s press secretary, was in fact the first thread pulled from a vast…
