American Decades
Jaworski, Leon 1905-1982
SPECIAL PROSECUTOR IN THE WATERGATE CASE
An Independent Prosecutor.
When in November 1973 the Nixon administration appointed Leon Jaworski special prosecutor in the Watergate case, many suspected that he was a Nixon crony, bent on obstructing the legal issues in the case and absolving the Nixon administration of wrong-doing. Nixon had already fired the previous Watergate special prosecutor, Harvard law professor Archibald Cox, precisely because of his insistence on pursuit of the truth in the case no matter which administration officials—including the president—were hurt. Jaworski, moreover, seemed comfortable with those whose political conduct may have left them vulnerable to scandal. He successfully defended Lyndon Johnson against vote-rigging charges following the congressional elections of 1948; won another electoral case for Johnson in 1960; and was associated by many with fellow Texan John Connally, whose close...
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1970's Law and Justice
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- Abortion: Roe v. Wade
- The Attica Riot and the Rights of Prisoners
- The Changing Legal Profession
- Crime and Public Opinion
- The Death Penalty
- The Due-Process Revolution
- Employment Opportunity: Job Requirements and Discrimination
- Environmental Law
- The Equal Rights Amendment
- Equality Before the Law: Men and Women
- Legal Services
- The Other Side of Law and Order: Nixon and the Constraints of Law
- The Supreme Court and Public Policy: The Supreme Court of the 1970s
- Paddling in Schools
- The Rights of the Accused
- School Desegregation
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Law and Justice, 1970–1979
