The Jerusalem Post

Conservati­ve radio host G. Gordon Liddy, of Watergate infamy, dies at age 90

- • By BILL TROTT

G. Gordon Liddy, a brash former FBI agent who helped orchestrat­e the 1972 Watergate break-in, a crime that began the unraveling of Richard Nixon’s presidency, died on Tuesday at the age of 90.

Liddy, who parlayed his Watergate infamy into a 20-year career as a conservati­ve talk-radio host, died surrounded by family at the home of his daughter in Mount Vernon, Virginia, his son, Thomas P. Liddy, told Reuters by telephone.

“He had a full life, and it just had run its course,” the younger Liddy said of his father, adding that COVID-19 was not a factor. “He did all the good Lord asked of him and then a little more.”

Liddy had been diagnosed a few years ago suffering from Parkinson’s disease, his son said. News of Liddy’s death was first reported by The Washington Post.

Liddy, born George Gordon Battle Liddy, was one of the notorious White House “plumbers” whose job it was to plug leaks to the media in the Nixon administra­tion. His portfolio at Nixon’s Committee to Re-elect the President was “dirty tricks” – and he approached the job with gusto.

He and colleague E. Howard Hunt, a former CIA agent, came up with schemes so outlandish and illegal that their superiors often squelched them.

Among them were a plot to kill investigat­ive columnist Jack Anderson, an ardent Nixon critic; having anti-war protesters at the Republican National Committee in San Diego in 1972 kidnapped and taken across the border into Mexico; and luring Democratic Party officials to a party with prostitute­s.

But not all their plans were rejected. In 1971 a few months before the Watergate burglary, Liddy was part of the break-in at the offices of a psychiatri­st who was seeing Daniel Ellsberg, a former US military analyst who leaked the top-secret Pentagon

Papers about the US war in Vietnam.

Then came the break-in that would undo Nixon. Liddy and Hunt came up with the plan to get into the Democratic National Committee headquarte­rs at the Watergate hotel-office complex in Washington as Nixon was seeking reelection in 1972.

After his team was caught, Liddy would be convicted of conspiracy, burglary and wiretappin­g for the Watergate and Ellsberg break-ins.

He was sentenced to up to 20 years in prison and served nearly five before being released – thanks to a commutatio­n in 1977 from Democratic president Jimmy Carter, who felt his sentence was out of proportion to those meted out to other Watergate criminals.

Unlike his six codefendan­ts, Liddy refused to cooperate with prosecutor­s, which had led a judge to add 18 months to the prison term because he would not answer a grand jury’s questions.

Liddy’s time in prison was the longest of any Watergate figure but he remained unapologet­ic about his crime and told The New York Times he would do it again if asked. He also was proud about not cooperatin­g with the grand jury while denouncing those who had. He drove a Rolls-Royce with a license plate that said “H20-GATE.”

After prison, Liddy started a security-investigat­ion firm, wrote best-selling books, had a few acting roles on television and in movies and in 1992 became host of a Washington-based radio talk show that was eventually syndicated to more than 225 stations. He retired in 2012.

With ramrod-straight posture and a trademark brushy mustache, Liddy was known for his bravado. He bragged about being able to hold his hand over a flame without flinching and spoke of being able to kill a person with just a pencil. When callers to his radio show asked how he was doing, he barked, “Virile, vigorous and potent!”

Liddy said he was a wimp as a child until he decided to do something about it. In his 1980 autobiogra­phy “Will,” he said he was inspired by the tenor of the speeches of Adolf Hitler that his family’s German maid listened to on the radio and determined to make a man of himself.

His method included roasting and eating a rat and lashing himself to a tree during a lightning storm to overcome his fears.

In 2001, Liddy’s reported belief that the Watergate breakin was meant to cover up a callgirl ring operated out of Democratic headquarte­rs was a key component of a defamation suit against him by Ida “Maxie” Wells, a secretary at the Democratic headquarte­rs at the time of the break-in.

According to the Post, Liddy said in at least two speeches that Nixon lawyer John Dean orchestrat­ed the break-in to steal pictures of scantily clad prostitute­s, including Dean’s then-girlfriend, from Wells’ desk.

A federal jury deadlocked and the case was dismissed.

Born November 30, 1930, in New York City, Liddy graduated with a bachelor’s degree from Fordham University in 1952 and a law degree from Fordham

Law School in 1957.

After two years’ US Army service, Liddy became a special agent of the FBI before resigning in 1962 to practice law in Manhattan. He then served as prosecutor in New York’s Dutchess County, where he was known for wearing a pistol to court.

“He believed passionate­ly in the dangers of drugs, criminals and Communists,” said a New York Times profile in 1973.

As a prosecutor, he was involved in the 1960s raid on Timothy Leary, the former Harvard professor and LSD advocate who had a commune near Poughkeeps­ie, New York. In the 1980s the two men would tour the nation hosting debates on moral and social issues.

Liddy unsuccessf­ully sought election to Congress from New York’s 28th district in 1968 but that year played a significan­t role in Nixon’s presidenti­al campaign in the district.

Liddy and his wife, Frances, who died in 2010, had five children. (Reuters)

 ??  ?? G. GORDON LIDDY (Jonathan Ernst/Reuters)
G. GORDON LIDDY (Jonathan Ernst/Reuters)

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