The revelation that W. Mark Felt, the former No. 2 person at the
FBI, was the “Deep Throat” figure that helped Washington Post reporters
Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward unravel the Watergate scandal, has
reopened old political wounds. Supporters of Richard M. Nixon, who
resigned in disgrace rather than face certain impeachment, accuse Felt
of being a traitor. Others have hailed him as a hero. However, the real
hero of Watergate was Frank Wills, an alert, Black, $80-a-week security
guard who discovered the burglary at the hotel-office complex
overlooking the Potomac River. After reporting to work on June
17, 1972 for his midnight to 8 A.M. shift, Wills was making his rounds
around 12:30 A.M. when something caught his eye. In an interview years
later with the Augusta Chronicle, he recalled: “A piece of tape was on
the door; the catch on the door was taped back. I removed the tape,
because at that time it really wasn’t unusual…” After making his
rounds, Wills went across the street to the Howard Johnson hotel, where
he had a serving of orange juice. When he returned to his 6th-floor
rounds at 1:55 A.M., he paused. “There, the same door had been
retaped the same way,” he told the newspaper. “Something sort of
alerted me about that. Just a feeling, you know.” Wills
telephoned D.C. police. And when they arrived, officers shut down the
elevator, blocked access doors and climbed six flights of stairs until
they came to the door that had been re-taped. “We discovered a
door had been forced open with a crowbar or something,” Wills said.
“That door led directly into the Democratic office, the DNC office.” He
noticed a silhouette of a man. “The (police) asked the person
in the shadow, ‘Who is that? Come out.’ I was searching for a light
switch. When we turned the lights on, one person, then two persons,
then three persons came out and on down the line,” Wills told the
Augusta Chronicle. In all, five men were apprehended: James W.
McCord Jr., Frank Sturgis, Bernard Barker, Virgilio Gonzalez and
Eugenio Martinez. They had broken into the offices of the Democratic
National Committee three weeks earlier to plant electronic
eavesdropping equipment and had returned to repair it. Nixon’s
press secretary, Ron Ziegler, tried to dismiss the break-in as a
“third-rate burglary.” But it quickly became clear that it was much
more than that. One of the burglars, James McCord, identified himself
as a CIA agent. Another burglar, Bernard Barker, carried on him the
phone number of E. Howard Hunt, the chief of security at the Committee
to Re-Elect the President. Through the aggressive reporting of
Woodward and Bernstein, the Senate Watergate hearings chaired by Sam
Irvin, and the testimony and remarkable recall of fired White House
counsel John Dean, the scope of the Watergate scandal was revealed and
many of Nixon’s closest aides went to prison. Nixon operatives
had engaged in a series of dirty tricks in 1973 and 1974 that included
breaking into the office of the psychologist of Daniel Ellsberg, the
anti-war activist that leaked the Pentagon Papers to the New York
Times; spreading false rumors about the wife of Sen. Ed Muskie, a
potential Democratic rival, and bugging the office of DNC chairman
Larry O’Brien. In addition, Nixon ordered his aides to compile an
Enemies List so that they could be harassed by the Internal Revenue
Service and other federal agencies. At the Watergate Senate
hearing, it was revealed that a secret tape-recording system had been
installed in the Oval Office. When investigators sought the tapes,
Nixon refused to release them. A unanimous U.S. Supreme Court ordered
him to turn them over . The combination of that order and the House
having approved three articles of impeachment forced Nixon from office.
On one of the tapes, Nixon and Chief of Staff H.R. “Bob” Halderman
discussed trying to get the CIA to obstruct the FBI’s investigation of
the Watergate break-ins. While the Watergate stars went on to
earn millions, Wills had difficulty getting and holding jobs. He moved
back to North Augusta, S.C. in 1990 after his mother suffered a stroke.
He did odd jobs and complained: “I was treated like a criminal myself.”
In 1983, a Georgia court convicted him of stealing a $12 pair of
sneakers. Wills, who died penniless five years ago in Augusta, Ga. at the age of 52, remains a forgotten hero.
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