Knowledge (XXG)

Herbert Porter

Source 📝

172:
After Porter's testimony in January 1973, he and his family left Washington and returned to the West Coast. In the immediate aftermath of the testimony, Porter had a hard time finding employment due to his connection to the Watergate scandal. In August 1973, he told the
112:
in my home district . I wore Nixon buttons when was 8 and when I was 10 and when I was 12 and when I was 16. My family worked for him; my father worked for him in campaigns, my mother worked for him in
391: 109: 153:. Reflecting on his motivations for the lie, Porter told the committee that Nixon's administration was an insular community that placed a high value on "protect the President". 141:. He falsely told the agents that the money had been used to fund the infiltration of left-wing student organizations. Porter testified during the January 1973 trial of the 396: 160:
on January 28, 1974. He was sentenced on April 11 of the same year; his sentence was 15 months' imprisonment, but the bulk of this sentence was suspended by Judge
126: 40: 149:
in June 1973. In the latter testimony, he admitted to having lied about the purpose of the spending, and stated that he had done so at the direction of
96:
and admitted that he had lied to the FBI during that questioning. Porter was convicted of making false statements in 1974 and served 30 days in prison.
267: 238: 207: 319: 118: 125:. Ziegler invited Porter onto Nixon's staff in 1970, and six months later, Porter was named the Scheduling Director of the 294: 104:
Porter was raised in California, and describes himself as having been a supporter of Richard Nixon from a young age:
146: 93: 184: 157: 381: 349: 386: 150: 92:
after the FBI questioned him about a money transfer he had made; Porter later testified before the
327: 161: 89: 180: 353: 323: 298: 142: 138: 271: 242: 211: 175: 375: 85: 137:
In July 1972, Porter was questioned by the FBI about money he had transferred to
122: 121:, where he befriended future Nixon administration figures including 164:, with the result that Porter was only imprisoned for 30 days. 63:
Making a false statement to an agency of the federal government
108:
I first met Mr. Nixon when I was 8 years old in 1946, when
295:"News Analysis: Still Secret – Who Hired Spies and Why" 392:
American people convicted of making false statements
84:
is an American man who served as a campaign aide to
293:Bernstein, Carl; Woodward, Bob (January 31, 1973). 67: 59: 47: 36: 28: 21: 268:"Porter Gets 30‐Day Term For Lying on Watergate" 239:"Watergate Leaves Scars on Young Nixon Loyalist" 208:"A Campaign Aide Admits Lying on Watergate Cash" 202: 200: 106: 262: 260: 127:Committee for the Re-Election of the President 41:Committee for the Re-Election of the President 16:Campaign aide to U.S. President Richard Nixon 8: 233: 231: 229: 18: 397:People convicted in the Watergate scandal 43:(CRP) organizer, former White House aide 196: 156:Porter pleaded guilty to the charge of 7: 179:that he was considering starting a 14: 145:, and testified again before the 119:University of Southern California 326:. March 11, 1974. Archived from 350:"The Nation: 30 Days for Lying" 320:"The Other Nixon Watergate Men" 1: 88:. He became involved in the 32:1938 (age 85–86) 413: 147:Senate Watergate Committee 94:Senate Watergate Committee 75: 55: 82:Herbert L. "Bart" Porter 115: 330:on December 22, 2008 117:Porter attended the 151:Jeb Stuart Magruder 110:he ran for Congress 162:William B. Bryant 133:Watergate scandal 90:Watergate scandal 79: 78: 23:Herbert L. Porter 404: 366: 365: 363: 361: 356:. April 22, 1974 346: 340: 339: 337: 335: 316: 310: 309: 307: 305: 290: 284: 283: 281: 279: 274:. April 12, 1974 264: 255: 254: 252: 250: 245:. August 5, 1973 235: 224: 223: 221: 219: 204: 181:land development 158:lying to the FBI 19: 412: 411: 407: 406: 405: 403: 402: 401: 372: 371: 370: 369: 359: 357: 348: 347: 343: 333: 331: 318: 317: 313: 303: 301: 299:Washington Post 292: 291: 287: 277: 275: 266: 265: 258: 248: 246: 237: 236: 227: 217: 215: 206: 205: 198: 193: 170: 143:Watergate Seven 139:G. Gordon Liddy 135: 102: 60:Criminal charge 48:Criminal status 24: 17: 12: 11: 5: 410: 408: 400: 399: 394: 389: 384: 374: 373: 368: 367: 341: 311: 285: 272:New York Times 256: 243:New York Times 225: 214:. June 8, 1973 212:New York Times 195: 194: 192: 189: 176:New York Times 169: 168:Post-Watergate 166: 134: 131: 101: 98: 77: 76: 73: 72: 69: 65: 64: 61: 57: 56: 53: 52: 49: 45: 44: 38: 34: 33: 30: 26: 25: 22: 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 409: 398: 395: 393: 390: 388: 385: 383: 382:Living people 380: 379: 377: 355: 351: 345: 342: 329: 325: 324:Time magazine 321: 315: 312: 300: 296: 289: 286: 273: 269: 263: 261: 257: 244: 240: 234: 232: 230: 226: 213: 209: 203: 201: 197: 190: 188: 186: 185:Orange County 182: 178: 177: 167: 165: 163: 159: 154: 152: 148: 144: 140: 132: 130: 128: 124: 120: 114: 111: 105: 99: 97: 95: 91: 87: 86:Richard Nixon 83: 74: 70: 66: 62: 58: 54: 50: 46: 42: 39: 37:Occupation(s) 35: 31: 27: 20: 358:. Retrieved 344: 332:. Retrieved 328:the original 314: 302:. Retrieved 288: 276:. Retrieved 247:. Retrieved 216:. Retrieved 183:business in 174: 171: 155: 136: 116: 107: 103: 81: 80: 387:1938 births 123:Ron Ziegler 376:Categories 191:References 113:campaigns. 100:Early life 360:April 17, 334:March 30, 304:April 17, 278:April 17, 249:April 17, 218:April 17, 71:30 days 68:Penalty 51:Guilty 362:2024 354:Time 336:2009 306:2024 280:2024 251:2024 220:2024 29:Born 378:: 352:. 322:. 297:. 270:. 259:^ 241:. 228:^ 210:. 199:^ 187:. 129:. 364:. 338:. 308:. 282:. 253:. 222:.

Index

Committee for the Re-Election of the President
Richard Nixon
Watergate scandal
Senate Watergate Committee
he ran for Congress
University of Southern California
Ron Ziegler
Committee for the Re-Election of the President
G. Gordon Liddy
Watergate Seven
Senate Watergate Committee
Jeb Stuart Magruder
lying to the FBI
William B. Bryant
New York Times
land development
Orange County


"A Campaign Aide Admits Lying on Watergate Cash"
New York Times



"Watergate Leaves Scars on Young Nixon Loyalist"
New York Times


"Porter Gets 30‐Day Term For Lying on Watergate"
New York Times

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.