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Persons Of The Year: Robert Philibosian

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  • Persons Of The Year: Robert Philibosian

    Metropolitan News-Enterprise, CA
    Jan 14 2008


    PERSONS OF THE YEAR: Robert Philibosian

    Ex-District Attorney Earns Respect as Advocate, Advisor, and Activist

    By KENNETH OFGANG, Staff Writer

    When 43-year-old Robert Philibosian was defeated for a full term as
    Los Angeles County district attorney in 1984, he did not `go gentle
    into that good night.'

    At a young age to be an ex-D.A., he built a new career. He is a
    private attorney, a `go-to guy' for people wanting action from local
    government, a conservative activist who continues to voice great
    pride in his role in the only successful effort to unseat sitting
    California Supreme Court justices in the 75-year history of retention
    elections, and a man whose advice and endorsement are sought by
    candidates for every office including the presidency.

    He has been asked again and again to run for public office - for the
    Legislature, for judge, for state attorney general - and continues to
    declare absolute disinterest. At age 67, he is now of counsel to the
    firm of Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton - having passed the maximum
    retirement age for partners - but remains busy as ever, representing
    clients and taking on assignments large and small, from serving on
    state and county boards and commissions to emceeing the annual
    MetNews Person of the Year dinner for the past 12 years.

    This year, however, that chore falls to someone else because
    Philibosian is a MetNews Person of the Year.

    Philibosian is a native of San Diego, where he attended public
    schools before his family moved to Selma, in rural Fresno County. He
    knew two things at an early age, he says: that he wanted to be a
    lawyer and that his politics were Republican.

    His role model as a lawyer, he explains, was a maternal uncle,
    Everett H. Berberian, who grew up around Fresno but practiced in the
    Bay Area for many years. And as far as his party affiliation is
    concerned, he says, he knew that by `the time I was old enough to
    know the difference between an elephant and a donkey.'

    His family was so conservative, he explains, that when they moved
    north, they continued to read the San Diego Union - now the
    Union-Tribune - a daily newspaper that is editorially conservative now
    and was even more so then, he recalls. His father retained business
    interests in San Diego, he notes, and preferred to have the
    conservative San Diego paper mailed to him rather than read the
    liberal Fresno Bee.

    Stanford Campus

    Philibosian was a mere youngster, he remembers, when he visited the
    Stanford University campus to attend his uncle's law school
    graduation. He was admitted to the school himself a few years later,
    joining the Republican Caucus and earning his undergraduate degree
    with a major in political science.

    It was a practical consideration, not a political one, that brought
    him to Los Angeles in 1962.

    He had to work his way through law school, he explains, and by
    attending Southwestern Law School, he could study part-time and take
    evening classes. (He retains his affinity for the school and has
    served on its board since 1984.)

    He got a job as a corporate `headhunter.' It wasn't bad work, he
    says, but it didn't have much to do with the career path he had
    decided on - that of a practicing lawyer, and preferably a prosecutor.

    He had an offer from a civil firm, to do insurance defense work, but
    had neither accepted it nor turned it down at the time he showed up
    for his civil service interview at the Hall of Administration.

    Back in the 1960s, he explains, the county's three civil service
    legal offices - those of the district attorney, public defender, and
    county counsel - would jointly interview prospective hires.

    He'd been given no advance preparation for the session, he recalls,
    and did not realize that he was going to be given a composite score
    by the three examiners, so he turned to the other two panelists and
    said, `Sorry, I don't want to take your time, but I'm only interested
    in the D.A.'s office.'

    Fortunately, he recalls, the district attorney representative on the
    panel - Deputy District Attorney Jack Cravens, now deceased - `perked up'
    and, as soon as the interview was over, sent him over to the Hall of
    Justice, where the district attorney was then-headquartered, and told
    him to see `Mr. Ritzi.'

    The eager prospective prosecutor ran out, having no idea where the
    Hall of Justice was or who Mr. Ritzi, was, but figuring someone would
    be able to direct him. Soon enough, he saw a uniformed sheriff's
    deputy who directed him to the right place, and discovered that
    fortune was on his side that day.

    Evelle Younger was the district attorney back then, and William Ritzi
    (later a Los Angeles Superior Court judge) was the assistant district
    attorney, the No. 3 person in the office. He was ushered into Ritzi's
    office, where the assistant district attorney asked him, `When can
    you start?'

    He took the job, even though it paid less than his civil offer - and
    even less than he was making in his corporate job.

    He began with the office in 1968, back in the days when newly minted
    deputy district attorneys and deputy public defenders honed their
    craft by making `the county run' - floating from one office to another
    for a week at a time.

    `You'd go from El Monte to Compton to Torrance to East L.A. - all over
    the place,' he explains. The system may not have been terribly
    efficient, but enabled the office to cover all of the courts, and
    also gave supervisors an opportunity to `size up' the young lawyers.

    East Los Angeles

    Philibosian eventually settled into an assignment in East Los
    Angeles, which was considered a great slot for a young lawyer because
    the courthouse was known for its `tough judges and tough defense
    attorneys,' he recalls. The head deputy district attorney was Robert
    Devich, later a justice of the Court of Appeal, and one of the
    judges, John Arguelles, went on to become a California Supreme Court
    justice.

    Devich, who retired from the bench in 1992, says he was not surprised
    that Philibosian rose to great heights.

    `He was a leadership-type guy' who could handle a calendar of up to
    120 cases a day, Devich recalls. `He was tough, but I found him to be
    fair, and he knew the value of cases. He got along with the public
    defenders and handled the calendar very well.'

    The assignment also helped form relationships that remained strong
    through his tenure as district attorney.

    Among those he worked with were Deputy District Attorneys James
    Bascue and Reuben Ortega, who became his top two aides as district
    attorney. (Both later were appointed to the bench and are now
    retired, Bascue from the Superior Court and Ortega from the Court of
    Appeal.)

    Ortega, who had left the office to go into private practice and later
    became a Los Angeles Superior Court commissioner, says he was `very
    reluctant' to give up that job for what might be a short stint as a
    top administrator, but that Philibosian was `very persuasive.'

    Ortega explains that he `loved the commissioner's job' and `loved
    juvenile court,' but that he made the right decision:

    `It was a fascinating and educational two years. I'll tell you, I
    never worked so hard in my life. I learned a lot from the experience
    and from him and I got to see how he took command of that office.'

    He added that he is `forever grateful' to Philibosian for helping
    launch his judicial career by recommending him to Deukmejian for
    appointment as a Superior Court judge. He was sworn in the day
    Philibosian left office and was elevated to the Court of Appeal two
    years later.

    Trial Experience

    After East Los Angeles, Philibosian went to Norwalk and Santa Monica,
    where he says he gained tremendous experience trying cases before a
    pair of veteran judges, both now deceased. One was Laurence
    Rittenband - who is remembered primarily for having sentenced film
    director Roman Polanski to 50 years in prison for having sex with
    underaged girls, turning him into an exile - and the other was Edward
    Brand, `a very tough guy' who carried a .38 snub-nosed revolver under
    his robes, Philibosian remembers.

    He eventually was promoted to head deputy in the Van Nuys office. He
    also stepped up his political involvement, volunteering for two
    statewide campaigns in 1978.

    One was that of Younger, who had been promoted from district attorney
    to state attorney general eight years earlier and was trying to
    unseat Gov. Jerry Brown. The other candidate was a state senator from
    Long Beach named George Deukmejian, who wanted to succeed Younger as
    attorney general.

    Much has been made of the fact that Philibosian and Deukmejian share
    an Armenian heritage, but that was a `totally minor' factor in their
    relationship, Philibosian explains. They did not live in the same
    community - Philibosian lived in Westwood for a while and settled in
    the San Fernando Valley in 1969 - and the younger man had played only a
    small role in Deukmejian's winning campaign because he was spending
    more of his time on Younger's losing one.

    Deukmejian nonetheless gave him an important assignment, naming him
    chief assistant attorney general in charge of the criminal side of
    the office. The new attorney general - who had authored a good deal of
    criminal justice legislation, including an initiative to restore the
    death penalty in the state - wanted the office to have `a more
    prosecutorial attitude' toward criminal cases, Philibosian explains,
    and picked him because of his experience as a prosecutor who had
    tried a lot of cases and also had administrative experience.

    Deukmejian agrees, saying Philibosian did a `tremendous' job in
    heading up the division. Philibosian has accomplished much, he said,
    because he is `very bright, collegial, and resourceful.'

    After Brown launched an ill-fated U.S. Senate run in 1982 rather than
    seeking a third term as governor, Deukmejian ran to succeed him. It
    was a difficult decision for him, Philibosian says, because the
    Attorney General's Office `had accomplished a lot' and because he was
    concerned about what would happen to his staff if he lost.

    Philibosian says he had no doubt which way his boss should go.

    `I said `Duke, you've got to run for governor,' ' assuring him that
    if need be, `we'll all go out and find jobs.' The strongest argument,
    he comments, was that as governor, he could reverse the trend of
    liberal judicial appointments under Brown.

    Deukmejian won a narrow victory over then-Los Angeles Mayor Tom
    Bradley and became governor. That meant a short-term promotion for
    Philibosian, who was named to replace the chief deputy, Michael
    Franchetti, who left the office right after the election to work on
    the governor-elect's transition team and went on to become the new
    governor's finance director.

    Philibosian, meanwhile, was working on his next job.

    Van de Kamp Moves On

    District Attorney John Van de Kamp, a Democrat, had won election as
    attorney general, defeating Republican George Nicholson, then a
    colleague of Philibosian's in the Attorney General's Office and now a
    Third District Court of Appeal justice. The result was widely
    expected, and there was much speculation as to whom the Board of
    Supervisors might select to serve the last two years of Van de Kamp's
    term as district attorney.

    Philibosian wanted the job, but hadn't let his interest become known
    publicly, out of loyalty to Nicholson.

    `I didn't want to give signals that I didn't expect him to win,'
    Philibosian explains. But once the election results were in, he told
    a television reporter at Deukmejian's victory party that he was going
    to seek the appointment.

    To become district attorney, somebody needed to get three votes from
    among the five supervisors - Republicans Michael Antonovich, Deane
    Dana, and Pete Schabarum, and Democrats Kenneth Hahn and Ed Edelman.
    (Dana and Hahn are now deceased, Schabarum and Edelman are retired
    from elective politics, and Antonovich remains on the board.) Dana
    `became my champion,' Philibosian relates.

    Antonovich backed M. David Stirling, with whom he had served in the
    state Assembly and who later became chief deputy attorney general
    under Dan Lungren; Edelman supported Stephen Trott, then U.S.
    attorney for the Central District of California and now a senior
    judge of the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals; Hahn supported
    Johnnie Cochran Jr., Van de Kamp's assistant district attorney.
    Schabarum, who hadn't made his choice known in advance, gave
    Philibosian his second vote.

    Hahn's backing of Cochran made perfect sense because Hahn - `one of the
    greatest political strategists of all time,' Philibosian says
    admiringly - represented the district with the largest concentration of
    African Americans and Cochran would have been the first black
    district attorney in the county's history.

    Cochran, Philibosian posits, `liked being in the mix but didn't
    seriously want to be district attorney,' instead being headed toward
    lucrative private practice. After the first ballot, Hahn cast the
    decisive vote for Philibosian, even though the two really didn't know
    each other.

    `He just kind of adopted me,' Philibosian explains. The relationship
    cut both ways, as Philibosian supported the supervisor and his son
    James K. Hahn in their subsequent campaigns.

    Current Supervisor Don Knabe, who was Dana's chief deputy at the
    time, had been designated to guide Philibosian through the process
    and recalls `some very anxious moments' during the selection meeting.


    `He was literally in my office with the door closed,' Knabe recalls,
    listening to the meeting over the `squawk box.' Not only was there
    uncertainty as to what Schabarum would do, and what Hahn would do
    beyond his initial vote for Cochran, it was still possible that the
    board would postpone a final decision, and even search for additional
    candidates.

    Ultimately, he remembers, the vote was made unanimous. All five
    supervisors, he says, `were very comfortable with Bob' and had `a
    great working relationship' with him in the two years he served.

    Philibosian, he added, `has done a great job' for the county through
    his service on the Economy and Efficiency Commission.

    Philibosian recalls his time as district attorney fondly, although he
    had no illusions about the difficulty he was going to face in keeping
    the job, with little recognition among voters in the huge county, and
    a need to raise a lot of money in a short time for an election
    campaign.

    He vowed, however, that he was `not going to worry about the
    politics' but was going to do the job as best he could. `I did the
    job, and loved every minute of it,' he says, taking credit for
    beefing up the office's efforts in toxic waste disposal,
    environmental law, consumer law, and antitrust enforcement;
    centralizing narcotics prosecutions - an idea he attributes to a young
    deputy named Steve Cooley - and directing an active legislative
    program.

    He accomplished much in a short time, he says, because he surrounded
    himself with top people.

    `The secret of any executive is to have a good staff,' a lesson he
    says he learned under Deukmejian. He filled top positions in the
    office with longtime colleagues Bascue and Ortega; Billy Webb, who
    had been calendar deputy in Rittenband's court while Philibosian was
    the trial deputy; Van de Kamp holdover Curt Livesay; and budget
    expert Joan Ouderkirk, whom he hired away from the county chief
    administrative officer and who was married at the time to John
    Ouderkirk, then a deputy district attorney and later a Los Angeles
    Superior Court judge.

    Antonovich, the lone remaining board member from that time, told the
    MetNews that he and Philibosian became good friends, and that his
    performance as district attorney was `superb,' elaborating:

    `He was tough on drug dealers, and strongly enforced child abuse and
    child predator laws....Bob is a hard-working and principled public
    servant who has dedicated his life to public service and the
    furtherance of justice.'

    His tenure as district attorney, however, was a short one, as the
    June 1984 primary election forced him to face what he calls `a
    perfect political storm against me.'

    He was a first-time candidate; opponent Ira Reiner had won two
    elections for Los Angeles city controller and two for city attorney.
    While the election was officially nonpartisan, he was a Republican
    running in a heavily Democratic county in an election in which
    Democrats turned out in large numbers because of a hotly contested
    presidential primary while Republicans largely stayed home because
    President Reagan's re-nomination was certain; and those Democrats
    were getting mailers urging a vote for Reiner and giving both
    candidates' party affiliations.

    `Very Smooth' Transition

    Reiner won by a good-sized margin and took office later that year.
    Philibosian made what he recalls as a `very smooth' transition to
    private practice, joining an old-line Los Angeles firm, MacDonald,
    Halstead and Laybourne - which later merged into the international
    mega-firm of Baker & McKenzie - and primarily practiced government and
    regulatory law.

    He joined Sheppard Mullin in 1994, after Baker & McKenzie closed the
    Los Angeles office. `I wasn't going to leave for San Francisco, or
    San Diego, or D.C.' in order to remain a partner at Baker & McKenzie,
    he explains.

    He has no regrets, he says, because Sheppard Mullin has remained a
    great place to work, maintaining a friendly and collegial atmosphere
    even as it has opened more offices, including one in Shanghai, and
    grown to 500 lawyers. He continues to focus on public law,
    specializing in land use and state and local regulatory law,
    including Coastal Commission and beverage licensing issues.

    He has largely stayed away from criminal law, although he has been
    involved in a few white-collar cases. He raised some eyebrows,
    though, last year when he showed up on the team of lawyers
    representing heiress Paris Hilton in her drunk driving/violation of
    probation case.

    Philibosian explains that he and his firm had not otherwise
    represented Hilton or her business interests or those of her family,
    but that he was brought into the case strictly to argue the issue of
    the sheriff's authority, as the public officer responsible for
    alleviating jail overcrowding, to release inmates early. He still
    believes that Sheriff Lee Baca acted appropriately, he says, but the
    trial judge disagreed and Hilton chose not to appeal.

    While he has not run for public office since losing to Reiner - he did
    serve two elective terms in party office, as a member of the Los
    Angeles County Republican Central Committee - he certainly never left
    the arena. In fact, not long after completing his tenure as district
    attorney, he embarked on a campaign the reverberations of which are
    still felt today.

    The California Supreme Court in 1986 had a decidedly liberal stamp.
    It consistently overturned death sentences, and constantly upset many
    in business with its rulings on labor and regulatory issues.

    But that course turned after Chief Justice Rose Elizabeth Bird and
    Justices Cruz Reynoso and Joseph Grodin were ousted by the voters in
    November 1986, giving Deukmejian the opportunity to appoint their
    successors.

    Philibosian was in the forefront of the campaign, which brought
    together well-heeled business interests, the GOP, and victims' rights
    groups, using capital punishment as a signature issue.

    Of the four Democratic justices on the ballot that year, only Stanley
    Mosk - who went on to become the longest-serving justice in California
    history before his death in 2001 - survived.

    Squelches Mosk Challenge

    As Philibosian tells it, there was a group within the anti-Bird
    coalition - he declines to name names - who wanted to target Mosk as
    well. `I and a number of other people squelched it,' he explains,
    believing that it was neither right nor smart to go after the court's
    senior justice, a politically adroit fixture of California public
    life for 40 years.

    While Mosk shared a party affiliation with the others, and sided
    with them much of the time when it came to deciding cases, he was
    very different, particularly from the chief justice, Philibosian
    explains.

    Bird, who died in 1999, `was not a good lawyer, not a hard worker,
    and an ideologue, so she was the opposite of Stanley Mosk,' he says.

    He relates a conversation he had with Richard Mosk, the justice's
    son, and now a justice of this district's Court of Appeal. The
    younger Mosk invited him to lunch, but Philibosian invited him to
    `save the time' and assured him that he was doing everything he could
    to keep the senior Mosk out of the opposition's sights.

    Richard Mosk confirms that Philibosian was helpful in the effort, for
    which he and his father were `extremely grateful.' Mosk adds that `my
    father admired people like Bob' who were willing to espouse differing
    views while maintaining a professional respect.

    Philibosian accepts the conventional wisdom that had Brown elevated
    Mosk to chief justice, and then appointed Bird, who had no prior
    judicial experience, as Mosk's successor, the liberal majority would
    likely have withstood the 1986 election.

    Brown, he says, made a `a fatal strategic error' that `literally
    changed the course of history in California.' The defeat of the
    three, and the appointments of more conservative justices by
    successive governors, have produced a `great' court, he says.

    Philibosian's own role in the campaign became an issue, he relates,
    when Bird spread a rumor that Deukmejian planned to appoint
    Philibosian as chief justice.

    An unnamed person who had discussed the matter with Bird, Philibosian
    says, attributed to her the comment that if Philibosian became the
    next occupant of her chambers, he planned to replace the macramé
    plant hangings in her office with nooses.

    The claim that he was after her job for himself `had no basis
    whatsoever,' he says, because he was quite happy at his law firm, and
    because Bird had exemplified the problems of having a chief justice
    with no judicial experience.

    In the ensuing years, he has served in a variety of part-time public
    and political posts, including as chairman of the county Economy and
    Efficiency Commission, the California Commission on Criminal Justice,
    and the California World Trade Commission.

    And while he says he does not have the close relationship with the
    current governor that he had with Deukmejian and Pete Wilson, whom he
    advised on judicial appointments and other matters, he is one of
    Arnold Schwarzenegger's appointees to the state Republican Central
    Committee.

    His present political project, he says, is helping reelect Cooley,
    `one of my oldest and dearest friends.'

    His practice and his outside activities leave little time for
    recreation, he acknowledges, but he says he spends as much time as he
    can with his family. He and Nancy Philibosian have been married for
    nearly four decades, and have two children.

    His son, also Robert Philibosian, is married to the daughter of a
    onetime courtroom adversary of the ex-prosecutor, the late Charles
    English, who was a leading criminal defense lawyer. His daughter,
    Janet Philibosian, is a part-time Monrovia attorney, the mother of
    his two grandchildren, and the wife of Craig Valenzuela, a member of
    the Los Angeles Police Department.


    http://www.metnews.com/articles/2008/philibosian0 11408.htm
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