This
auction is for the following RARE Alexander Butterfield Watergate Scandal autographed
8x10 photograph:
BIO:
Alexander Butterfield Watergate Scandal he served as the deputy assistant to
President Richard Nixon from 1969-1973. He revealed the White House taping system's
existence on July 13th, 1973 during the Watergate investigation.
From 1973-1975, he served as administrator of the Federal Aviation
Administration.
Watergate
Revelations:
Butterfield
did, however, play a minor role in Watergate. Nixon had $1.6 million in
campaign funds left over from the 1968 election. Determined to raise as much
re-election money as he could before a new federal campaign finance law took
effect on April 7, 1972, Nixon's staff and political operatives began raising
large amounts of cash. Some of this cash was used for illegal purposes
connected with the Watergate scandal, such as surveillance and paying for the
Watergate burglary. Haldeman retained $350,000 in cash in a locked briefcase in
the office of Hugh W. Sloan Jr. at the Committee for the Re-Election of the
President. Haldeman said the case, colloquially known as "the 350",
was for polling operations. Haldeman aide Gordon C. Strachan moved the cash to
the White House in April 1972, but Haldeman ordered it removed. Strachan then
asked Butterfield to handle the cash by giving it to someone Butterfield
trusted. On April 7, Butterfield removed the cash and met a close friend at the
Key Bridge Marriott in Rosslyn, Virginia. The friend agreed to keep the cash in
a safe deposit box in Arlington County, Virginia, and make it available to the
White House on demand. Butterfield voluntarily revealed his role in "the
350" to United States Attorneys shortly after leaving the White House in
March 1973. Butterfield also played a very limited role in some of the
surveillance conducted by the Nixon White House. On September 7, 1972, Nixon
met with Haldeman and Ehrlichman to discuss Senator Edward M. Kennedy's request
for Secret Service protection while he campaigned on behalf of the Democratic
presidential nominee, Senator George McGovern. Haldeman suggested Butterfield
handle the details, and Butterfield, Ehrlichman, and Haldeman met with Nixon
later that day to discuss planting a mole. Nixon was convinced Kennedy was an
adulterer, and wanted to catch him "in the sack with one of his
babes". Butterfield assigned former Nixon bodyguard Robert Newbrand as the
spy in Kennedy's protective detail on September 8.
Installing
the Richard Nixon taping system:
Butterfield
also oversaw installation of the taping system which Nixon ordered for the
White House. On February 10, 1971, Haldeman's assistant, Lawrence Higby, told
Butterfield that Nixon wanted a voice-activated audio taping system installed
in the Oval Office and on White House telephones. The goal, Nixon said, was to
create a more accurate record of events. Butterfield worked with the Secret
Service to install five hidden microphones in Nixon's desk in the Oval Office,
two in lamps on the mantel over the fireplace, two in the cabinet room, and on
all telephone lines in the Lincoln Sitting Room and Oval Office. According to
Butterfield, the system was highly secret, its existence known only to Nixon,
Haldeman, Higby, and the three or four Secret Service technical staffers who
installed it. In April 1971, Nixon ordered the taping system to be installed in
his private office in the Executive Office Building.
White
House Assistant President Richard Nixon:
In
late 1968, Butterfield learned that he would be stationed in Australia for
another two years, delaying any potential promotion and potentially harming his
military career. The ambitious Butterfield wanted to be in "the
smoke" (where the action was), and wanted to leave Australia. After coming
across a newspaper article which mentioned the appointment of H. R. Haldeman as
Nixon's White House Chief of Staff, Butterfield wrote to Haldeman asking for a
job. The two met in New York City about December 19, 1968, to discuss a role as
a military aide, but when nothing suitable came up, Butterfield asked to take
any job in the White House. General Andrew Goodpaster, former White House staff
secretary in the Eisenhower administration, suggested that Haldeman have a
deputy, and Haldeman offered the position to Butterfield about January 13.
Butterfield retired from the Air Force a few days later, and his appointment as
deputy assistant to the president was announced on January 23, 1969.
THIS IS AN AUTHENTIC HAND AUTOGRAPHED 8x10 PHOTOGRAPH. I ONLY SELL AUTHENTIC HAND AUTOGRAPHED MEMORABILIA. I do not sell reprints or facsimile autographs. When you bid on my items you will receive the real deal authentic hand autographed items. You will receive the same signed 8x10 photograph that is pictured in the scan. If you have any questions feel free to e-mail me. PLEASE NOTE this 8x10 photograph was printed and then autographed post war. I combine S&H when multiple items are purchased. I ship items internationally the price for international S&H varies by country. I currently have other rare autographed military and historical signed items available. Please take a look at my other auctions of rare military and historical autographed items.