Stanley Ira Kutler (August 10, 1934 – April 7, 2015) was an American historian, best known for his lawsuit against the National Archives and Richard Nixon that won the release of tape recordings Nixon made during his White House years, particularly those in relation to the Watergate scandal.
Kutler was born in 1934 in Cleveland, Ohio, the son of Robert (a printer) and Zelda (Coffman) Kutler. He married Sandra J. Sachs in 1956, and they have four children. He attended Bowling Green State University (B.A., 1956) and Ohio State University (Ph.D., 1960).
He was an instructor in history at Pennsylvania State University (1960–1962) and then taught at San Diego State University (assistant professor 1962–1964, associate professor 1964-1970, professor of history 1970–1980), before teaching history at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, where he also taught occasionally in the Law School.
He has written widely in a number of fields of American history, concentrating on American constitutional history and the twentieth century. His earliest book was Judicial Power and Reconstruction Politics (University of Chicago Press, 1968). His other major books include The Wars of Watergate (Knopf, 1990); The American Inquisition (Hill & Wang, 1982), winner of the Silver Gavel Award, American Bar Association, 1983; Privilege and Creative Destruction: The Charles River Bridge Case (Norton, 1978; revised edition, 1989); Judicial Power and Reconstruction Politics (Chicago 1968); and Abuse of Power: The New Nixon Tapes (Free Press, 1997), a book that resulted from his successful lawsuit against the National Archives and Nixon to force the release of the long-suppressed tapes. He also has authored or edited more than half a dozen textbooks in various fields of American history. His scholarly articles have appeared in leading history and legal periodicals.