Policeman and investigator After leaving the Army, he became a policeman in his hometown of Endicott, then a New York state trooper. In the 1950s, he was the police chief of
North Bay Village, Florida. He then became an investigator for
Florida Attorney General Richard Ervin in the 1960s. When Ervin's term ended in 1964, Dardis went to work for Dade County state attorney
Richard Gerstein. He also worked for
Janet Reno.
Watergate As Gerstein's chief investigator, in 1972 Dardis was tipped off about a connection between a
Miami bank and
Bernard Barker, one of the Watergate burglars who had been caught in the act inside the
Democratic National Committee headquarters in the
Watergate building. A check for $25,000 had recently been deposited in Barker's account. That check had been written by a major
Republican fundraiser: Kenneth H. Dahlberg, the man Dardis had rescued in World War II. While Dahlberg was never accused of any wrongdoing, the money linked the burglars to
Nixon's reelection campaign. When
Washington Post reporter Carl Bernstein arrived at the state attorney's office, Dardis passed along the information, which contributed to the
Posts coverage of what became known as the
Watergate scandal, which led to Nixon's resignation in disgrace in 1974.
Other cases Dardis continued to uncover other major crimes, including a "$862,000 fraud at
Cedars of Lebanon Hospital in 1974" and "a $258,931 trifecta scam at Flagler Dog Track in 1977". In the late 1970s, he went undercover, posing as a crooked cop; the investigation led to the dismantling of a "drug ring with annual sales of $500 million". Threats persuaded Dardis to relocate his family back to Endicott, New York, in 1979. ==Reporter==