Biography of Hermann Hesse

• Name: John Wesley Dean III.
• Birth: October 14, 1938, Akron, Ohio, U.S.
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Early life:

        John Wesley Dean III is a former lawyer who worked as a White House lawyer for President Richard Nixon from July 1970 to April 1973, where he was involved in the incidents of Watergate theft and after the Watergate scandal up to the cover. Joined deeply. He was referred to as the "Master Manipulator of Cover-Up" by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). He blamed for a lone felony in return for being a key witness for the prosecution. As a result, the prison sentence decreased eventually, which he served at Fort Holobard outside of Baltimore, Maryland.

        Immediately after the Watergate trial, Dean wrote about his experiences in a series of books and traveled to the United States to give a lecture. Dean is currently a commentator on contemporary politics, writing books, and writing a column for Findow's Write Online Magazine. He is a strong critic of the Navy Dialogue and the Republican Party, and is a registered independent. He was a strong critic of former President George W. Bush and President Donald Trump.

        Dean participated in Colgate University (Hamilton, New York) and then College of Vostur (Ohio), where he received a bachelor's degree in 1961. He obtained law degree from George Town University (Washington, DC) in 1965. They first joined a law firm. Served as the Chief Minority (Republican) Lawyer of the House Judiciary Committee in Washington, DC, and then in 1966-67. As a Associate Director of the National Commission on the Reform of Federal Criminal Law, the two-year term accepted his appointment as a deputy attorney general in the Nixon Administration. In 1970, President elected Dean as White House lawyer.

        Dean first came to national attention in 1972, when Nixon named a special investigation for possible involvement of White House personnel in the Watergate issue. As soon as it was revealed, he refused to issue a proposed fictitious report refusing a cover-up, and when the implications of the White House involvement became strong, Dean started telling the Federal Investigators that What he knew

        During the campaign in 1972, Dean and some other former FBI agents and members of the President's re-election committee presented an initial plan for intelligence, which was unfounded. He was asked to end the plan and efforts were made to spy on the Democratic National Committee. Thieves broke at Watergate Complex twice, both of them in 1972. After taking the criminals into custody and questioning, Dean took the evidence and money and destroyed it before being found by some of the investigators.

        Watergate thieves were sentenced to prison on March 23, 1973, while Dean hired an attorney in an inconsistent way and continued working as Nixon's White House Council. Because Nixon was unaware of the involvement of Dean, he asked them to prepare a report of all the evidence and knew everything about the scandal. However, this was a special effort for him because he was a part of this scandal, even if he was indirectly. Consequently, he could not complete the report and was fired by Nixon on April 30, 1973.
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