The newspaper story stunned Washington. It revealed that a $25,000 check donated to the president's re-election committee had landed in the bank account of a man charged with breaking into the opposition's campaign headquarters.
The story, "Bug Suspect Got Campaign Funds" by reporters Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward, appeared 40 years ago on The Washington Post's front page. It showed for the first time that President Richard Nixon's campaign had financed the burglary of the Democratic National Headquarters at the Watergate office complex in June 1972.
Before Woodward and Bernstein's Aug. 1 article, the press had covered Watergate sporadically since the June break-in. Few people could believe that the White House would be involved in a crime as bizarre as the botched burglary of a campaign office.
The Woodward and Bernstein story turned a trickle of Watergate coverage into a powerful stream of investigations describing how the burglary was part of a wide-ranging criminal conspiracy. With strong support from their editors, the two young reporters relentlessly uncovered one shocking truth after another about the president and his top aides. A little more than two years later, Nixon resigned the presidency in disgrace.
How much of a difference did Woodward and Bernstein really make? Thanks to the popularity of their book All the President's Men and the movie of the same name, they were hailed during Watergate's aftermath as the dynamic duo who exposed a White House crime spree.
Since then some critics have belittled the role played by Woodward, Bernstein and the rest of the press, arguing that journalists had little to do with driving Nixon from the presidency. Historian W. Joseph Campbell calls the idea that reporters brought down the Nixon presidency a "media myth." New York University professor Jay Rosen recently tweeted that historians mention Woodward and Bernstein "just barely" when discussing how Watergate came to light.
It's true that Woodward and Bernstein didn't do it alone. FBI investigators, U.S. District Court Judge John Sirica, the Senate Watergate Committee, the House Judiciary Committee, and special prosecutors Archibald Cox and Leon Jaworski all played crucial roles.
But to say that journalists had nearly nothing to do with toppling Nixon is wrong. In addition to Bernstein and Woodward, other reporters such as Time magazine's Sandy Smith, a Los Angeles Times team led by Jack Nelson, and the New York Times' Walter Rugaber and Seymour Hersh had important Watergate scoops.
As my book Watergate's Legacy and the Press shows, it's doubtful that the truth of Watergate would have come to light without the hard work of reporters. Here's why:
Nixon had good reason to attack Woodward, Bernstein and their editors. The Post's stories broke through the Watergate cover-up that had stymied the official investigation by the FBI and prosecutors. If not for the work of journalists, Nixon might never have resigned.
Jon Marshall is the author of "Watergate's Legacy and the Press: The Investigative Impulse" (Northwestern University Press, 2011) and teaches journalism at Northwestern University's Medill School.