Deep Throat suspect found dead in hotel The Guardian July 29, 2004 by Dan Glaister
One of the longest-running mysteries of American politics may soon be resolved after it was announced yesterday that the man many suspect of being Deep Throat in the Watergate scandal had died.
Fred LaRue, known as the "bagman" because he delivered payments to ensure the silence of participants in the Watergate break-in, was found dead in a hotel room in Biloxi, Mississippi. He was 75.
The two Washington Post reporters who broke the Watergate story, Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward, have maintained that they would only reveal the identity of Deep Throat once he was dead.
Although there have been several names advanced as Deep Throat, LaRue is one of the more likely candidates. He was a special assistant to John Mitchell, the former attorney general who headed Creep, the Campaign to Re-elect the President, in 1972.
LaRue was at a meeting at Nixon's Florida holiday home at which the scheme to break into the Democratic headquarters in the Watergate building in Washington was first mooted.
Although LaRue insisted he was not Deep Throat, and that the source was a combination of several people, Woodward and Bernstein have insisted Deep Throat was one person.
LaRue said last year that President Nixon had not been told of the plan to break into the building.
He cited his close relationship with Mr Mitchell to back up his claim that the president was ignorant of the plan.
LaRue served four and a half months in prison for his role in the Watergate conspiracy, after being charged with obstructing justice.
Fred LaRue, Deep Throat suspect, found dead in hotel
Moderators: Alyrium Denryle, Edi, K. A. Pital
Fred LaRue, Deep Throat suspect, found dead in hotel
Mystery man
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