'Saturday Night Massacre' attorney general dies
December 31, 1999
Web posted at: 4:43 p.m. EST (2143 GMT)
BOSTON (CNN) -- Elliot Richardson, 79, who quit as President Richard Nixon's attorney general in Watergate's "Saturday Night Massacre," died Friday at Massachusetts General Hospital of a cerebral hemorrhage.
Word of his death came from a hospital spokeswoman and the office of Massachusetts Gov. Paul Cellucci. Richardson was stricken Wednesday in Boston where he was visiting his family. He had lived in Washington.
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Elliot Richardson testified in front of the House Judiciary Committee in 1998 on the issue of perjury.
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In a wide-ranging career, Richardson served as secretary of
defense under Nixon, ambassador to Great Britain and U.S.
representative to the Law of the Sea Conference during the Gerald
Ford administration. He also ran for a U.S. Senate seat in
Massachusetts in 1984.
But he was best known for his actions in 1973, when, during the
height of the investigation into the break-in at Democratic Party
headquarters at the Watergate Hotel, he refused Nixon's orders to
fire the special prosecutor in the case, Archibald Cox.
The Republican president was battling Cox over his attempts to
subpoena tape recordings of White House discussions believed
relevant to the investigation of the Watergate break-in and the
suspected cover-up by the Republican president and his staff.
Nixon, who eventually was driven from office by the Watergate
affair, contended the nine tapes being sought were privileged.
"The more I thought about it, the clearer it seemed to me that
public confidence in the investigation would depend on its being
independent not only in fact but in appearance," Richardson wrote
in his 1996 book, "Reflections of a Radical Moderate."
Cox eventually was fired by Acting Attorney General Robert Bork,
whose nomination for the Supreme Court years later would be denied.
Richardson remained a man who followed his instincts, rather
than party lines, throughout his life.
In 1994, Richardson, who was a Republican, added his name to the
list of trustees of President Clinton's legal defense fund set up
to help defray Clinton's legal costs in fighting Paula Jones'
sexual harassment allegations and Whitewater charges.
Descended from early New England settlers, Richardson was born
in Boston and was related to many of Boston's prominent families.
He earned a bachelor's degree cum laude from Harvard University
in 1941, served in World War II, and in 1945 became editor and
president of the Harvard Law Review.
After graduation, Richardson practiced law before being
appointed U.S. attorney for Massachusetts from 1959 to 1961.
Richardson, who was a partner in the prominent Boston law firm
of Ropes & Gray, served as lieutenant governor of Massachusetts
from 1965 to 1967.
His services won him the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the
nation's highest civilian honor, in 1998.
Richardson retired from the D.C. law office of New York's
Milbank, Tweed, Hadley & McCloy in October 1992.
Richard Fishman, who worked with Richardson at Milbank, once
said, "Elliot is the model of integrity in the legal profession."
Richardson married Anne Francis Hazard in 1952, and they had
three children.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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