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Wednesday, April 8
The Indiana Daily Student

Mark Felt, Watergate 'Deep Throat,' dies at 95

** FILE ** In this Aug. 30, 1976, file photo Mark Felt appears on CBS' "Face The Nation" in Washington. Newly released Nixon-era records show senior FBI official Felt regularly reported to Nixon and his national security team on events as minor as a high-school cafeteria fight and a peaceful sit-in by 20 college students. But on the sly Felt was up to much bigger things: he was Deep Throat, surreptitiously feeding revelations to The Washington Post about the Watergate scandal that ultimately would bring Nixon down.

SANTA ROSA, Calif. – The former FBI second-in-command who revealed himself as "Deep Throat" 30 years after he tipped off reporters to the Watergate scandal that toppled a president has died.

W. Mark Felt was 95. John D. O'Connor, a family friend who wrote the 2005 Vanity Fair article uncovering Felt's secret, said he died Thursday.

The shadowy central figure in the one of the most gripping political dramas of the 20th century, Felt insisted his alter ego be kept secret when he leaked damaging information about President Richard Nixon and his aides to The Washington Post.

Some speculated that Felt was the source who connected the White House to the June 1972 break-in at the headquarters of the Democratic National Committee. He steadfastly denied the accusations until finally coming forward in May 2005.

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