"Harry L. Kozol, Expert in Patty Hearst Trial, Is Dead at 102". The New York Times. Archived from the original on May 22, 2013. Retrieved May 22, 2010. ^ Wilkinson, Francis (December 24, 2008).
Patricia Campbell HEARST, Defendant-Appellant. Nos. 76–3162, 77–1759. United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit. November 2, 1977. ^ "Bomb blast rips Hearst castle". The Morning Record.
"Thomas Padden, who arrested Patty Hearst, dies". San Francisco Chronicle. Archived from the original on September 24, 2015. Retrieved August 17, 2015. ^ "Patty's Twisted Journey".
Patty Hearst. Led by a hardened criminal named Donald DeFreeze, the SLA wanted nothing less than to incite a guerrilla war against the U.S. government and destroy what they called the “capitalist state.” Their ranks included women and men, blacks and whites, and anarchists and extremists from various walks in life.
F. Lee Bailey, the dramatic criminal defense lawyer who represented Sam Shepherd, Patty Hearst, the Boston Strangler, the My Lai Massacre commander and O.J. Simpson, died Thursday in Atlanta. He was 87.
June 3, 2021F. Lee Bailey / Date of death
F. Lee Bailey, High-Profile Lawyer To Boston Strangler And OJ Simpson, Dies At 87.
87 years (1933–2021)F. Lee Bailey / Age at death
“He took money that was rightfully going to the government and that would have benefited his client.” The government produced a damning paper trail: Bailey had agreed that any fee he took would first be approved by the presiding judge, and early on he agreed to share a fee of $3 million, split among himself, Shapiro, ...
It was during the Simpson case that the two men severed their friendship, with Mr. Shapiro accusing Mr. Bailey of trying to enhance his own role in the case by planting stories denigrating Mr. Shapiro's legal abilities and his loyalty to their client.
Simpson, Dies at 87. With theatrical courtroom flair, he was involved in a host of notorious criminal cases, including those of the Boston Strangler and a Vietnam War massacre.
F. Lee BaileyF. Lee Bailey, the criminal defense attorney who helped successfully defend O.J. Simpson on murder charges, has died. He was 87.
In the O. J. Simpson murder case, Dershowitz acted as an appellate adviser to Simpson's defense team during the trial, and later wrote a book about it, Reasonable Doubts: The Criminal Justice System and the O. J. Simpson Case (1996). Dershowitz wrote: "the Simpson case will not be remembered in the next century.
Bailey was found in contempt of court and spent 43 days in the same federal prison where Duboc was being housed near Tallahassee before he was able to come up with $700,000 to repay some of the debt.
June 3, 2021F. Lee Bailey / Date of death
Former Yarmouth resident F. Lee Bailey, who gained fame as one of the country's most renowned criminal defense attorneys, died Thursday at a hospital in the Atlanta area. He was 87. Bailey had lived in Yarmouth since 2010 but moved to Georgia about a year ago to be close to one of his sons, a former law partner said.
Bailey' death at 87 was confirmed on Thursday. WALTHAM, Mass. — F. Lee Bailey, the celebrity attorney who defended O.J. Simpson, Patricia Hearst and the alleged Boston Strangler, but whose legal career halted when he was disbarred in two states, has died, a former colleague said Thursday.
Former Yarmouth resident F. Lee Bailey, who gained fame as one of the country's most renowned criminal defense attorneys, died Thursday at a hospital in the Atlanta area. He was 87. Bailey had lived in Yarmouth since 2010 but moved to Georgia about a year ago to be close to one of his sons, a former law partner said.
F. Lee Bailey(CNN) F. Lee Bailey, the prominent defense attorney who represented many high-profile clients, including O.J. Simpson, died Thursday at age 87. His death was confirmed to CNN by Jennifer Sisson, a manager at Bailey's consulting firm.
F. Lee BaileyF. Lee Bailey, the criminal defense attorney who helped successfully defend O.J. Simpson on murder charges, has died. He was 87.
Hearst's parents hired F. Lee Bailey, a Boston, Massachusetts, attorney renowned for winning acquittals for the alleged "Boston Strangler" and accused wife-murderer Dr. Sam Sheppard. Bailey declared that for 20 months, Patty Hearst had been via "prisoner of war" whose actions were entirely governed by her desire to stay alive.
Two months after her abduction, Patty Hearst announced in a new tape that she had joined the SLA and taken the name "Tania." The message was accompanied by a photograph of Hearst posing with a gun before a poster of the SLA symbol, a seven-headed cobra. Her parents skeptically replied that all the tapes were made under duress.
Over her private objections, Bailey put his client on the stand to counter the coming flood of damaging testimony. Hearst described her violent abduction. For nearly two months, she had been bound, blindfolded, and confined in a dark closet, where she was sexually molested by Wolfe and De Freeze. She was constantly threatened, hectored with revolutionary rhetoric, and told that her parents had abandoned her by refusing the SLA's demands. After seeing the May 16 incident on television, she accepted her captors' claims that the FBI would kill her if they discovered her in a SLA hideout.
Bill Harris had ordered her to tell Tom Matthews about the Hibernia robbery. The Harrises, she said, also dictated the text of the "Tania Interview," which was to have been published to raise funds for the SLA. Bailey argued that Hearst's actions and words resulted from a constant threat of death.
Prosecutor James Browning, Jr., was equally intent on establishing that Hearst's behavior before and after the holdup reflected her voluntary participation in the crime.
She agreed to testify against the Harrises. On September 24, 1976, after already serving more than a year in jail, Hearst was finally sentenced to seven years imprisonment.
Captured and Arrested. On September 18, 1975, FBI agents captured Hearst in San Francisco. Instead of being freed, she was arrested for the Hibernia Bank robbery and hustled off to jail to undergo the first of many psychiatric examinations.
American singer songwriter Jimmy Urine of the band Mindless Self Indulgence wrote the electronic song "Patty Hearst" as the 7th song on his 2017 solo album " The Secret Cinematic Sounds of Jim my Urine ".
Early life and education. Patricia Hearst, who prefers to be called "Patricia" rather than "Patty", was born on February 20, 1954 in San Francisco, California, the third of five daughters of Randolph Apperson Hearst and Catherine Wood Campbell. She grew up primarily in Hillsborough, and attended its Crystal Springs School for Girls and ...
The manager and an employee followed Harris out and confronted him. There was a scuffle and the manager restrained Harris, when a pistol fell out of Harris' waistband. Hearst discharged the entire magazine of an automatic carbine into the overhead storefront, causing the manager to dive behind a lightpost.
On May 16, 1974, the manager at Mel's Sporting Goods in Inglewood, California observed a minor theft by William Harris, who had been shopping with his wife Emily while Hearst waited across the road in a van. The manager and an employee followed Harris out and confronted him. There was a scuffle and the manager restrained Harris, when a pistol fell out of Harris' waistband. Hearst discharged the entire magazine of an automatic carbine into the overhead storefront, causing the manager to dive behind a lightpost. He tried to shoot back, but Hearst began aiming closer.
Hearst alone was arraigned for the Hibernia Bank robbery; the trial commenced on January 15, 1976. Judge Oliver Jesse Carter (who happened to be a professional acquaintance of a junior member of the prosecution team) ruled that Hearst's taped and written statements after the bank robbery, while she was a fugitive with the SLA members, were voluntary. He did not allow expert testimony that stylistic analysis indicated the "Tania" statements and writing were not wholly composed by Hearst. He permitted the prosecution to introduce statements and actions Hearst made long after the Hibernia robbery, as evidence of her state of mind at the time of the robbery. Judge Carter also allowed into evidence a recording made by jail authorities of a friend's jail visit with Hearst, in which Hearst used profanities and spoke of her radical and feminist beliefs, but he did not allow tapes of psychiatrist Louis Jolyon West 's interviews of Hearst to be heard by the jury. Judge Carter was described as "resting his eyes" during testimony favorable to the defense by West and others.
On September 18, 1975, Hearst was arrested in a San Francisco apartment with Wendy Yoshimura, another SLA member, by San Francisco Police Inspector Timothy F. Casey and his partner, Police Officer Laurence R. Pasero, and FBI Special Agent Thomas J. Padden and his partners, FBI agents Jason Moulton, Frank Doyle, Jr., Larry Lawler, Monte Hall, Dick Vitamonte, Leo Brenneissen, and Ray Campos. While being booked into jail, Hearst listed her occupation as "Urban Guerilla" and asked her attorney to relay the following message: "Tell everybody that I'm smiling, that I feel free and strong and I send my greetings and love to all the sisters and brothers out there."
Two months after her release from prison, Hearst married Bernard Lee Shaw (1945–2013), a policeman who was part of her security detail during her time on bail. They had two children, Gillian and Lydia Hearst-Shaw. Hearst became involved in a foundation helping children with AIDS, and is active in other charities and fund-raising activities.
Bailey made his name as the attorney for Sheppard, an Ohio osteopath convicted in 1954 of murdering his wife. Sheppard spent more than a decade behind bars before the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in a landmark 1966 decision that “massive, pervasive, prejudicial publicity” had violated his rights.
One of the most memorable moments of the trial came when Bailey aggressively cross-examined Los Angeles police Detective Mark Fuhrman in an attempt to portray him as a racist whose goal was to frame Simpson. It was classic Bailey.
Bailey earned a law degree from Boston University in 1960, where he had a 90.5 average, but he graduated without honors because he refused to join the Law Review. He said the university waived the requirement for an undergraduate degree because of his military legal experience.
At trial, Bailey claimed she was coerced into participating because she feared for her life. She still was convicted. Hearst called Bailey an “ineffective counsel” who reduced the trial to “a mockery, a farce, and a sham,” in a declaration she signed with a motion to reduce her sentence.
Bailey also defended Albert DeSalvo, the man who claimed responsibility for the Boston Strangler murders between 1962 and 1964. DeSalvo confessed to the slayings but was never tried or convicted, and later recanted. Despite doubts thrown on DeSalvo’s claim, Bailey always maintained that DeSalvo was the strangler.
The death was confirmed Thursday by Peter Horstmann, who worked with Bailey as an associate in the same law office for seven years. A well-known case for Bailey took place in federal court in Gainesville in 1996 involving French-American drug smuggler Claude Duboc, who pleaded guilty to drug and money-laundering charges.
Fuhrman denied using racial epithets, but the defense later turned up recordings of Fuhrman making racist slurs. Even though Fuhrman remained cool under pressure, and some legal experts called the confrontation a draw, Bailey, recalling the exchange months later, said, “That was the day Fuhrman dug his own grave.”.
On September 18, 1975, Hearst was arrested in a San Francisco apartment with Wendy Yoshimura, another SLA member, by San Francisco Police Inspector Timothy F. Casey and his partner, Police Officer Laurence R. Pasero, and FBI Special Agent Thomas J. Padden and his partners, FBI agents Jason Moulton, Frank Doyle, Jr., Larry Lawler, Monte Hall, Dick Vitamonte, Leo Brenneissen, an…
Hearst's grandfather, William Randolph Hearst, created the largest newspaper, magazine, newsreel, and movie business in the world. Her great-grandmother was philanthropist Phoebe Hearst. The family was associated with immense political influence and a position of anti-Communism since before World War II.
Patricia Hearst, who prefers to be called "Patricia" rather than "Patty", was born on February 20, 1…
Hearst suffered a collapsed lung in prison, the beginning of a series of medical problems, and she underwent emergency surgery. This prevented her from appearing to testify against the Harrises on 11 charges, including robbery, kidnapping, and assault; she was also arraigned for those charges. She was held in solitary confinement for security reasons; she was granted bail for an appeal hearing in November 1976 on the condition that she was protected on bond. Her father hi…
Two months after her release from prison, Hearst married Bernard Lee Shaw (1945–2013), a policeman who was part of her security detail during her time on bail. They had two children, Gillian and Lydia Hearst-Shaw. Hearst became involved in a foundation helping children with AIDS, and is active in other charities and fund-raising activities.
Hearst published the memoir Every Secret Thing, co-written with Alvin Moscow, in 1981. Her acc…
• American singer-songwriter Patti Smith's re-imagined 1974 cover of Jimi Hendrix's "Hey Joe" is a meditation on Patty Hearst's involvement with the Symbionese Liberation Army. The single was Smith's first appearance on a record.
• American singer-songwriter, Warren Zevon, mentions Patty Hearst in a song he co-wrote with David Lindell, "Roland The Headless Thompson Gunner" which was included on Zevon's 1978 album "Excitable Boy".
• American Woman
• Brainwashing
• List of kidnappings
• List of solved missing person cases
• Stockholm syndrome