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F. Lee Bailey
Born Francis Lee Bailey Jr.
June 10, 1933(1933-06-10) (age 90)
Waltham, Massachusetts, U.S.
Education Harvard University
Boston University School of Law
Occupation Lawyer, businessman, author
Known for High profile defense attorney
Spouse(s) Florence Gott (1960–1961) (divorced)
Froma Portney (–1972) (divorced)
Lynda Hart (1972–1980) (divorced)
Patricia Shiers (1985–1999) (her death)
Children Scott F. Bailey

Francis Lee Bailey Jr., commonly referred to as F. Lee Bailey, (born June 10, 1933) is an American attorney licensed to practice in Maine. For most of his career, he was licensed in Massachusetts and Florida. He is a criminal defense attorney who served as the lawyer in the Sam Sheppard re-trial. He was also the supervisory attorney over attorney Mark J. Kadish in the court martial of Captain Ernest Medina for the My Lai Massacre, among other high-profile trials, and was one of the lawyers for the defense in the O. J. Simpson murder case. He has also had a number of visible defeats, legal controversies, and personal trouble with the law, and was disbarred in Massachusetts and Florida for misconduct while defending his client Claude DuBoc.[1] He was allowed to practice law again in July 2013.[2] In spite of his difficulties, he still has a reputation for being a highly successful defense attorney.

Education and military service[]

Bailey was born in Waltham, Massachusetts. He went to Cardigan Mountain School and then Kimball Union Academy, graduating in the class of 1950. Bailey studied at Harvard College, but dropped out in 1952 to join the United States Marine Corps. Bailey received his aviator wings in 1954.[3] He served as a jet fighter pilot and a legal officer. He was discharged in 1956. Bailey received his LL.B. from Boston University, where he was ranked first in his graduating class in 1960.[citation needed]

Notable cases[]

Sam Sheppard[]

In 1954, Dr. Sam Sheppard was found guilty in the murder of his wife Marilyn. The case was believed to be the inspiration for the Fugitive television series (1963–1967) and the 1993 movie.[4] Bailey, at the time a resident of Rocky River, Ohio, was hired by Sheppard's brother Stephen to help in his brother's appeal. In 1966, Bailey successfully argued before the U.S. Supreme Court that Sheppard had been denied due process, winning a re-trial. A not-guilty verdict followed. This case established Bailey's reputation as a skilled defense attorney and was the first of many high-profile cases.[citation needed]

"Boston Strangler"[]

While defendant Albert DeSalvo was in jail for the "Green Man" sexual assaults, he confessed his guilt in the "Boston Strangler" murders to Bailey. DeSalvo was found guilty of the assaults but was never tried for the stranglings.[5]

Dr. Carl A. Coppolino[]

Dr. Coppolino was accused of murdering his wife, Dr. Carmela Coppolino (August 28, 1965), and his neighbor Lt. Col. William Farber (July 30, 1963). The prosecution claimed that Coppolino injected his victims with a curare-like substance called succinylcholine chloride, which at the time was undetectable due to limited forensic technology. Bailey, who had just won Sam Sheppard an acquittal in November 1966, successfully defended Coppolino in the New Jersey case over the death of Lt. Col. William Farber in December 1966. However, Coppolino was convicted of murdering his wife in Florida. He was paroled after serving 12 years of his sentence.[citation needed]

Ernest Medina[]

Bailey successfully defended U.S. Army Captain Ernest Medina in his 1971 court-martial for responsibility in the My Lai Massacre during the Vietnam War.

Patty Hearst[]

The case of Patty Hearst, a newspaper heiress who had committed armed bank robberies after being kidnapped by the Symbionese Liberation Army (SLA), was one of Bailey's defeats. Patty Hearst describes his closing argument in her autobiography as "disjointed" and that she suspected he had been drinking. During his closing argument, Bailey spilled a glass of water on his pants.[6]

1994 DuBoc case[]

In 1994, while the O.J. Simpson case was being tried, Bailey and Robert Shapiro represented Claude DuBoc, an accused marijuana dealer. In a plea bargain agreement with the U.S. Attorney, DuBoc agreed to turn over his assets to the U.S. government. These included a large block of stock in BioChem, worth approximately $6 million at the time of the plea deal. When the government sought to collect the stock, it had increased in value to $20 million. Bailey claimed he was entitled to the appreciation in payment of his legal fees. Since he had used the stock as collateral for loans, he was unable to turn over the stock to the government. In 2000, he was sent to prison for contempt. After 44 days at the Federal Correctional Institution, Tallahassee, Bailey's brother succeeded in raising the money to enable him to return the stock, and he was freed.[1][2]

O.J. Simpson[]

Bailey joined the O. J. Simpson defense team just before the preliminary hearing. Bailey held numerous press conferences to discuss the progress of the case. In a press conference prior to his cross-examination of Mark Fuhrman, Bailey said, "any lawyer in his right mind who would not be looking forward to cross-examining Mark Fuhrman is an idiot". His famous cross-examination of Fuhrman is considered by many to be the key to Simpson's acquittal. In front of a jury composed predominantly of people of color, Bailey got the detective to claim he never used the word "n*****" to describe blacks at any time during the previous ten years, a claim the defense team easily found evidence to refute. Ultimately, the statement that Bailey drew from the detective forced Fuhrman to plead the Fifth in his next courtroom appearance, thereby undermining his credibility with the jury and the otherwise devastating evidence he allegedly found. Bailey also attracted minor attention for keeping a silver flask on the defense table, which fellow defense attorney Robert Kardashian claimed contained only coffee.[7]

William & Chantal McCorkle[]

Chantal McCorkle (born 1968, Slough, England) is a British citizen. Along with William, her American husband, she was tried and convicted in 1998 in Florida for her part in a financial fraud. The McCorkles sold kits purporting to show buyers how to get rich by buying property in foreclosures and government auctions. They advertised on infomercials. Among the grounds for their conviction was their representation in the infomercials that they owned luxury automobiles and airplanes (actually rented for the commercials), and their use of purported testimonials from satisfied customers, who were actually paid actors.[8]

She, represented by Mark Horwitz, and her husband, represented by Bailey, were each originally sentenced to over 24 years in federal prison under mandatory sentencing laws. After two appeals, the McCorkles' sentences were reduced in 2006 to 18 years.[9]

"Paul is Dead"[]

Bailey was featured in an RKO television special, in which he conducted a mock trial, examining various expert "witnesses" on the subject of the Paul is dead rumor. One of the experts was Fred LaBour, whose article in The Michigan Daily had been instrumental in the spread of the urban legend. LaBour told Bailey during a pre-show meeting that he had made the whole thing up. Bailey responded, "Well, we have an hour of television to do. You're going to have to go along with this." The program aired locally in New York City on November 30, 1969, and was never re-aired.[10][11]

Disbarment[]

Bailey's visible public profile has come both as a result of the cases he has taken and for his own personal actions.[12] In 2001, he was disbarred in the state of Florida, with reciprocal disbarment in Massachusetts on April 11, 2003. The Florida disbarment was the result of his handling of stock in the DuBoc marijuana case. Bailey was found guilty of seven counts of attorney misconduct by the Florida Supreme Court. Bailey had transferred a large portion of DuBoc's assets into his own accounts, using the interest gained on those assets to pay for personal expenses. In March 2005, Bailey filed to regain his law license in Massachusetts but failed.

Allowed to practice in Maine[]

In 2011, Bailey passed the bar examination in Maine and applied for a law license; in 2012 the Maine Board of Bar Examiners voted 5–4 to deny his application. The majority said Bailey had not proved by "clear and convincing evidence that he possesses the requisite honesty and integrity" to practice law.[13] Bailey appealed. In July 2013, the Maine Supreme Judicial Court ruled that Bailey was allowed to practice law there.[2]

Publications[]

Non-fiction
  • The Defense Never Rests, co-author with Harvey Aronson. Stein and Day, 1971. ISBN 0-8128-1441-X.
  • For the Defense. Atheneum, 1975. ISBN 0-689-10667-X.
  • Cleared for the Approach: In Defense of Flying, co-author with John Greenya. Prentice Hall, 1977. ISBN 0-13-136663-7.
  • How to Protect Yourself Against Cops in California and Other Strange Places. Stein & Day, 1982. ISBN 0-8128-2891-7.
  • Excellence in Cross-Examination, co-author with Kenneth J. Fishman. Thomson West, 2013. ISBN 0-3146-2126-1.
Fiction
  • Secrets (1977).
Magazine
  • Gallery, publisher (1972).[14]

Notes[]

  1. "SJC-08764: In the matter of F. Lee Bailey", "Suffolk, December 2, 2002 - April 11, 2003," mass.gov, accessed October 7, 2007.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Harrison, Judy (June 7, 2013). "F. Lee Bailey can practice law in Maine, justice says in reversal of prior ruling". http://bangordailynews.com/2013/06/07/news/portland/f-lee-bailey-can-practice-law-in-maine-justice-says-in-reversal-of-prior-ruling/. Retrieved July 14, 2013. 
  3. Notablebiographies.com
  4. Bailey, F. Lee; Aronson, Harvey (September 1, 1972). The Defense Never Rests. New American Library. p. 67. http://books.google.com/books?id=tO8dAQAAMAAJ&q=%22sam+sheppard%22+%22fugitive%22&dq=%22sam+sheppard%22+%22fugitive%22&hl=en&sa=X&ei=8JbjUM_QDozO0QGki4GADg&ved=0CDYQ6AEwAA. Retrieved 2013-01-02. "More than ten years later, the Sheppard card would serve as a model for the popular television show The Fugitive." 
  5. Junger, Sebastian; "A Death In Belmont"; W.W. Norton & Co. Inc, 2006.
  6. Hearst, Patricia Campbell & Moscow, Alvin, Patty Hearst: Her Own Story, Corgi/Avon, 1988 (p. 442-443) ISBN 0-552-13490-2, previously published as Every Secret Thing (1982)
  7. Donna Foote, "Here Comes the Jury", Newsweek, October 21, 1996.
  8. Allie Johnson, "Chantal's Angels", The Pitch, November 9, 2000.
  9. "Judge cuts couple's jail term", Orlando Sentinel, March 25, 2006.
  10. Glenn, Allen, "Paul is dead (said Fred)", Michigan Today (November 11, 2009)
  11. R. Gary Patterson, The Walrus Was Paul: The Great Beatle Death Clues (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1998) 16–17. ISBN 978-0-684-85062-7 (13).
  12. Norman, Bob, "A most-wanted attorney", Orlando Weekly, October 5, 2000
  13. F. Lee Bailey Denied Bid to Practice Law in Maine, ABC News on-line, January 1, 2013
  14. "Playboy and Plagiarism", Time magazine October 16, 1972, accessed October 7, 2007: In October 1972, Bailey became "the showcase publisher of Gallery", a new magazine, based on Playboy and Penthouse magazines, but later dropped out as publisher.

References[]

External links[]

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