Home>News Center>World
         
 

'Deep Throat' family may cash in on fame
(Agencies)
Updated: 2005-06-02 15:24

SAN FRANCISCO - The family of W. Mark Felt, the former FBI official whose alter ego as Deep Throat has been revealed, appears ready to cash in on his newfound fame.

And if money is what they want, Felt's family stands to reap a huge financial windfall, according to literary agents, who estimated Wednesday that a book deal could be worth up to $1 million.


Nick Jones, Joan Felt and Will Felt, from left, speak to the media gathered in front of their home Tuesday, May 31, 2005, in Santa Rosa, Calif. W. Mark Felt, 91, was second-in-command at the FBI in the early 1970s. His identity as 'Deep Throat,' the long-anonymous source who leaked secrets about President Nixon's Watergate coverup to The Washington Post, was revealed Tuesday by Vanity Fair magazine, and family members said they believe his account is true. Nick and Will are grandsons of Felt. [AP]
"That is assuming he has a compelling story to tell," said Glen Hartley, president of Writer's Representatives LLC, based out of New York. "A book could easily be valued in the six figures."

As news broke that Felt was indeed the secret source who guided two young Washington Post reporters as they uncovered the Watergate scandal, Felt's family offered to sell family photographs — the first in an apparent flood of money-making opportunities.

Felt's role in the scandal, which forced the resignation of then-President Nixon, surfaced in an article written for Vanity Fair by a family friend, San Francisco attorney John O'Connor.


Former FBI deputy director Mark Felt emerges as his daughter Joan Felt (L) and grandson Nick Jones (R), look on from his home in Santa Rosa, California, May 31, 2005. Jones earlier read a statement to the press in which he confirmed that his grandfather was the informant Deep Throat, the legendary source who leaked Watergate scandal secrets to the Washington Post and helped bring down President Richard Nixon. [Reuters]
He wrote that Felt's daughter Joan, who persuaded her 91-year-old father to go public as "Deep Throat," lamented that the Post's Bob Woodward would get all the credit — and profit — if Felt went to the grave with his secret.

"We could make at least enough money to pay some bills like the debt I've run up for the kids' education," she told Felt, according to the article. "Let's do it for the family."

Vanity Fair said the Felts were not paid for the article, and Felt's grandson, Nick Jones, said Tuesday that the family has yet to decide how to proceed. Nobody answered the phone Wednesday at Joan Felt's home, where she cares for her father.

Clearly, interest in Felt's story is white hot.

"All The President's Men," the 1974 book by Woodward and Carl Bernstein about the scandal, ranked as the 43th best-selling title Wednesday afternoon on Amazon.com, up from about 400th the night before. Requests for the movie jumped twelvefold on Netflix, the online DVD rental service.

O'Connor didn't respond Wednesday to a request from The Associated Press for comment, but he told The Wall Street Journal that he's fielding numerous book and movie offers.

Questions remain about what kind of a story Felt can tell today. He suffered a stroke in 2001 and has been in declining health since.

Felt appeared frail when he shuffled to the doorway of his daughter's house Tuesday to give photographers a brief opportunity to take his picture. His family refused all questions, fueling speculation about how his age has affected his awareness and memory.


The Washington Post confirmed former FBI number-two Mark Felt was the 'Deep Throat' source who helped unravel the Watergate scandal of the 1970s and bring down President Richard Nixon, seen here in 1974. [AFP]
Before Felt's story can be sold, the family must show publishers or filmmakers that he has a compelling and accurate story to tell, said Peter Osnos, chief executive of the publishing company PublicAffairs and a former Post reporter.

"The big issue is, did Felt keep notes or a diary?" Osnos said. "Did he tell anybody or record anything in advance? The impression that you have now is a very old and frail man. If there is no written record, what you may have is the family scrambling around looking for something to say."

Felt's family will also have to compete with Woodward, whose own Deep Throat book is being rushed into print by Simon & Schuster.

Osnos also sees nothing wrong with Felt's family trying to sell his story.

"There's no reason why they shouldn't," Osnos said. "This isn't Amber Frey, who fell into a situation and then try to capitalize on it. This was a guy who really was an historic figure. This is the last great mystery of the Watergate era. It's a big story about a big story."

Without Woodward and Bernstein's cooperation, Felt's family won't likely have access to their notes, which the pair sold for $5 million to the University of Texas two years ago. At the time, they said documents naming Deep Throat would be kept secure at an undisclosed Washington location until the source's death.



 
  Today's Top News     Top World News
 

China, India and Russia join forces to boost security

 

   
 

China will not link yuan to textiles row

 

   
 

Government reveals plan to combat AIDS

 

   
 

22 die in Hunan mountain torrents

 

   
 

China: UN Council resolution dangerous

 

   
 

GM to build $387m engine plant in China

 

   
  Guessing game over Deep Throat's ID ends
   
  Dutch voters reject EU constitution
   
  Europe in crisis after Dutch, French reject treaty
   
  U.N. fires first staffer over oil-for-food role
   
  Badawi raps US-Japan view of China as threat
   
  Palestinian leader hospitalised in Jordan
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  Related Stories  
   
'Deep Throat' emerges from Watergate shadows
   
Identity of 'Deep Throat' source confirmed
   
Woodward tells how FBI man became 'Deep Throat'
   
Guessing game over Deep Throat's ID ends
  News Talk  
  Are the Republicans exploiting the memory of 9/11?  
Advertisement