Call & Times

Herbert Kalmbach; Nixon’s lawyer, Watergate figure

- By EMILY LANGER

Herbert Kalmbach, a personal attorney to President Richard Nixon who was drawn into the Watergate scandal as an alleged bagman and later went to prison for illegal political fundraisin­g that included the peddling of an ambassador­ship, died Sept. 15 in Newport Beach, California. He was 95.

The death was announced by the family in a notice published in the Los Angeles Times.

Kalmbach had the distinctio­n, it was written in the New York Times in 1973, of being "the most mysterious figure among the strangely assorted cast of characters in the Watergate affair." A California lawyer, he was by all accounts a loyal servant to the president, low-key and capable in matters political as well as private, and was virtually unknown to the public before the Watergate investigat­ion that drove his client from the White House.

Kalmbach had met Nixon through a mutual acquaintan­ce and had supported his political ambitions since Nixon, as vice president, made his first, unsuccessf­ul bid for the Oval Office in 1960. Two years later, Kalmbach stood by his candidate when Nixon lost a race for California governor and prematurel­y declared his political career to be over.

Nixon's election to the White House in 1968 — and his choice of Kalmbach as his private attorney — propelled Kalmbach's legal practice and burnished his personal prestige. His social circle reportedly came to include Donald Nixon, the president's brother, and actor John Wayne. Kalmbach's firm, with offices in tony Newport Beach and in Los Angeles, attracted a stream of high-powered corporate clients who, in addition to legal representa­tion, received a certain proximity to the president.

Kalmbach was entrusted with Nixon's taxes, his estate planning and the acquisitio­n of the lush property in San Clemente, California, that became known during the Nixon administra­tion as the Western White House. Kalmbach also displayed considerab­le and sometimes controvers­ial skill in courting political donors, raising a reported $18 million for his client's 1968 and 1972 presidenti­al campaigns.

Kalmbach would serve six months in prison after pleading guilty in February 1974 to felony charges of improper fundraisin­g during the 1970 mid-term elections and a misdemeano­r charge of offering a European ambassador­ship in exchange for a $100,000 donation. But he insisted that he did not knowingly participat­e in any illegality stemming from the notorious events of June 17, 1972.

On that day, five burglars broke into the Democratic National Committee headquarte­rs at the Watergate complex in Washington as part of a scheme to spy on Nixon's political enemies.

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