jueves, 20 de septiembre de 2007

marcia clark

LAS VEGAS -- -- There were T-shirts proclaiming, "Get arrested in Vegas, stay in Vegas." There was a man in a chicken suit. And in a nod to the last time O.J. Simpson's legal woes turned a city topsy-turvy, there was Marcia Clark, who once unsuccessfully prosecuted the former football star for murder.

But the circus outside the Regional Justice Center was a marked contrast to the somber hearing during which Simpson was granted $125,000 bail. He and three others face 10 felony counts in connection with the alleged theft last week of at least $80,000 worth of sports memorabilia from a room at the Palace Station Hotel & Casino.


The Heisman Trophy winner and NFL Hall of Fame running back -- dressed in a blue prison jumpsuit and orange slippers -- had his hands cuffed as he entered the courtroom packed with media. In the middle row of benches sat his sister, his daughter and his girlfriend, Christine Prody.

In a hearing that lasted less than 10 minutes, Clark County Dist. Atty. David Roger outlined a deal reached with Simpson's attorneys to allow their client to be released on bail. He was instructed to relinquish his passport and was ordered to stay away from any suspects or potential witnesses in the case.

"There will be no direct contact, no indirect contact with anyone whatsoever. If you see them walking, you cross the street to the other side," Judge Joseph Bonaventure admonished Simpson in a stern tone.

"Yes, sir," Simpson responded softly.

A few hours later, Simpson left the detention facility. A television helicopter followed the vehicle he was riding in as it pulled away. Simpson, 60, was expected to fly home to Miami. He would have to return to Las Vegas for his next court date, which was tentatively scheduled for late October.

Yale L. Galanter, Simpson's Florida-based attorney, said at a news conference after the hearing that his client would avoid the spotlight for a while.

"You don't fight for your client in front of TV cameras. You fight for your client in front of a judge and jury," he said.

The courthouse scene, however, was anything but low-key.

Clark -- who prosecuted Simpson in the 1994 slayings of his ex-wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend Ronald Goldman -- was there reporting for "Entertainment Tonight."

People began gathering at the Regional Justice Center's steps at sunrise. Some held signs:

"He was set up."

"No blood for O.J."

"Not this time O.J."

One man raised a bottle of orange juice.

The news conference was repeatedly interrupted by a bespectacled man in an "I [Heart] Famous People" ball cap. He was missing several front teeth. The man tried, unsuccessfully, to high-five Galanter. He yelled that Simpson "is innocent and not guilty!" At one point, he answered his cellphone and whispered that he was too busy to chat.

After a while the man retreated to a cafe across from the justice center, where signs warned, "Street girls bringing attorneys into the restaurant must pay for orders in advance."

Two other men linked to the case -- in which Simpson is charged with armed robbery and kidnapping in what he said was an attempt to retrieve memorabilia stolen from him -- were taken into custody Wednesday.

Alfred Beardsley, 46, one of the collectors who accused Simpson, was arrested at the Luxor hotel here Wednesday on an unrelated outstanding warrant.

Authorities said that by leaving California, Beardsley had violated his parole in a Riverside County case. In 2005, Beardsley was sentenced to two years in prison for stalking his ex-girlfriend. He told police, according to court papers, "Personally, I think she just wants me back."

Authorities also booked Charles H. Cashmore, 40, of Las Vegas into the Clark County detention center after he turned himself in to Las Vegas police. Lt. Clint Nichols said that Cashmore turned over some of the sports memorabilia taken from the Palace Station hotel. Police still are looking for another unidentified male suspect.


Times staff writers Miguel Bustillo in Houston and Sara Lin in Riverside contributed to this report.

Marsha Clark belonged to a special breed of lawyers, those who love trials. Clark joined the District Attorney's office in 1981 and quickly excelled in her various positions. Prior to the Simpson trial, Clark had spent four years in the Special Trials Unit, which handled the most complex and sensitive investigations.
A lifer, the term used by prosecutors to describe one who could not switch to criminal defense, Clark viewed her cases as a struggle between the good and the evil. Clark saw Simpson as an evil man: "He beat his wife--he's evil." With a personal vendetta against Simpson, Clark personalized the prosecution of Simpson.

Clark thought that she related to African-American women, who made up the majority of Simpson's jury, but focus groups showed that they viewed her with contempt. Clark came across as a hard, brash woman, even a "bitch" to some. As a prosecutor, Clark was cold and calculating, relentless in her desire to convict Simpson of the murder of Brown-Simpson and Goldman.

During the trial, Judge Ito requested that the trial be extended into the evening to allow Roza Lopez, Simpson's maid, to testify before leaving the country for El Salvador. As a divorced single working mother, Clark exclaimed that she had informed the court that she could not be present in court that evening as she had no one to watch her two sons. Nearly crying, Clark added, "I can't be here, Your Honor." Almost overnight Clark turned into a heroine among working mothers everywhere.

After the Simpson trial, Clark took a leave of absence from the District attorney's office and is not expected to return. For an advance of four million dollars, the third largest advance in the history of non-fiction publishing, Clark wrote a successful book about her experience in the Simpson trial entitled Without A Doubt.

LOS ANGELES, 19 (UPI) -- Former Los Angeles prosecutor Marcia Clark was in Las Vegas to cover O.J. Simpson's latest legal troubles for "Entertainment Tonight."

Clark -- a leading member of the team that prosecuted Simpson in 1994 for the killings of his former wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend, Ron Goldman -- Wednesday sported a new look that made her difficult to recognize in the courtroom, People.com reported.

"Nobody recognized me because they weren't used to looking for a blonde," said Clark, who was sitting a few feet away from Simpson at his arraignment on felony chargers.

The "ET" legal correspondent told People she changed her brunette mane on the advice of her hairdresser.

"I just want to say, the only time I didn't listen to my hairdresser is when I had a perm," she said.

Clark confirmed that blondes do have more fun.

"There's no question they do," she said. "Why didn't someone tell me this sooner? I thought it was cheating, like you had to be naturally blond or something when you were a kid. No, you don't have to be. I love it."

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