PROSECUTORS TAKE A NEW LOOK AT CIA'S WATERGATE ROLE

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP91-00901R000700090055-5
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RIPPUB
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K
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18
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December 16, 2016
Document Release Date: 
June 13, 2005
Sequence Number: 
55
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Publication Date: 
November 28, 1973
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NSPR
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PRESS E - 346,090 Approved For Release '2005/07/01 : CIA-RDP91-009 S -~i 81973 By DAN THOMASSON A member of the Senate"'' Scripps-Howard Staff Writer j Armed Services . committee''' WASHINGTON - Special I which oversees CIA opera- e Watergate prosecutors have tions, said. today, however, L--'questioned Richard M. Helms, Martinez has conceded he former director of the Central made periodic reports to his Intelligence A g e n c y ! A), CIA control agent in Miami. about alleged discrepancies in The source said Martinez p r e v i?o u s testimony on the twice reported he had talked CIA's role in the Watergate with Hunt, but he was told by affair and on charges the the agent not to be concerned agency was using a "double about Hunt because he was on agent" to keep tabs on the a White House assignment. 'Watergate burglars. This would verify at least Helms, now U.S. ambassa- part of a .charge made in a dor to Iran; was quizzed at magazine article by Andrew length Monday by attorneys. -St. George, a New York writ- working under special prose- 'cutor Leon Jaworski. Meanwhile, informed sources said the Senate Water- gate committee has developed evidence it believes shows the CIA had advance knowledge of .the planning for the June 17. 1972, break-in of the Demo- cratic national headquarters here. The sources said Eugenio R. /Martinez, one of the five-man Watergate break-in team. was in contact with a CIA official during the time he and several other Americans . of Cuban ancestory were working under E. Howard Hunt Jr:, a former CIA agent, on activities fi- nanced by the Nixon re-elec- tion committee. Martinez was on the CIA payroll at the time of the break-in, but the CIA has de- nied categorically the agency knew he had been recruited by Hunt for the political espio- nage operation. Martinez w a s reportedly being paid to keep the agency informed about anti-Castro ac- tivities in the Cuban refugee community in Miami. , gressional committees and to the prosecutor's office, then headed by Archibald Cox. The thrust of that testimo- -my, including a public appear- ance before the Senate Water- gate committee, was that he and Walters both r e s i s t e d White House pressure to warn the FBI not to look into cer- tain areas of the Watergate because it would damage CIA operations. Both Helms and Walters tes- tified they reportedly denied- to the FBI that their Water- er, who recently appeared be- fore' the Senate Armed Serv- ices Committee CIA subcom- mittee. Chairman Stuart Symington, D-Mo., of the subcommittee has discredited St. George's report. But the source close to the Watergate committee and an- other close to Jaworski's of- fice said there are indications the CIA was using Martinez in an effort not only to watch the activities of I-lunt'and G. Gor- don Liddy, another convicted Watergate' figure, but. in an , attempt to stay close to activi- ties of a White House. intelli- gence operation known as "the plumbers." The special prosecutor's of- fice, according to sources, questioned Helens c l o s e l y about ain em orandum in which he ordered his deputy, Gen. Vernon A. Walters, to- ask the FBI to "desist from expanding this (the Watergate investigation). . .into other areas which may eventually run afoul of our operations." The memo to Walters ap- peared to contradict Helms' earlier testimony to five con gate inquiries would disturb CIA activities. t The June 28, 1972, memo from Helms to Walters also supports a disclosure last summer that the CIA. had requested that two of its agents not be interviewed in connection with the Watergate matter. . The request was revealed in an internal FBI memorandum, which noted that the-CIA-,had asked too late to keep one-of the men . from being': inter- viewed but that the,bureau honored the request and never interviewed the other. STAT Approved For Release 2005/07/01 : CIA-RDP9.1-00901 R000700090055-5 C 1 - pp e~`For Release 2005/07/01 : CIA-RDP91-00901R ~~~ ~.. -SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER E - 204,749 EXAMINER & CHRONICLE S - 640,004 NOV 14 1973' By Patrick J. Slogan Washington Bureau WASHINGTON - Special 'Prosecutor Leon Jaworski has decided to cross-examine former CIA Director Ri- ./chard Helms auout-a memo that contradicts Helms' sworn testimony thut he op- posed White house efforts to use the CIA to cover up the Watergate burglary. It has been learned that Jaworski' has decided to dis- patch two staff investigators to Teheran to question Helms, who is now U.S. am- bassador to Iran. Involved is a Ilelms memo to Gen. Vernon Walters, dep- uty CIA director, that was unco\ered-by'SpecialWater- gate Prosecutor Archibald Cox. Co-, said the memo was at odds with Helms' testi- mony before Congress and to the federal Watergate grand jury. Cox had decided to send staffers to cross-examine helms in Iran for a sworn deposition shortly before he was fired by President Nix- on. In an interview, Helms has denied he committed perjury or lied to the grand jury. Ile said he could not recall the memo now in tA then' -acting director of the to hide the source of the hands of federal Watergate FBI, said he limited his funds. investigators. agency probe of the break-in The controversial Helms- va pr e is vu in uvi.u IJuui the FBI investigation would testimony, Helms said the CIA was no way involved in .!jeopardize CIA operations :in the Watergate break-in on Mexico. June 17, 1972. And Helms said he did nothing to limit the "BI investigation of the burglary 'of Democratic na- tional headquarters. However, L. Patrick Gray, It was later learned that the Watergate break-in was financed in part with money f r o m Nixon's re-election campaign that had been "laundered" in Mexico City by Cox and now being pur- sued by Jaworski is dated 11 days after the break-in - on' June 28, 1972. William Colby, `-~ who produced the memo, said it was based on a Helms staff meeting at the CIA on June 19 - two days after the break-in. yes. qu!z o.. j)_~Ly after Walters warned that to Walters memo uncovered i t l Approved For Release 2005/07/01 : CIA-RDP91-00901 R000700090055-5 Approved For Release 2005/6T:NGI4RDP.8it-00901 R000 2 8 NOV 1973 By Oswald Johnston Star-News Staff Writer - Former CIA director -"Richard M. Helms has testi- fied for a second time be- -fore the Watergate grand jury about possible CIA involvement in the break-in at Democratic National Headquarters and* the sub- sequent coverup. Ilclnts, now ambassador to Iran, was recalled from his diplomatic post for testi- mony and appeared for about all hour yesterday before the grand jury, ac- cording to sources close to the investigation. Watergate special prose- cutor Leon Jaworski's of- fice refused any comment on the Iiclms interrogation. But it understood staff in- vestigators, following the lead of Archibald Cox, wanted to examine further a memorandum written by Helms 11 days after the June 17, 1972, Watergate .break-in in which he asked that FI3BI agents "confine themselves to the personali- ties already arrested or di- rectly under investigation." TIIIE JUNT..E 28, 1972, memo surfaced earlier this month and stirred reports of renewed interest at the prosecutor's office in Helm's original testimony. In some eyes, the memo ran directly counter to sworn testimony by Helms and other CIA officials that the agency had no connec- tion whatsoever with E. -'Howard Hunt and the other Onetime intelligence opera- at: wo a --c7 ..xt. t q K. re p~; ~T ' yet o E ~.~ 1 go tives who carried out the June 17 break-in. This apparent discrepan- cy was further underlined earlier this month by an ar- ticle in Harper's Magazine. It contended that Eug cuio ;vlartinez, one of the five conspirators apprehended inside the Democratic head- quarters and admittedly a paid CIA informant at the tinie of the break-in, had kept CIA higher-ups fully informed of the doings of Hunt and his colleagues. TIIE- THESIS has been sharply disputed by all con- gressional investigators who have looked into the matter. The Senate Armed Services Committee held two hearings earlier in the month in an unsuccessful effort to press the author to authenticate his claims. Rep. Lucien Nedzi, D- Mich., whose CIA oversight subcommittee of the House Armed Services Committee, has probably carried out the most painstaking study of the relationship of CIA to Watergate, has firmly con- cluded that the agency was not involved and that the potentially damaging memo is really innocent. v William E. Colby, the present (:IA director, earli- er this month prepared at the invitation of Senate Armed Services Committee acting chairman Stuart Symington, D-Mo., a second memo to explain what Helms had in mind. In it, Colby explained that the original Helms memo, RICHARD HELMS j cials confirmed yesterday that Helms returned from ,Tehran over the weekend. Informed sources reported that he conferred with Col- by Monday, and he was reported to have met V, ith Nedzi yesterday afternoon. When questioned, Nedzi reiterated that the contro- versial memo could hurt I-Helms only through misin- terpretation. "Our record is complete," he_ said, adding that he and his subcornlTiit- 'tee had gone through "piles of memoranda" from classi- fied CIA files relating to the Watergate crew, including Martinez, without finding a shred of evidence of any involvement. addressed to deputy CIA director Gen. Vernon A. c- Valters, was aimed at pro- tecting two undercover agents in Mexico from ex po- sure by an F)3I investiga- tion of what later turned out to be a Republican Finance Committee money chain through a Mexico City bank:. "IIE WANTED to dis- courage a fishing expedition into CIA operations," Colby said. Nedzi has fully accepted this interpretation, both in a special subcommittee re- port on the CIA-Watergate connection prepared last month and in private con- versation thereafter. He repeated his conviction in an interview yesterday. State Department offi- STAT Approved For Release 2005/07/01 : CIA-RDP91-009018000700090055-5 H LOS ANGELES TTMRS Approved For Release 200 /q7{Q, : 115RDP91-00901 R0007 BY RICHARD RZESTON Times Staff Writer WASh INGTON -- Rich- Virc1 AI. helms, former di- rector of the Central Intcl- ligence Agency, will rc- turn to the United States soon to answer questions before Watergate prosecu- tors about atlparcnt con- flicts between his testimo- ny and a CIA menioran- dum, llclnts, now U.S. ambas- sador to Iran, will be asked about discrepancies between the memorandum he wrote and his congres- sional testimony, informed sources said Friday. What is in dispute is whether the (',IA moved to shut off an FBI inquiry into Nixon reelection funds drawn on a Alexican bank and linked to the Watergate case. The memorandum in question, from Ilclins to his deputy, Gen. Vernon L ' \7alters, was. dated June 28, 1972. It was turned over early this month by CIA Dircefor William E. ~.- Colby to Sen. Stuart Sy- mington (D-Mo.), acting chairman of the Senate Armed Services Commit- tee. Colby was attempting to clarify t h e controversy Surrounding the document and helms' testimony be- fore congressional conl- mittccs. The key sentence in the memorandum is: "In addi- tion, we (the CIA) still here to the requo t that they (the ]11l) confine themselves to the pers?on- alilic:: ahrad arrested of directly inkier suspicion and that they desist from expanding this investiga-. Lion into other areas which may well, eventual- ly, run afoul of our opera- tions." White I-Iou.se officials expressed concern in the early stages of the Water gate scandal that an FBI investigation in Alexico might enc.lan` cr CIA oper- ations in that country. Both Helills and Walters testified publicly of their repeated assurances to the White House that no CIA operations in ICI c x i-c o would be threatened by an FBI inquiry. Early this month Archi- bald Cox, the special- Watergate prosecutor fired by President Nix- on Oct. 20,.. said to had evidence that a key wit ness in the Watergate in- vestirgtion h a cl contra- dicted his testinl.onv in an internal g o v e r n nl e n t memorandum. Cox did not, name the person in an ap- 'Iiearance before the Sen- ate Judiciary Con11;1ittee. It was learned, however, that his reference was to Helms and the mcmoran- durn nom, in question. Approved For Release 2005/07/01 : CIA-RbP?1-00901 R000700090055-5 WASHINGTON POST Approved For Release 2005/0 /01N931PLR~P91'-00901R00 Hehils Faces 'New 0,i-at y Watergate Probers By Laurence Stern Former Central Intelli- gence Agency Director Rich- vard M. Helms is returning to Washington soon from his post in Iran for another round of testimony on the agency's role in the Water- gate scandal. helms' return visit has "no connection" with State Department business, ac- cording to State Department officials. But the Watergate special prosecutor's office is understood to want to inter- view the former CIA direc- tor about seeming discre- pancies in various appear- ancies when he gave testi. mony. The interest of the special prosecutor's office is under- stood to focus on a June 23, 1972, memorandum from Helms to his deputy, Geh. ,L-? Vernon Walters, asking that t`-he FBI be.requested to con- fine its Watergate inquiries in Mexico to "personalities already arrested or directly under suspicion." The Helms memorandum also requested that the FBI "desist from expandinC this glary team and the Nixes re-election committee within a week after the break-in. Sen. Howard Baker (R- Tenn.), vice chairman of the Senate Watergate commit- tee, said yesterday he has no intention of interviewing Helms at this time. Baker did acknowledge, however, that he is looking into pub- lished allegations that the CIA infiltrated the White House "plumbers" team and the Watergate conspirators. Such allegations have been recently made by for- mer CIA official Miles Copeland in the Nationalz-. Review and free-lance writer Andrew St. George in Harper's magazine. St. George was questioned in executive session by the Senate Armed Services Committee yesterday for the second time in a week. Af- terward, acting chairman Stuart Symington (D-Mo,) said that, th-~ writer refused . to divulge the source for allegations in his Harper's article that the CIA''had in- investigation into other filtrated the Watergate bur areas which may well, even- glary team. tually, run afoul of our op- "The authenticity of orations." quotes in the article relating Previous testimony by to the forrtt-r Central Intel- Iielms. Walters and other ligence Agency director, Air. CIA officials was that the -Richard M. Helms, now am- agency never sought to limit bassndor to Iran. is still un- FBI inquiries into the certain, unproven and uns- W_atergate scandal's .llexi? upported, except perhaps by can connection. This facet of sources which ,l l-. St. the case established a link George will not identify," between the Watergate bur- Symington said. Approved For Release 2005/07/01 : CIA-RDP91-00901 R000700090055-5 T T T A ~vorski, has taken over in in i vestigation in which there no connection to tine Water ceved in advat)c,e docu- that promises of exccuttvc. havebeen public alts