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Herbert Kalmbach, 60, Republican Party fund raiser and Nixon's personal attorney. Collected hush money for Watergate burglars. Pleaded guilty to breaking campaign-contribution laws, served six months. Regained right to practice law in 1977. Now partner in Hillsdale Associates, Santa Ana, Calif., real estate firm.
Richard Kleindienst, 58, became Attorney General in June 1972 after Mitchell left Cabinet to head Nixon re-election committee. Pleaded guilty to giving false testimony to Senate Judiciary Committee about antitrust suit against ITT. Suspended sentence. Acquitted last year in home state of Arizona on twelve counts of perjury allegedly committed while representing a swindler. Arizona Supreme Court suspended him from practicing law last month. U.S. Supreme Court suspended him last week from practicing before it.
Egil ("Bud") Krogh, 42, Ehrlichman's White House assistant and member of plumbers. Pleaded guilty to charges stemming from burglary of office of Ellsberg's psychiatrist. Served four months. Taught government and law at San Francisco's Golden Gate University before regaining right to practice law in 1980. Now an attorney in Seattle. Says Watergate taught him "the limitations of presidential power. It was a positive experience, but I don't recommend it."
Jeb Stuart Magruder, 47, former Haldeman aide and deputy director of Nixon re-election committee. Admitted plotting burglary and participation in coverup. Served seven months. Completing graduate study at Princeton Theological Seminary. Chosen last month over 120 other applicants to be assistant pastor of First Presbyterian Church in Burlingame, Calif. "I paid my debt to society and more," he says. "Is anybody free of sin?"
Donald Segretti, 40, political saboteur who tried to undermine primary campaigns of Nixon's potential 1972 Democratic opponents. Distributed letter maliciously claiming Henry Jackson was homosexual and Hubert Humphrey had consorted with call girl. Pleaded guilty to distributing false campaign material. Served four months. Practices law in Newport Beach, Calif.
Maurice Stans, 74, Secretary of Commerce and Nixon's chief political fund raiser. Pleaded guilty to five violations of campaign-financing laws but insisted they were "not intentional." Paid $5,000 fine. Runs one-man business-consulting firm in Pasadena, Calif. Awaiting congressional approval of his nomination by President Ronald Reagan as a director of Overseas Private Investment Corporation.
The Supporting Cast
Alexander Butterfield, 56, White House aide whose sensational Senate committee testimony first revealed existence of Nixon's secret White House recording system. Headed FAA, 1973 to 1975. Briefly held executive jobs in California aviation and insurance companies. Now self-employed management consultant.
John Caulfield, 53, Ehrlichman aide and former New York City police officer who tried to calm McCord and keep him from telling of White House connection to Watergate burglary. Suffered from ulcers and underwent stomach surgery. Works for Millionaire Industrialist Robert Abplanalp, one of Nixon's closest friends, at aerosol-valve manufacturing company in Yonkers, N.Y.
