Category: Law

  • High-profile lawyer takes Britney’s case

    Britney Spears has yet another new lawyer in the custody battle for sons Sean Preston and Jayden James Federline.

    Stacy D. Phillips will represent Spears, facing off against Kevin Federline’s lawyer, Mark Vincent Kaplan. Phillips previously has represented celebrity clients such as Bobby Brown and Darryl Strawberry, as well as the ex-spouses of Axl Rose, Tori Spelling, and Jean-Claude Van Damme. (Story continues below interactive map.)

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    Sorrell Trope, Spears’s last lawyer, had asked twice to be dismissed from the case. When he first tried to withdraw, he cited a breakdown of communication with Spears that made “further representation of her interests impossible.”

    In a statement to People magazine, Trope explained, “We filed papers asking to be relieved, and hopefully they will find someone to replace us.”

    A new lawyer is one of many changes for Spears in the last month. After she left the Stewart and Lynda Resnick Neuropsychiatric Hospital at UCLA on Feb. 6, the court ruled that her father, Jamie Spears, would be named as her temporary co-conservator, giving him legal control of his daughter’s affairs. Britney’s brother, Bryan Spears, is also a co-trustee of her estate.

    Her parents have since taken charge of the pop star’s business and personal relationships. Howard Grossman, Spears’s business manager, was fired by her father. Her mother, Lynne, has requested a restraining order against Spears’s frequent companion and self-proclaimed manager, Osama Lutfi. Lynne Spears claimed he was verbally abusing and drugging Britney.

    Two other lawyers have claimed they were representing Spears. Adam Streisand (a second cousin to Barbra) met with Spears to discuss her rights after Jamie Spears was named temporary conservator. However, because Spears does not have the legal power to determine her own representation, Streisand removed himself from her case.

    Jon Eardley also claims to be representing Spears. This week, he spoke to People about his belief that Spears is being “deprived of her Constitutional rights” and his desire to take her case to a federal court.

    Unlike Eardley, Stacy Phillips’s representation of Spears was approved by a court commissioner yesterday.

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  • Bert Fields, celeb lawyer, terrorizes opponents

    You’re in trouble. You want a lawyer. And not just any lawyer. You want a scary lawyer.

    Pick up the phone and call Bertram “Bert” Fields, who is known as “L.A.’s scariest lawyer.”

    Fields, 78, has been representing entertainment celebs for more than 50 years. (Story continues below interactive map.)

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    Just the short list of his clients includes Edward G. Robinson, Jack Webb, The Beatles, Dustin Hoffman, Michael Jackson, Elaine May, Michael Ovitz, Tom Cruise, Steven Spielberg and Paramount Pictures.

    Fields’s luster has been tarnished lately by his connection to Anthony Pellicano, the private investigator who goes on trial in federal court next month. However, the scary lawyer is still getting lots of work.

    Recently, he’s been in the news as attorney for Tamara Mellon, the co-founder of the Jimmy Choo luxury shoe empire who is suing her mother, Ann Yeardye.

    Fields also represented publisher Judith Regan, who recently reached and out-of-court settlement of her wrongful termination suit against HarperCollins and its parent company, News Corp.

    The Regan suit pitted Fields against a former client, News Corp. head Rupert Murdoch. Typically, that association did not lead Fields to soften his rhetoric.

    “They’ve chosen war and they will get exactly that,” he said in December after the suit was announced. “She (Regan) won’t take this lying down.”

    This wasn’t the first time Fields compared litigation to war.

    “If I were a general, I would attack, and keep pressing the attack — to throw the opponent off balance to change the odds and make a settlement your way much more favorable,” he told The New Yorker’s Ken Auletta in 2006. “…It forces the other side to think. ‘Hey, I may lose this case. Let’s settle it.’”

    Fields grew up in Los Angeles, the son of a surgeon who included Mae West and Groucho Marx among his clients. Fields graduated from Harvard Law School in 1952. He taught briefly at Stanford Law School and then served in the Air Force as a lawyer. In 1955, he began practicing law in Los Angeles.

    From the beginning, he fashioned a take-no-prisoners style.

    “If he’s on the other side, he’s a nightmare,” one Fields client told Auletta. “He’s going to make your life miserable.”

    At the same time, Fields told Auletta that he was careful to keep the volume down in the courtroom.

    “A jury doesn’t want some guy shouting at them,” he said. “Even when you think the other side is a scumbag – it doesn’t win you points.”

    A partner in the Los Angeles firm of Greenberg, Glusker was charging $900 an hour in 2006, according to Auletta.

    In addition to his practice of law, Fields is the author of two non-fiction works on history and of two mysteries. Written under the pseudonym of “D. Kincaid,” the novels feature Harry Cain, a lawyer.

    Fields and his firm had a long association with Pellicano, the private investigator who was charged in 2006 with wiretapping, racketeering, bribery and other charges.

    Fields has said that he had no knowledge of Pellicano using illegal methods to obtain information during the course of his work for the firm.

    Pellicano’s trial, in which he will represent himself, begins on Feb. 27.

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  • Judith Regan settles suit with News Corp.

    Judith Regan may have published a book with a dull last chapter. It doesn’t make for good reading, but it would seem worth her while.

    Regan’s sensation-filled lawsuit against News Corp. and HarperCollins has been settled for an undisclosed amount, Regan and her adversaries announced Friday.

    Both sides aren’t saying much, and lots of questions raised by the lawsuit, a document that read like a novel with a heroine (Regan) and quite a few villains, remain unanswered.

    Regan, who had published hundreds of authors and made millions in the process, had sued the companies in November for $100 million. (Story continues below interactive map.)

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    She had alleged that she had been wrongly terminated in December 2006. She also claimed that she had been made to seem anti-Semitic and that she had been forced to withhold information about Rudy Giuliani that might damage his presidential campaign.

    When the lawsuit was filed, a News Corp. spokesman dismissed Regan’s claims as “preposterous.”

    On Friday, News Corp. issued what amounted to an apology.

    “After carefully considering the matter, we accept Ms. Regan’s position that she did not say anything that was anti-Semitic in nature, and further believe that Ms. Regan is not anti-Semitic,” it said in a statement.

    Regan, too, issued a statement.

    “I am grateful for the opportunity to have worked with so many gifted people and am looking forward to my next venture,” she said.

    And that was that. The other allegations in the lawsuit aren’t addressed.

    No mention was made of the Regan’s claim that she was told not to disclose damaging information about Giuliani that she had learned while dating Bernard Kerik, a Giuliani associate and former New York City police commissioner who is now under indictment.

    Unmentioned, too, is Regan’s charge that she was unfairly made the scapegoat for the bad publicity generated by her project with O.J. Simpson.

    Regan had planned on publishing the former football’s star’s “hypothetical” account of how he would have murdered his wife if he had murdered his wife.

    In the face of adverse publicity, HarperCollins canceled the publication. Regan alleged that the company had supported the project and then abandoned her when the going got tough.

    “As a result of this corporate shirking of responsibility, false representations and defamation, Regan was unfairly attacked worldwide for her involvement in the O.J. project,” the lawsuit claimed. “She received death threats, hate mail and was shunned, humiliated and caused great harm.”

    Other questions remain unanswered:

    Did her bosses at HarperCollins neglect to take care of Regan’s office? It reportedly had no air conditioning in the summer and too much heat in the winter.

    Did those same bosses fail to investigate “serious security breaches” which led to a light fixture crashing onto Regan’s desk?

    Did those bosses do nothing when Regan complained that people within the company were attributing her rise in the company to sexual activities?

    Followers of this real-life legal drama may never know.

    One of her lawyers suggested to The Wall Street Journal that Regan doesn’t want to look back.

    “It is better for her to get on with her life,” said Bert Fields.

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  • Bradbury Nomination is Torturous

    This post was archived from createpositivechange.org/. View the original on the Wayback Machine.

  • Robert Trout takes on another high-profile case

    The trial of Rep. William J. Jefferson, D-La., begins next month with the nine-term congressman and former chairman of the U.S. congressional caucus on African trade facing a 16-count indictment including fraud, bribery, racketeering and money laundering.

    Jefferson is charged with taking more than $500,000 in bribes and soliciting much more in a scheme to broker business deals in Africa.

    Making the case for the congressman, whose freezer was stuffed with $90,000 in cash in $10,000 packets wrapped in aluminum foil and stuffed inside frozen-food containers, will be attorney Robert P. Trout. (Story continues below interactive map.)

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    A former federal prosecutor, Trout has defended other Democratic notables, including Carol Browner, chief of the Environmental Protection Agency during the Clinton administration. Browner had been charged with illegally destroying agency computer files that had been sought by a conservative legal foundation.

    Trout also defended Schuyler Tilney, a Houston-based Merrill Lynch executive, against charges of securities fraud. The Securities and Exchange Commission accused Tilney of helping Enron Corp. improperly inflate its profit figures.

    Trout is a partner in the law firm Trout Cacheris with Plato Cacheris, who has represented Robert Hanssen and Aldrich Ames, spies serving life sentences. Other former clients of Cacheris include Monica Lewinsky, former U.S. Attorney General John Mitchell and Fawn Hall of Iran Contra fame.

    Jefferson has hired PR chief Judy Smith of Impact Strategies, a crisis communications company in Washington, to help coordinate press queries and shape his media message during the trial. Smith work as a deputy press secretary for former President George H.W. Bush and has done work for Lewinsky, Sen. Larry Craig, and the family of Chandra Levy, the murdered congressional staffer who had an affair with former Rep. Gary Condit.

    Trout has argued in recent pretrial hearings that certain evidence, including some of Jefferson’s statements to the FBI and evidence from Jefferson’s home, should not be admitted at the trial.

    Trout asserts that FBI agents who raided Jefferson’s home in 2005 were overly hostile to Jefferson, who assumed they were going to arrest him.

    “He thought he was going to be taken out in handcuffs,” Trout said.

    Trout maintains that given the circumstances of the raid, the agents should have read the congressman his Miranda rights, but failed to do so.

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  • Theatrical Rusty Hardin takes Clemens’s case

    Baseball’s Roger Clemens has never been one to back down and go easy on batters.

    So it’s no surprise that he has launched a very public campaign to clear his name of allegations leveled against him in the Mitchell report on the use of steroids and other performance-enhancing drugs in baseball.

    And it’s also not surprising that Rusty Hardin, a Houston-based criminal defense lawyer, is representing Clemens. (Story continues below interactive map.)

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    “(Hardin) remains the name that should be on the speed-dial of every athlete or deep-pocketed Houstonian who might ever conceivably get into trouble,” wrote the Houston Press in naming Hardin Houston’s best criminal defense lawyer of 2005.

    The honor didn’t come easily, as Houston has long had a reputation for effective and flamboyant criminal defense lawyers.

    However, selecting Hardin was a no-brainer, the Press wrote, “like naming Lance Armstrong as Best Bicyclist from Texas.”

    Hardin, 66, a Vietnam War veteran, and a graduate of Southern Methodist University Law School, first made a name for himself working as a prosecutor in Houston for the Harris County District Attorney’s office.

    During his 15 years there, he almost always won. By his own account, he sent 15 men to death row, according to The New York Times.

    The key to his victories was his preparation and his folksy ability to win over juries. “His closing arguments were pure theater,” wrote Pamela Colloff in a 2000 Texas Monthly profile.

    Summing things up for the jury at the end of one trial, Hardin reenacted the murder by pretending to pump shotgun shells into a truck. In another summation, he swung a pickax — the murder weapon — into a phone book.

    Hardin left the D.A.’s office in 1990 and went into private practice. His resume shows a wide variety of clients. He represented the accounting firm of Arthur Anderson LLP in an Enron-related case. His firm, Rusty Hardin & Associates, P.C., has also handled cases for Rice University, ExxonMobil and Dow Jones & Co.

    Hardin successfully represented the estate of J. Howard Marshall II against claims by Marshall’s wife, Anna Nicole Smith, a former Playboy centerfold.

    He has also has fared well defending sports stars, so much so that his firm’s website has a section headed “Professional Athletes.”

    Former basketball star Calvin Murphy turned to Hardin when he was charged with sexual assault of a child. A jury acquitted Murphy after a five-week trial.

    Hardin also got an acquittal after NFL quarterback Warren Moon was charged with assaulting his wife. Hardin represented basketball coach Rudy Tomjanovich and basketball player Steve Francis in separate driving-while-intoxicated cases. Juries acquitted both men.

    Clemens, one of the biggest names in baseball and the winner of 354 games over a 24-year Major League career, hasn’t been charged with any crimes.

    But former Sen. George J. Mitchell, D-Maine, named Clemens in a report about the use of performance-enhancing drugs in baseball.

    Allegedly, Clemens used steroids while playing for the Toronto Blue Jays in 1998 and while a New York Yankee in the early 2000s. The report also accuses Clemens of using human growth hormone.

    Brian McNamee, a former trainer with the Blue Jays and strength coach with the Yankees, is the source of these allegations.

    Hardin says that McNamee is lying in exchange for easy treatment by federal authorities. “(He) only came up with names after being threatened with possible prison time,” Hardin said at a press conference earlier this month.

    The Times reported Saturday that McNamee has retained Richard D. Emery, a New York City lawyer with experience in libel and defamation cases. Emery took aim at a 60 Minutes interview by Mike Wallace with Clemens that’s scheduled to air Jan. 6.

    The lawyer said that if Clemens uses the interview to accuse McNamee of lying, the baseball player could expect a defamation lawsuit.

    Hardin responded by saying, “My advice to Brian and his lawyers would be to stay tuned because (Clemens) told Mike Wallace the truth.”

    Related stories on Muckety:
    George Mitchell: connected or conflicted?
    Barry Bonds hires powerful defense team
    Steroid report centers on two suppliers

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  • George Mitchell: connected or conflicted?

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