Talk about soft on crime. 'Deep Throat' died today. It was reported on NPR's Morning Election. The weird thing was this sort of he-said-she-said handling of the man's legacy with the 'she-said' part coming from convicted criminals like G. Gordon Liddy.
I can't find the Liddy quote but this excerpt from an AP article which they also include gives a taste of the warped thinking process:
"Critics, including those who went to prison for the Watergate scandal, called him a traitor for betraying the commander in chief."
So if someone were writing the Obit for Eliot Ness, would they include an assessment by Al Capone?






