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Attorney Geragos Draws A Crowd

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  • Attorney Geragos Draws A Crowd

    ATTORNEY GERAGOS DRAWS A CROWD
    By Michael Hinkelman

    Philadelphia Daily News, PA
    http://www.philly.com/dailynews/local/8567787.htm l
    [email protected] 215-854-2656
    July 18 2007

    One legal journal calls him one of the country's "marquee" lawyers.

    And Los Angeles attorney Mark Geragos has the client list to back up
    the lofty description.

    He's defended pop star Michael Jackson, Academy Award-winning actress
    Winona Ryder, ex-California Congressman Gary Condit and convicted
    wife-killer Scott Peterson.

    Just last week, a federal judge in California removed him from the
    case of a defense contractor charged with fraud because he refused
    to submit to a background check that would have allowed him to see
    classified information.

    Now, Geragos is in federal court here, defending a man who is charged
    with traveling overseas to have sex with young boys.

    During the trial's opening yesterday, the courtroom was packed with
    spectators.

    Most of them - some aspiring lawyers - were there to see Geragos.

    One of Geragos' first major cases, in 1992, was defending Susan
    McDougal, a former business partner of Bill Clinton in the Whitewater
    land deal.

    He won back-to-back state and federal-court jury-trial acquittals for
    McDougal after she had been convicted and imprisoned before Geragos
    represented her.

    Geragos, 49, a lanky man with a taste for fine clothes, is no stranger
    to Philadelphia.

    He is a graduate of Haverford College.

    He was also one of the lead lawyers in a pair of federal class-action
    lawsuits against two life-insurance companies for not paying out on
    policies issued to Armenians that had been written before and during
    the purported genocide committed by the Turks against Armenians during
    World War I.

    The two cases settled for over $37.5 million. A plaintiff in one of
    the cases was a Philadelphian, George Yacoubian. *
    From: Baghdasarian
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