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by Christopher Ketcham
THE CHARGE
Mark Felt as Deep Throat counseled his listeners to “follow the money,” advice that Woodward and Bernstein smartly heeded. There is another money trail from the Nixon years that has yet to be fully explored: It is a trail that suggests Richard Nixon and/or operatives within the Nixon White House ordered the 1972 assassination attempt against Alabama governor George Wallace, the populist agitator, segregationist, racist, ex-boxer, and vertex of Southern politics who presented the chief threat to Nixon’s incumbency. The bulldoggish Wallace himself candidly told reporters two years after the gunshots had paralyzed his legs and confined him to a wheelchair: “I think my attempted assassination was part of a conspiracy.” That conspiracy, averred Wallace, had its origins in the Nixon White House.
If we are to build a case for Wallace’s charge against Nixon and/or Nixon’s henchmen – specifically the key figures of Charles “Chuck” Colson, the man who as White House special counsel once advised his president to firebomb the liberal Brookings Institution, who today is a powerful leader in the evangelical Christian movement; Everett Howard Hunt, the ex-CIA spook hired by Colson for “black ops,” including the bungled Watergate break-in that occurred less than one month after the Wallace shooting; and G. Gordon Liddy, former FBI agent turned White House counsel turned dirty trickster under Colson, today a popular conservative radio host – we should rely on the two structural elements that commonly form an indictment for murder: motive and circumstantial evidence. The motive was clear. The circumstantial evidence is overwhelming.
THE MOTIVE
- In the 1968 presidential election that
brought Nixon to office on the slimmest of margins – Nixon defeated
Democratic candidate Hubert Humphrey by 7/10s of 1 percent – George
Wallace as a candidate with the American Independent Party (AIP)
carried an astonishing five states and 14 percent of the popular vote,
some 10 million voters. “Not since Theodore Roosevelt's Bull Moose
Party emerged in 1912,” Newsweek noted, “has a third party [the
AIP] so seriously challenged the two party system.” The Wallace/AIP
machine sparked a stomach-churning panic among Republicans under Nixon,
given that Wallace had locked up a conservative Southern bloc that
otherwise would have voted almost wholly for Nixon (four out of five
Wallace voters told pollsters in 1968 that without Wallace in the
running Nixon was their man by default; conservatives, Southern
conservatives especially, could not countenance the Democratic
presidential nominee, Hubert Humphrey, a liberal Minnesotan).
Conversely, if Wallace had carried 1 percent more of the popular vote
in two different states, he would have denied Nixon the electoral votes
needed for victory, throwing the contest into the Democratic-controlled
House of Representatives, which was expected to install Humphrey.
- As
early as 1966, Nixon was telling Harry Dent, his Southern strategist –
who would later head an intelligence gathering operation against George
Wallace that Nixon dubbed “Wallace Watch” – that Wallace was the man he
“feared most.”
- In 1970, with Wallace topping out on the
president’s growing “enemies list,” Nixon secretly taps into a $1.9
million cash slush-fund to help bankroll the campaign of Wallace’s
opponent, Albert Brewer, with infusions that eventually come to
$400,000, a third of Brewer’s entire campaign budget. Wallace is
narrowly re-elected and fresh from victory goes on the road attacking
Nixon in preparation for a 1972 run, again as a third party insurgent.
The New Yorker pronounces him “an awesome and disquieting presence in national politics.”
- During
1970, Nixon also orders the IRS to chase after the personal and
business finances of Wallace and his brother, Gerald, a corrupt tycoon,
in an effort to derail Wallace’s re-election to the state house. Dubbed
the Alabama Project by U.S. Attorney General John Mitchell, at least 75
IRS officers are assigned to what becomes a very expensive fishing
expedition, turning up nothing. Still, according to one account, the
investigation is allegedly dropped in exchange for Wallace annulling
his third-party presidential candidacy in 1972 and opting instead to
run as a Democrat.
- Nixon in his typical fashion is wildly
paranoid that Wallace will go it alone once again if he fails to mount
a decent showing in the Democratic primaries. So Nixon by 1972 lavishes
another $600,000 to satisfy his Wallace obsession – this time to
bankroll Wallace’s campaign against Edmund Muskie in Florida.
Nixon calculated that Wallace could in no way secure the nomination but
a solid series of primary victories would keep him in the running as a
Democrat nonetheless. Nixon has now spent at least $1 million of his
own slush-fund – and countless hundreds of thousands in government
money – to quell the Wallace threat.
- In 1971, Nixon’s
henchmen under the leadership of Charles “Chuck” Colson – “tougher than
hell, smarter than hell, meaner than hell,” Colson was Nixon’s go-to
man for dirty tricks and later a key figure in the Watergate affair –
even went so far as to attempt to purge American Independent Party
voters from the rolls in California. This was in order that AIP, so
successful backing Wallace in 1968, would fail in 1972 to meet
California’s registration minimums for a spot on the ballot.
- Wallace
places well in some primaries – he wins Florida, for example – does
passably in others…but always the question of whether he’d go the
third-party route darkened the future of the Nixon White House. The
“entire strategy” of Nixon’s reelection, Nixon backer Robert Finch
noted at the time, “depends on whether George Wallace makes a run on
his own.” A 1971 poll showed Nixon leading by four to six points in a
head-to-head race with any of the likely Democratic nominees (Muskie,
Ted Kennedy, Hubert Humphrey), a lead that dropped to a distressing one
percent when Wallace as a third party candidate was factored in.
- In
May 1972, John Amos, an insurance executive working as Hubert
Humphrey’s Southern strategist, contacts Jimmy Faulkner, Wallace’s
right-hand man from Alabama, to set up a line of communication between
the two candidates. What prompted Humphrey’s overture? Did Humphrey
have intelligence that Wallace was abandoning the Democratic ticket to
go third party? If so, Humphrey would have asked Wallace to free up
delegates won in primaries that spring. Jimmy Faulkner was to have
briefed Wallace on the Humphrey overture on May 19.
- On May
15, 1972, four days before the meeting was to happen, George Wallace is
shot five times at a Maryland campaign stop by would-be assassin Arthur
Bremer, 21, a shy and bespectacled community college drop-out from
Milwaukee, who is disarmed of his .38 cal. pistol and pummeled to the
ground by onlookers. George Wallace, his spine pierced with bullets, in
agony clings to life, and later spends 54 days in the hospital,
undergoing multiple operations; he loses all use of his legs and will
suffer the rest of his life bound to his wheelchair in constant pain.
On May 3 – just under two weeks before he was shot – Wallace had
confided to a journalist that he had a feeling “somebody’s going to get
me one of these days.”
THE ASSASSIN: THE STRANGE CASE OF ARTHUR BREMER
- A nearly penniless busboy and part-time
janitor, the son of an alcoholic truck-driver and depressive mother,
Bremer in the two months before the assassination suddenly went on the
move, purchasing a blue AMC Rambler for $800 in cash. According to the
Washington Post and Time Magazine, federal income tax
forms discovered in his apartment indicated he’d only earned $1,611 the
previous year – so the Rambler was an almost impossibly deep-pocket
purchase. A month before the assassination attempt, Bremer flew to and
from New York, where he chartered a helicopter over the city, hired a
limo, stayed at the Waldorf-Astoria, and visited a high-rolling massage
parlor (tipping the masseuse who masturbated him $30). Bremer often
earned less than $10 in a day. When he drives to Ottawa, Canada, three
weeks before the shooting, he stays at the exclusive Lord Elgin Hotel.
He later purchases three guns for $80, a tape recorder, a police radio,
and binoculars. Wallace himself wondered publicly as to who bankrolled
these profligate excursions and purchases, all cash paid.
- Did Bremer have accomplices? According to investigative reporter Donald Freed, writing in the Los Angeles Free Press
in June 1972, Bremer was seen on “several occasions” talking closely
with an “older, heavy-set man” as they rode the route of a Michigan
ferry back and forth. Investigative reporters Sybil Leek and Bert Sugar
claim that Bremer’s visit to the Lord Elgin hotel in Ottawa included a
rendezvous with one Dennis Cossini, identified as a CIA agent. Cossini,
who had no history of drug abuse, was found dead from a massive heroin
overdose two months after the Wallace shooting. An eyewitness on the
Chesapeake & Ohio Railway told the New York Times and Associated Press
that in April and May of 1972 he saw Bremer traveling by train across
Wisconsin in the company of a well-dressed man who stood 6’2” tall,
weighed 225 pounds and spoke with a New York accent. The eyewitness
said the man talked heatedly about moving a political campaign – which
campaign the witness could not say – from Wisconsin to Michigan. Was
this the same “heavy-set man” from the Michigan ferry?
- It
is also of note that ballistics investigators in the Wallace shooting
found disturbing discrepancies. Wallace alone was wounded in nine
different places, while three other victims – a Secret Service agent, a
campaign worker, and an Alabama state trooper – were each wounded once.
Altogether 12 separate wounds were inflicted on that fateful day by a
lone gunman firing a .38 caliber revolver that held only five bullets –
magic bullets, one might assume. Yet this wound count presumably
includes entry and exit wounds, rendering the scenario entirely possible, though improbable. The New York Times,
however, made note of the fact that “four persons had suffered at least
seven separate [initial entry] wounds from a maximum of five shots.”
The Times noted there was “broad speculation” as to how this could be –
as, logically, it was simply not possible without a second gun, or
second shooter, in the mix. Added to the ballistics conundrum is a
further mystery: several of the bullets recovered could not be matched
to Bremer’s .38 cal. weapon (the experts, en revanche, claimed the bullets were too damaged for a positive identification).
- A
CBS News cameraman caught the events before and after the shooting and
later provided the FBI a clip that reportedly depicted a man in the
crowd near Wallace who resembled none other than G. Gordon Liddy, the
Watergate break-in mercenary under Hunt. CBS reporters from their film
documentation alleged that Liddy “led Wallace into Bremer’s line of
fire.” George Wallace told the FBI that he believed Liddy was standing
directly behind Arthur Bremer.
- Authors Freed, Leek, Sugar
and others have suggested that Bremer had a control agent who was
running him in the Wallace assassination project. The writers have also
speculated that Bremer was a programmed assassin, mind-controlled by
CIA handlers using psychedelic brainwashing techniques – massive doses
of LSD and BZ coupled with hypnosis – perfected in government Cold War
programs such as MK-Ultra and Operation Artichoke. There is no hard
evidence to support a Bremer-as-Manchurian-Candidate scenario. Yet
Bremer’s disassociated behavior – his indifference, incoherence, his
noted roboticism, the “silly grin” he consistently wore – raises
questions. He writes in his diary that he would shoot Wallace in order
to secure fame and publicity. But then, jailed and accused, he refused
to speak to the press and, even after his conviction – he was sent to
prison for 53 years – he has never talked since. “I stand mute,” he
said. Bremer’s lawyer at the opening of his speedy five-day trial told
the court that given the defendant’s mental state – the eerie
non-presence of the man – it is not surprising that “some doctors will
tell you even Arthur Bremer doesn’t know if he shot Wallace.” When
Bremer was arrested and charged, a federal officer noted that he was
“almost oblivious to what was going on.” Today, Bremer spends his time
in prison talking to “inanimate objects,” though he has not been
declared insane.
- Note bene: it was long rumored among CIA
operatives that the public meltdown of the normally composed Sen.
Edmund Muskie – the strongest of the Democratic contenders who doomed
his candidacy by bursting into whimpering tears at a New Hampshire
podium – was the result of LSD poisoning. Miles Copeland, a veteran CIA
operative, writes in “The Real Spy World” that the CIA was asked
(presumably by Republican operatives) “for an LSD-type drug that could
be slipped into the lemonade of Democratic orators, thus causing them
to say sillier things than they would anyhow. To this day, some of my
friends at the agency are convinced that Howard Hunt or Gordon Liddy
[slipped such a drug] into Senator Muskie’s lemonade before he played
that famous weeping scene.”
NIXON’S DIRTY TRICKSTERS: COLSON, HUNT, LIDDY AND THE BREMER CONNECTIONS
- Bob Woodward in 1972 diligently chased
through the labyrinth of the Wallace assassination story but failed to
uncover definitive evidence of a White House-Bremer connection (at
least nothing that satisfied his editors, who were difficult enough to
convince that a sitting U.S. president and/or his closest advisors
would cover up a two-bit break-in, much less abet murder). Woodward at
one point received an anonymous tip that a Watergate suspect had met
with Bremer in Milwaukee. But he could find nothing to support the tip.
- Two years later, in May 1974, Martha Mitchell, the
estranged alcoholic wife of the embattled U.S. Attorney General John
Mitchell, visited George Wallace and his wife Cornelia at their home in
Montgomery, Ala. According to Wallace biographer Dan T. Carter, Martha
told Wallace an incredible story: John Mitchell, unnerved by what he
believed to be a “Colson-Bremer connection,” had repeatedly wondered
aloud to his wife, “What was Charles Colson doing talking with Arthur
Bremer four days before he shot George Wallace?” (Martha Mitchell,
unfortunately, is dead.) Was Colson the Watergate suspect who visited
Bremer?
- Author Dan Carter, noting Martha Mitchell’s
erratic behavior and heavy drinking, offers that Martha “may simply
have misunderstood her husband’s response to the news that Colson had
ordered a break-in of Bremer’s apartment.” The Bremer break-in was
another piece of the Wallace assassination puzzle. According to
Woodward and Bernstein, Colson ordered CIA black ops specialist and
ersatz author of spy novels E. Howard Hunt, who would be quickly
implicated in the Watergate burglary that followed within weeks of the
Wallace shooting, to enter Bremer’s Milwaukee apartment and plant
pro-Democratic literature to make the assassin appear a proxy for the
McGovernite left. It is unknown whether Hunt completed the task. In any
case, the FBI inexplicably failed to seal Bremer’s apartment for a
period of at least 90 minutes, during which time the place was
stampeded by media and key evidence was reportedly removed and/or
tampered with. One report states that Secret Service agents on site allowed
reporters to make off with crime scene evidence. Investigators found an
incongruous stash of campaign literature: Black Panther and ACLU
buttons; Wallace campaign literature; a Confederate flag; and a
scribbled note about the pains and pleasures of masturbation.
- Meanwhile,
in Bremer’s car a diary surfaced that was reportedly an accounting of
Bremer’s travels and thoughts in the two months before he shot Wallace,
bearing on its pages the loud declaration that “I have to kill
somebody” and “I am one sick assassin.” But Wallace himself came to
believe that the diary, with its bizarre admixture of sophistication
and stupidity (complete with spelling errors so egregious they seem
almost purposeful), was in fact a forgery. Its tone, he noted to
reporters, was “contrived,” as though “it were deliberately written to
throw off inquiry into a possible conspiracy.”
- Gore Vidal in the New York Review of Books
in 1973 came to a similar conclusion. Vidal’s article, “The Art and
Arts of E. Howard Hunt,” traversed Hunt’s long career as a spy novelist
and concluded that Hunt likely authored the Bremer diary.
- Seen
in this light, one wonders if Nixon’s pay-offs to the blackmailing E.
Howard Hunt (as much as $180,000 in cash at a time) served not merely
to cover up the break-in at the Watergate Hotel – but to cover up a
Hunt-Bremer-Wallace connection to Chuck Colson and the White House, a
connection that ultimately might have signaled complicity in attempted
murder.
- Anecdotal evidence supports the notion of
assassination plots issuing from the Nixon White House. A Boston
intelligence operative named William Gilday as early as 1970 reportedly
met with Nixon aides who recruited him for “schemes ranging from dirty
tricks to murder,” according to Anthony Summers, author of “The
Arrogance of Power: The Secret World of Richard Nixon.” “Those [Gilday]
was incited to kill,” Summers writes, “included Senator Edward Kennedy
and George Wallace. The aides in question are unnamed here for legal
reasons but Gilday has appeared to have knowledge of corroborating
details – their nicknames, for example – and has provided
reconnaissance photographs he said were taken with Kennedy’s murder in
view.” The Nixon White House Tapes suggest a Boston connection to Chuck
Colson, who in conversation with a worried Nixon – who complained that
operations that were “very close to me” had been rife with mistakes –
told his president that he would never betray him. “I did things out of
Boston,” Colson said, referring to “15 or 20 black projects.” “We did
some blackmail and…my God, uh, uh, uh, I’ll go to my grave before I
ever disclose it.”
- Note that Nixon from the first news of
the Wallace shooting became obsessed with the case, ordering the FBI to
immediately force jurisdiction. Mark Felt, assistant FBI director under
acting director and faithful Nixon appointee L. Patrick Gray, took
charge in the critical first hours, but was quickly replaced by Gray,
who would later help destroy Watergate evidence and was also pivotal in
shunting the Bremer case out of the purview of the Watergate hearings.
Gray briefed Nixon daily on the Bremer developments. Nixon stipulated
that all evidence seized in Bremer’s apartment be remanded to the White
House rather than FBI headquarters, against protocol. All copies of the
Bremer diary transcripts that had been provided the Secret Service and
other agencies were to be surrendered and destroyed immediately. All
records that the White House itself had even seen the diary were to be
destroyed. Nixon apparently felt the need to cover tracks.
- The
FBI re-opened the Wallace case at least 4 times in the years since
Bremer’s conviction, though these have hardly been extensive in their
scope. In 1993, for example, FBI conducted only one interview with an
undisclosed individual and then once more retired the case (FOIA
requests may reveal the interviewee). According to the FBI’s case
dossier, known as the WalShot Files, the agency’s original
investigation during 1972-74 failed to explore key avenues of inquiry.
The FBI under L. Patrick Gray refused to look at the wide-ranging
information unearthed in the Watergate hearings and possible
connections to Nixon’s dirty tricks bandwagon and Bremer. Even Bremer’s
defense lawyer, Benjamin Lipsitz, was asked to testify before Senate
Watergate investigators. “I thought these guys were off the wall,”
Lipsitz told Insight Magazine in 1998. Lipsitz thought: “What
does Bremer have to do with Watergate?” George Wallace, meanwhile, had
high hopes for the Watergate hearings, with UPI reporting in 1974 that
Wallace felt the investigation “would turn up the man who paid the
money to have him shot.”
- In 1992, George Wallace Jr.,
Wallace’s son, requested the FBI and Congress re-open the case “to
learn if there is any truth to a report that the attack was discussed
in the Nixon White House,” according to the Associated Press.
The younger Wallace was careful to note that he did not suspect Nixon’s
involvement. “My question is, did anyone else involved in Nixon’s
campaign have prior knowledge?”
- According to Seymour Hersh, writing in the Atlantic Monthly
in 1983, even Gerald Ford, on the eve of pardoning Nixon, demanded of
Nixon’s lawyer, James St. Clair, to get to the bottom of the widening
rumors of a Nixon White House involvement in the Wallace assassination.
“Is there anything to it?” asked Ford. “Was the White House behind the
Wallace shooting?”
- Writing on Wallace, H.R. Haldeman
noted in his diary that Nixon “felt very strongly that, under any
circumstances, it would be better for us to have [Wallace] out…” This
was Haldeman’s last entry on the matter. Years later, even after
Nixon’s death, Haldeman’s lawyers have continued to fiercely rebuff all
efforts to open documents and records pertaining to Nixon and Wallace.
Why specifically the blackout on the references to Wallace?
- In the spring of 1974, Los Angeles Times
correspondent Jack Nelson, having heard Wallace’s allegation of
conspiracy and cover-up in his assassination, set out to get answers
from the Nixon White House, which was riding out the first shockwaves
of the Watergate scandal. Nelson had come across a story that the man
Bremer had met with riding the ferry back and forth in Michigan was
none other than G. Gordon Liddy. He presented his questions, was
stonewalled into the summer, until events moved faster than he or the
White House or anyone expected: Congress was moving to impeach.
- Ironically,
the one man to whom Richard Nixon, alone and embattled, could now turn
was George Wallace, who carried enough influence to sway the votes of
the Dixiecrats who could save Nixon from the axe. “George, I’m just
calling to ask if you’re still with me,” Nixon told Wallace. “No, Mr.
President,” Wallace replied, “I’m afraid I’m not.” Nixon hung up, and
turned to Alexander Haig, Nixon’s chief of staff, delivering the
famously echoed epitaph to his career: “Well, Al, there goes the
presidency.”
- “In reality,” observes Dan Carter, “what
provoked [George Wallace to refuse help to Nixon] was the ongoing
refusal of the Nixon White House to divulge the details of the actions
of Nixon and Colson on the night of his shooting.” What can we assume
from this seemingly minor detail? Richard Nixon might have saved his
presidency by fully disclosing to Wallace the truth behind the WalShot
case; he instead opted not to. Perhaps he feared such a disclosure more
than the loss of his presidency. Perhaps he feared something worse than
impeachment or resignation. Perhaps he feared a lifetime in prison for
attempted murder.
WALLACE’S SIGNIFICANCE IN THE CONTINUUM OF AMERICAN POLITICS
- George Wallace’s coalition of
conservative Southern voters ushered in the era of the Republican
Southern Strategy, which has defined the parameters of victory for the
GOP for over a quarter-century. The attempted assassination of Wallace
and the end of his 1972 campaign allowed Nixon to harvest a franchise
that arguably came to fruition outside the traditional Democratic Party
by the demagoguery and leadership – however atavistic and ugly – of
George Wallace. Without Wallace and the bullets that stopped him, there
would be no GOP as we know it today. That is Wallace’s legacy.

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