Date: April 25, 1973

Time: 3:35 pm – 4:10 pm

Location: Executive Office Building

-16-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. November-2011)

The President met with Richard G. Kleindienst.

Watergate

-Schedule

-Refreshments

Manolo Sanchez entered at an unknown time after 3:35 pm.

Refreshments

Sanchez left at an unknown time before 4:10 pm.

Watergate

-Kleindienst’s conversation with Henry Petersen, April 25, 1973

-Earl Silbert’s April 16th memorandum to Petersen

-Burglary of Daniel Ellsberg’s psychiatrist

-G[eorge] Gordon Liddy and E. Howard Hunt, Jr.

-Petersen’s advice to Kevin T. Maroney

-Justice Department’s Internal Security Division

-John L. Martin’s response to Maroney, April 18

-Government’s knowledge of results of burglary

-James Wagner

-Dave Mitten [sp?]

-Prosecution’s responsibility concerning defendant’s rights

-John W. Dean III

-Petersen

-Scope of conversation with President

-H. R. (“Bob”) Haldeman, John D. Ehrlichman, Kleindienst

and President as subjects of investigation

-National security and executive privilege

-Ellsberg

-J. Edgar Hoover

-Mitchell

-[First name unknown] Marx

-White House role in investigation ,Plumbers

-White House Plumbers operation

-Results

-17-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. November-2011)

-Dean’s role

-President’s conversation with Petersen

-Prosecution’s responsibility

-Informing judge

-Mission

-Possible actions by judge

-Timing

-Kleindienst’s conversation with Petersen

-Ellsberg case

-Kleindienst

-Cover-up

-Reasons for White House investigation

-Hoover

-Burglary of psychiatrist’s office

-Petersen’s recommendation

-Kleindienst

-Warren E. Burger

-Conversation with Roger Robb

-Recommendation

-Ellsberg case

-Information for judge

-Corroboration

-Liddy and Hunt

-Effect of burglary on case

-President’s conversation with Petersen

-Dean’s possible testimony

-Liddy and Hunt

-Ehrlichman

-Dean

-President’s knowledge

-Mitchell and Ehrlichman

-Ellsberg case

-Need to reveal information

-President’s conversation with Henry A. Kissinger

Manolo Sanchez entered at an unknown time after 3:35 pm.

-18-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. November-2011)

Instructions on Xerox copies

Sanchez left at an unknown time before 4:10 pm.

Watergate

-Dean

-Motive

-Immunity

-Blackmail of President

-Kleindienst’s conversation with Petersen

-Ellsberg case

-Ehrlichman and Dean

-Leaks from grand jury

-Court reporters

-Prosecutors

-President’s conversation with Petersen

Sanchez entered and left an unknown time between 3:35 pm and 4:10 pm.

Watergate

-Dean’s conversation with Silbert, April 14, 1973

-Silbert’s conversation with Petersen, April 16, 1973

-Silbert’s memorandum to Petersen

-President’s conversation with Petersen

-President’s evaluation of information

-Prosecution’s responsibility in Ellsberg case

-Dean

-Role in Watergate

-Motive

-John N. Mitchell

-Conversations with US Attorney

-Dean’s confidential relationship with President

-Subornation of perjury

-Funds for defendants

-Cover-up

-Kleindienst’s conversation with Petersen

-Blackmail of President

-19-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. November-2011)

-Mitchell

-Guilt

-Conversation with President, July 1972

-President’s desire for a report

-Clark MacGregor

-Conversation with Ronald Ziegler, August 12, 1972

-Immunity

-Effect

Manolo Sanchez entered at an unknown time after 3:35 pm.

Refreshments

Sanchez left at an unknown time before 4:10 pm.

Watergate

-Dean

-Immunity

-President as adversary

-President’s knowledge

-Immunity

-President’s conversation with Petersen

-Effect on Ehrlichman and Haldeman

-Information of Ellsberg case

Manolo Sanchez entered at an unknown time after 3:35 pm.

President’s thanks

Sanchez left at an unknown time before 4:10 pm.

Watergate

-Dean

-Possible testimony

-President, Kleindienst, and Petersen

-Blackmail

-Investigation

-20-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. November-2011)

-Conversation with President

-William O. Bittman, Hunt, and Paul O’Brien

-Blackmail

-President’s response

-$1,000,000

-President’s schedule

-Conversations with attorneys for Ehrlichman and Haldeman

-President’s advisors

-William P. Rogers

-Need for counsel

-Dean

-Departure from White House staff

-Disclosure of information concerning Ellsberg case to Silbert

-Ellsberg break-in

-Prosecutor’s action

-Presidency

-President’s situation

Kleindienst left at 4:10 pm.