Politics | Watergate Developer to Demolish Watergate Parking Garage Submits plans to raze 'Deep Throat' meeting site that undid a presidency By John Johnson Posted Aug 27, 2013 4:33 PM CDT Copied In this May 7, 1973, photo, reporters Bob Woodward, right, and Carl Bernstein sit in the newsroom of the Washington Post in Washington. (AP Photo) A little bit of American history looks to be destined for the rubble heap. A developer in Rosslyn, Virginia, has submitted plans to tear down the parking garage where "Deep Throat"—aka FBI agent Mark Felt—told his secrets to Bob Woodward, reports the ArlNow blog. Unless preservationists make a strong case, the garage will be turned to dust in 2016 or 2017, reports the Washington Business Journal. A historical marker already marks the site that launched the Watergate scandal, and developer Monday Properties says it will make sure that some kind of marker adorns the eventual new office building. It's just that "the garage is at the end of its useful life," says one of its execs. For the record, it was parking spot 32D that led to Nixon's downfall. Read These Next A Delta flight got wild with an allegedly unruly passenger. Mark Sanchez hospitalized after stabbing. A Trump coin looks to be in the works, with legal questions swirling. FBI parts ways with the ADL over Turning Point USA controversy. Report an error