Bonus Episode 4: The Drunk Cop Who Brought Down a President - podcast episode cover

Bonus Episode 4: The Drunk Cop Who Brought Down a President

Jul 29, 20206 minSeason 1Ep. 14
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Episode description

If not for the fateful inaction of a single Washington, DC police officer, Watergate might never have happened.

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Transcript

Speaker 1

We have a mystery story out of Washington. Five people have been arrested and charged with breaking into the headquarters or the Democratic National Committee in the middle of the night Watergate. Before Washington Post reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, before Deep Throat, before the cover up, there was the Watergate break in itself and the arrest of the five

men who did it. At the time, almost nobody understood the significance of those arrests, or how they would lead to the fall of President Richard M. Nixon, or how they very nearly didn't happen at all. Welcome to a

special bonus episode of Flashback. I'm Sean Braswell. Today we consider another extremely fateful moment from history, the summer night in nineteen seventy two when five burglars were arrested at the exclusive Watergate condo and off As Complex in Washington, d C. Sometimes the fall of a powerful leader takes years of resistance and political organizing. Sometimes it takes a bloody coup, and sometimes it's as simple as a single man doing nothing one night in a local bar. They

were called the bum Squad. Late on a Friday night in June two Sergeant Paul Leaper of the Washington d C. Police Department and two fellow officers were dressed up as hippies and cruising the streets of Georgetown in an unmarked light blue Ford Sedan. They weren't looking for a good time. They were looking for criminals. It was after midnight and Leaper, a tenure veteran of the force, was about to head home after putting in two hours of overtime. Then an

alert came in over the radio. Nicole comes out of one two am. The guard thinks he has a burgery at the water Day some of that effect. This is Sergeant Leeper in telling the story to a group of students at North Marion High School in West Virginia. We respond to the front of the Watergate complex. We get out of the car, we parked legally, we don't have any red light and sawn on me and they like that nor It's a non marked cruiser and it's a

fulky looking cruiser. Don't look like a police cruiser should Leeper and his colleagues didn't look like cops either. The Watergate burglars had stationed to look out across the street at the Howard Johnson motor lodge. He reportedly saw the bum Squad roll up, but didn't give them a second glance.

He was watching a horror movie on TV at the time, Attack of the Puppet People, and so the bum Squad entered the building and proceeded to make one of the biggest arrests in American history, catching five men breaking into the Democratic National Committee's offices on the sixth floor. The burgle is forced to stairwell door, then taped its latch open at as the police found nothing. Then they spied five men crouching behind some disks. But here's the thing.

The Bump Squad was not the first to get the call to investigate that night. The vehicle responsible for that area, Squad Car eight, had been contacted by the dispatcher first, but was unable to respond. Why Sergeant Lieper again, where all the scout car the patrol car that run that area. He kind of begs off, He says, I'm low on gas. I can't They calls to the dispatcher Squad Car eighties

lack of gas became part of the Watergate saga. Who knows how things might have played out had a uniform police officer in a patrol car turned up at the watergate that night instead of the bum squad. Maybe the lookout could have worn the burglars in time. It's an amazing what if from history, But it's even more interesting than that. For decades, no one really examined squad car eighties low on gas claim. Then a few years ago a historian biographer named Craig Shirley looked more closely at

what happened that night. Shirley spoke with the owner of a nearby bar that was a favorite hangout of Washington's police officers at the time. Officers would often stop there for free meals and free drinks, even while on duty. The owner told Shirley that squad Car eighty was not low on gas. Its officer had started drinking bourbon and coke around midnight. By the time the call to investigate came into the walkie talkie. Lying on the bar, he

could barely walk. The bar owner, no stranger to inebriated officers, told him he should tell the dispatcher that he was out of gas and couldn't respond, and so that's what he did. Shirley subsequently tried to confirm the identity of the officer and squad car a d that fateful evening, but he got nowhere. He told me that he ran into the Blue Wall of silence, not to mention a messy, haphazard archive with no pertinent records at the Metropolitan Police

Department of the District of Columbia. Watergate ended the presidency of Richard Nixon, and it changed American political life and profound ways. Among other things, the Supreme Court rule that the president is not above the law and forty eight people who are convicted, including two of Nixon's attorneys general and his chief of staff. And to think it might have all turned on some bourbon and coke. Now that's

a strong drink. Thanks for listening, and please stay tuned to this feed for more bonus episodes on fateful moments from history and the weeks ahead. Flashback is written and hosted by me Sean Braswell, senior writer and executive producer at Ozzie. It was edited by Maybe mcgoren and produced by Tracy Moran. Chris Hoff engineered our show. Make sure to subscribe to Flat sh Back on the I Heart Radio app or listen wherever you get your podcasts. M M

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