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Donald Henry Segretti (born September 17, 1941 in San Marino, California) was a political operative for the Committee to Re-elect the President (Nixon) during the 1970s. Segretti was hired by friend Dwight L. Chapin to run a campaign of dirty tricks (which he dubbed "ratfucking") against the Democrats; his work was paid by Herb Kalmbach, Nixon's lawyer, from presidential campaign re-election funds gathered before an April 7, 1972, law required that contributors be identified. His actions were part of the larger Watergate scandal.

In 1974, Segretti pleaded guilty to three misdemeanor counts of distributing illegal (in fact, forged) campaign literature and was sentenced to six months in prison, actually serving four months. One notable example of his wrong-doing was a faked letter on Democratic presidential candidate Edmund Muskie's letterhead falsely alleging that U.S. Senator Henry "Scoop" Jackson, a fellow Democrat, had had an illegitimate child with a 17-year-old; the Muskie letters accused Senator Hubert H. Humphrey of sexual misconduct as well.[1] After testimony regarding the Muskie letters emerged, Democrats in Florida noted the similarity between these sabotage incidents and others that involved stationery stolen from Humphrey's offices after Muskie dropped out of the race. A false news release on Humphrey's letterhead "accused Rep. Shirley Chisholm (D-N.Y.) of being mentally unbalanced" and a mailing with an unidentified source mischaracterized Humphrey as supporting a controversial environmental measure that he actually opposed.[1]

In the 1976 film about Watergate, All the President's Men, Segretti was played by Robert Walden.

Segretti was a lawyer who served as a prosecutor for the military and later as a civilian. However, his license was suspended for two years following his conviction. In 1995, he ran for a local judgeship in Orange County, California. However, he quickly withdrew from the race when his campaign awakened lingering anger over his involvement in the Watergate scandal. In 2000, Segretti served as co-chair of John McCain's presidential campaign in Orange County, California.[2]

He holds a B.S. in Finance from the University of Southern California (1963) and a J.D. from UC Berkeley Law School (1966). While at USC he became associated with Dwight L. Chapin, Tim Elbourne, Ron Ziegler, Herbert Porter and Gordon C. Strachan, they all joined the "Trojans for Representative Government" group.

Karl Rove, a 21st-century political operative is said to have been Segretti's protégé, either directly[3][4] or indirectly.[5][6]

References

  1. ^ a b New York Times Press Service. "Watergate jogs memory: Democrats recall strange election incidents," The Dallas Morning News, May 13, 1973, page 14A.
  2. ^ "Donald Segretti", Notable Names Database, retrieved 07-25-2006.
  3. ^ Jack Anderson. "Is Karl Rove a genius or an evil genius?" (opinion column), The Intelligencer (Doylestown, PA), October 6, 2003, page 7A: "Another Segretti protege is Karl Rove, known as "General" Rove in the George W. Bush White House for his masterful handling of the 2000 presidential campaign and the 2002 congressional campaign."
  4. ^ Bob Elliott. "Rove, Knight are winners ... or not" (opinion column), Iowa City Press-Citizen, February 15, 2008, page 13A: "Though he was born on Christmas Day in 1950, Rove isn't someone you'd characterize as a jolly old elf. Matter of fact, the person credited with being Rove's mentor is Donald Segretti , himself convicted and jailed after Watergate era scandals."
  5. ^ Rheta Grimsley Johnson. "Some humans ain't human" (opinion column), Montgomery Advertiser (Alabama), May 5, 2008, Lifestyles page: "I came of age during Nixon and Watergate, so I realize dirty tricks have been around forever. ... Dirty tricks and meddling are not a Karl Rove invention. Donald Segretti beget Lee Atwater who beget Karl Rove."
  6. ^ Bill Curry. "McCain staking race on caricature issues" (opinion column), Hartford Courant, October 19, 2008, page C3: "The culture wars were invented by the folks who brought you Nixon's dirty tricks and kept alive by a direct line of their descendants, from Donald Segretti to Lee Atwater to Karl Rove to Steve Schmidt, the Rove acolyte who made McCain's flagging campaign what it is today."

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