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Justice For All: 'Attorney To The Stars' Mark Geragos Is Also A Hero

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  • Justice For All: 'Attorney To The Stars' Mark Geragos Is Also A Hero

    JUSTICE FOR ALL: 'ATTORNEY TO THE STARS' MARK GERAGOS IS ALSO A HERO IN THE ARMENIAN COMMUNITY

    Pasadena Weekly, CA
    http://www.pasadenaweekly.com/article.php?id=54 37&IssueNum=102
    Dec 13 2007

    You can't turn on a TV these days without seeing criminal defense
    attorney Mark Geragos commenting on a high-profile criminal case on
    "Larry King Live" or the "Nancy Grace" show or the "Today" show or
    "Good Morning America."

    These days, Geragos is known as attorney to the stars - infamous
    cultural luminaries, really, people like former Clinton insider
    Susan McDougal; former California Congressman Gary Condit, who came
    under suspicion in the death of former Capitol intern Chandra Levy;
    actress Winona Ryder in her shoplifting problem in Beverly Hills;
    Michael Jackson, with whom he worked for a while when Jackson was
    accused of molesting a boy; murderer Scott Peterson, who now sits
    on death row; and now Gary Anderson, trainer for recently indicted
    baseball great Barry Bonds.

    Anderson was released Nov. 15 after spending most of the year in jail
    for refusing to testify against Bonds, who was indicted for allegedly
    lying under oath about using steroids. Geragos told Forbes.com that
    Anderson will likely refuse to testify at Bonds' trial.

    But for all the celebrities he's represented over the years, Geragos
    is pretty much an everyday criminal defense attorney whose firm has
    taken on almost a quarter of its clients free of charge.

    Part of the reason for Geragos' generosity with both his time and
    skills is the intense pride that the 50-year-old father takes in
    his Armenian heritage, and much of that pro bono work is focused on
    helping his community.

    Along with being a trustee with the Armenian Assembly of America,
    Geragos, according to brief profiles on Wikipedia, Armenipedia and
    other Web cites operated by various organizations, serves on the
    advisory committee of Birthright Armenia. He's also chairman of
    Armenian Bone Marrow Donor Registry and has been a member of the
    Armenia Fund International board of trustees.

    Geragos was also one of three lawyers in two federal class action
    lawsuits against New York Life Insurance for policies that never
    paid death benefits to relatives of victims of the Armenian Genocide
    of 1915 in which 1.5 million Armenians were slaughtered by Ottoman
    Turks. The two cases were settled for more than $37.5 million.

    His celebrity was apparently not lost on jurors he was selecting
    recently for the trial in Pasadena of a young Armenian man accused
    of murder. "They were perplexed as to how it was I was in Pasadena
    and representing a person who is charged with murder. 'How would he
    have the money?' His mom's a recent immigrant," Geragos said of the
    questions he read on the faces of those prospective jurors.

    But the fact is Geragos, who lives with his family in nearby

    La Cañada Flintridge, continues making his mark - without much fanfare
    - as a criminal defense lawyer in the Pasadena Courthouse. In fact,
    shortly after representing Susan McDougal, who was also charged but
    later acquitted of stealing from conductor Zubin Mehta, Geragos
    served as the attorney for Michelle Holden, former wife of Pasadena
    City Councilman

    Chris Holden, who was ultimately convicted of molesting the family's
    teenage male babysitter.

    We caught up with Geragos last week while he was having lunch at the
    Green Street Tavern in Old Pasadena.

    - Kevin Uhrich

    Pasadena Weekly: How did you get so involved with Larry

    King and Nancy Grace and all those shows?

    Mark Geragos: It started, actually, with Susan McDougal, and that
    really when cable started to come in, because that was all Whitewater
    at that time, and I've had the good fortune to have a series of cases
    that attract attention, I guess ... You can look at that from two
    different perspectives. Most recently I've been involved with the
    Barry Bonds' indictment and I represent Gary Anderson, who is his
    trainer. We just got [Anderson] freed after 51 weeks, which is kind
    of a throwback to McDougal and the civil contempt [citiation].

    (In 1996, McDougal spent 17 months behind bars for refusing to
    answer questions related to Independent Prosecutor Kenneth Starr's
    investigation of the Whitewater real estate scandal involving former
    President Clinton, who later pardoned McDougal before leaving office
    in 2001.)

    In my opinion, there aren't enough voices from the defense side
    articulating on TV why this pro-prosecution and pro-law-and-order
    mentality may not be the be-all and end-all.

    It seems somewhat ironic that you have all these high-profile cases,
    when you and your firm do a lot of pro bono work.

    Over the years, fully 25 percent of our practice has been pro bono.

    Actually, you are very involved in the Armenian community. How
    important is that work to you?

    To me that's the best thing that I do. This year, we raised over $15
    million for Armenia Fund in the Thanksgiving telethon. I'm one of the
    three lawyers who worked on the genocide class action cases and we've
    recovered over $37.5 million. Just in this past month we distributed
    another $4 million to charities that came out of that work, so it's
    pretty satisfying.

    I guess the biggest thing now, legally speaking, is still Peterson,
    because he's on death row. Are you still his lawyer?

    We still consult with and represent him in the civil matters and I'll
    continue to do so until someone tells me not to.

    I can guess the answer, but what is your opinion of the death penalty
    at this point?

    I never thought that the death penalty made any sense. Still don't.

    Three strikes?

    Same thing. One of the good things about [LA County DA] Steve Cooley
    has been a more judicious use of [the] three strikes [law]. You go
    out of LA County and some of the horror stories you hear are just
    unbelievable. But we are fortunate in LA County that Steve has a more
    enlightened view of how to use it.

    That goes to the next contention, which is the criminal justice system
    is broken. How do you go about fixing that, in your opinion?

    Part of the problem is the fact that so many people have this view
    of defendants getting off and all of that. That's not the problem
    with the criminal justice system. The problem is innocent people are
    being convicted. That is clearly the biggest problem.

    But how can that be reversed?

    Well, I think there are a lot of things. There needs to be more
    resources for public defenders ... you know the problem is 95 percent
    of the cases that go through the justice system involve people who
    are indigent, and that's a real problem. Because they can't afford
    representation. Public defenders are strapped. They don't have enough
    resources, and it's a real problem.

    Has the PATRIOT Act increased your workload at all?

    It has and it hasn't. It's increased the workload because I'm
    generally more suspicious of how evidence is obtained. But generally
    the mitigation of those things is really on the periphery. It's the
    implementation of it that I think is a bit scary.

    --Boundary_(ID_58ggMqPSspEmwd7VioBs5A)--
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