Conversation 008-115

TapeTape 8StartMonday, September 13, 1971 at 7:43 PMEndMonday, September 13, 1971 at 7:47 PMTape start time05:24:53Tape end time05:28:45ParticipantsNixon, Richard M. (President);  Haldeman, H. R. ("Bob");  Ehrlichman, John D.Recording deviceWhite House Telephone

On September 13, 1971, President Richard M. Nixon, H. R. ("Bob") Haldeman, and John D. Ehrlichman talked on the telephone from 7:43 pm to 7:47 pm. The White House Telephone taping system captured this recording, which is known as Conversation 008-115 of the White House Tapes.

Conversation No. 8-115

Date: September 13, 1971
Time: 7:43 pm - 7:47 pm
Location: White House Telephone

The President talked with H. R. (“Bob”) Haldeman.

     Attica prisoner uprising
           -Media coverage
                 -John D. Ehrlichman’s report
                      -National Broadcasting Corporation [NBC]
                            -Prisoners support
                            -Thomas Grey (“Tom”) Wicker
                            -Nelson A. Rockefeller credit
                            -William Kunstler
                            -Wicker
                            -Rockefeller
           -Racial aspect
                 -Blacks
                 -Guards
                 -Puerto Ricans

**********************************************************************

BEGIN WITHDRAWN ITEM NO. 1

[Personal Returnable]
[Duration: 33s ]

END WITHDRAWN ITEM NO. 1

**********************************************************************

Ehrlichman joined the conversation at an unknown time after 7:43 pm

     Federal prisons
          -Preventive actions
                -Attorney General
                      -Alert
                -Attica effect
                      -Possible deterrent
                      -Rockefeller’s conversation with Ehrlichman
                            -Bobby Seale and Black Panthers
                                 -Comment
                                       -Attorney General

     Rockefeller
         -Attica
               -Response
                     -Negotiations
         -Conservatism
               -Compared to W. Ronald Reagan
         -Problems
               -John V. Lindsay
               -Attica
               -Welfare

This transcript was generated automatically by AI and has not been reviewed for accuracy. Do not cite this transcript as authoritative. Consult the Finding Aid above for verified information.

Hello?
Mr. Haldeman, sir.
Bob?
Yeah.
Well, how's the New York incident played, do you know?
I don't.
I haven't gotten a reading on it.
John Ehrlichman saw a part of it and was saying that NBC, at least, played it as the expectable bathhouse of, you know, great tragedy for the prisoners and all that kind of crap.
Played the prisoner line.
Yeah.
I guess they had Tom Wicker on, John and all.
Had Wicker on and all that.
Not giving any Rockefeller any credit, huh?
Did they give Rockefeller any credit?
No.
That's predictable.
Yep.
And I didn't see any of them.
They had Kunstler and Wicker both on, apparently.
played it that way.
Poor Rocky, he's going to get his fill of these people.
Yep.
He'll learn.
I think it is predictable that, you know, that's the way they would, they will build it.
Not sure it's the way people are going to look at it, though.
Not when they see the, if they ever get out and, well, if they get out the fact that it's basically a black thing, that's going to turn people off awful damn fast.
That the guards were white and
Right?
Yep.
And they killed a couple of Puerto Ricans, didn't they?
Yeah.
Apparently so, yeah.
I don't have the...
Yeah, let me talk to John.
All right.
Yes, sir.
John.
Yes, sir.
Did you have some ideas that we ought to take some preventive actions in some of the federal prisons?
Well, we've already alerted the prisons through the Attorney General.
Right.
And so they're all on kind of a standby basis.
Well, I would think, John, that what happened in New York, rather than stimulating more, is likely to
you know, have an effect that could be quite the opposite.
A deterrent.
Well, the concern that Rockefeller had was that SEAL and some of the Black Panthers who had been up there came out and said to the press, if any harm comes to any of these prisoners, why, we're going to blow up other prisons around the country.
I see.
That's what he told you this morning.
Right.
Yeah.
So I passed that along to the Attorney General, who in turn alerted his system.
They won't.
I don't think they will.
I may be wrong, but...
I think Rockefeller had to do what he did.
Oh, I think so, too.
He couldn't possibly cave into these people.
And he took four days, didn't he?
Since Wednesday.
Right.
But he told me.
He said they had negotiated and they were doing it.
Yeah.
It's going to make him a... Before you...
Where you get through with Rockefeller, he may be more conservative than Reagan.
Well, he's moving over there, isn't he?
You think so?
Well, he's being confronted with a lot of tough choices.
Yeah, with Lindsey and then the prison thing and all the rest.
Welfare just spiraling out of sight.
Right, right.
Okay.
All right, sir.