Archive for the 'Bill Pavelic' Category

Nov 25 2003

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I was trying to help this boy but now i feel guilty

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The Sun

November 25, 2003

I WAS TRYING TO HELP THIS BOY BUT NOW I FEEL GUILTY

BYLINE: Antonella Lazzeri in Los Angeles

LENGTH: 427 words

 Charity boss sent lad to Jacko

 A CHARITY boss who introduced Michael Jackson to the 12-year-old lad he is accused of repeatedly molesting said last night he is tortured by guilt.

 Jamie Masada, who runs a charity for sick children, was told by Gavin Ar-vizo’s relatives that the boy had just weeks to live -and it was his dying wish to meet Jacko.

 Jamie said: “I got on the phone to arrange it but now I think, ‘Was it a mistake?’
 
 ”I was trying to help this boy but now I feel so guilty. When I heard about the charges my first thoughts were, ‘Oh my God!’

 ”I have felt bad ever since. I keep thinking, ‘Is it really true or is it not true?’ I just don’t know.” Jamie told how Gavin’s concerned mum contacted him before the sex abuse allegations were made to say Jacko had asked her to sign some kind of agreement.

 He added: “She was worried because she didn’t know what she was signing. It was around the time of the Martin Bashir documentary.”

 The notorious programme showed Jacko cuddling Gavin -and admitting he had shared a bed with him.
 Jamie also denied claims that Gavin’s family want a cash settlement, adding: “They are not after money. His mother is very religious and she just wants jus-tice.”

 Jacko’s legal team have hired the man who dug up dirt on the main witnesses in the OJ Simpson murder trial to investigate the Arvizo family.

 Private eye Zvonko “Bill” Pavelic is said to be investigating the back-grounds of family members in a bid for information that might discredit them as witnesses.

 Drugs
 The news came as sources close to Jacko claimed Gavin’s mum has previously threatened to sell her story unless the star hands over cash.

 Other employees of the singer claim they saw her high on drugs and in angry rows with Jacko.
 The singer is due to make his first court appearance on January 9. But yes-terday a legal expert said it might take a year for a proper trial to start.

 Professor Carol Chase said the star’s legal experts could delay the trial for months by claiming they needed time to prepare a case.

 When Jacko was accused of molesting 13-year-old Jordy Chandler a decade ago, the case was eventually dropped after a multi-million dollar deal with the lad’s family.

 But a change in the law means Gavin would be forced to give evidence at court even if he had accepted a pay off.

 Meanwhile, Jacko has cancelled plans to attend a tribute concert at London’s Dominion Theatre on December 14.

 The conditions of his Pounds 1.75million bail ban him from leaving America.

LOAD-DATE: November 26, 2003

LANGUAGE: English

PUB-TYPE: Newspaper

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Mar 05 1995

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Impact of ito’s sanctions on simpson defense de-bated

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Los Angeles Times

March 5, 1995, Sunday, Home Edition

Impact of ito’s sanctions on simpson defense de-bated;

COURTS: SOME SAY DEFENDANT’S RIGHT TO FAIR TRIAL MAY BE HURT. OTHERS SEE DAMAGE TO THE PRACTICE OF CRIMINAL LAW.

BYLINE: By HENRY WEINSTEIN and TIM RUTTEN, TIMES STAFF WRITERS

SECTION: Part A; Page 1; Metro Desk

LENGTH: 1407 words

“Make the punishment fit the crime” is one of those homey maxims that trips warmly off the tongue. But Friday, when Superior Court Judge Lance A. Ito tried to do that after defense lawyers again withheld evidence in O.J. Simpson’s dou-ble murder trial, he twisted the case into something that many legal experts say resembles an ethical pretzel.

Although most analysts agree that the first part of Ito’s remedy — $950 fines for attorneys Johnnie L. Cochran Jr. and Carl Douglas — will have little immediate impact, they say the consequences of the other sanctions the judge im-posed may be serious for Simpson himself.

“In a very important sense, Judge Ito acted unfairly because he protected the lawyers at their client’s expense,” said defense attorney Marcia Morrissey. Al-ibi witness “Rosa Lopez didn’t fail to provide that tape (of an investigator’s July interview with her). It wasn’t her fault and it wasn’t O.J. Simpson’s ei-ther. Yet they are the people being made to suffer by Ito.”

Many defense lawyers also have begun to worry that the picture of the crimi-nal justice system being beamed around the world from Ito’s courtroom may have an extremely damaging impact on the practice of criminal law across the country.

“Quite frankly, this is not a pretty picture,” said Los Angeles defense law-yer Barry Tarlow. “I once worked for the summer in a plant that manufactured ice cream, and I didn’t eat ice cream for a couple of years after that. Something similar is happening to the public in this case.”

Essentially, Ito did two things Friday when he ruled that the defense had failed in its obligation to provide prosecutors with the tape-recorded interview with Lopez, as well as a written report on a conversation with her:

First, he imposed the fines on Cochran and Douglas and reproved them for “a representation made with reckless disregard for the truth if not a deliberate attempt to mislead both the prosecution and the court.”

Second, Ito said that if the defense chooses to play the videotape of Lopez’s testimony for the jurors, he will tell them that Simpson’s lawyers violated the law and that the jury “may consider the effect of this delay in disclosure, if any, upon the credibility of the witness involved and give to it the weight to which you feel it is entitled.”

Simpson’s lawyers have 10 days in which to ask Ito to reconsider his deci-sion.

In an interview Saturday, Cochran said he was still feeling the sting of Ito’s judicial blow.

“I respect Judge Ito. But in this instance he is dead wrong and terribly un-fair — not only to us, but most of all, to O.J. Simpson,” Cochran said.

If Ito’s sanctions stand, said Morrissey and Los Angeles defense attorney Ge-rald L. Chaleff, the judge’s retribution was too lenient in the first instance and so severe in the second that it may threaten Simpson’s right to a fair trial.

“The personal sanctions he imposed on Cochran and Douglas are insignificant,” Morrissey said. “If this trial is a search for the truth, it doesn’t seem fair that Simpson is being made to pay for his lawyers’ mistake.

“The jury needs to make a decision about Lopez’s credibility. The lawyers’ failure to provide the tapes or her prior statements — whatever their reasons — just isn’t relevant to the question of whether Ms. Lopez is a credible wit-ness. So Ito has injected something foreign into the jury’s deliberations, which is how well the defense lawyers have complied with the discovery rules.”

Chaleff agreed. “When the judge says a lawyer has acted with reckless disre-gard of the truth and the fine is $950, that sends a mixed message,” he said. “If a judge truly believes that a lawyer has lied to him or her, then the sanc-tion should be more severe.

“The ultimate victim of that will be the defendant, because the jury is being told by the court and the prosecutor not to trust his lawyers,” Chaleff said. “And if they don’t trust the lawyers, then they won’t believe their defense. And if they don’t believe the defense, O.J. Simpson will be convicted.”

However, Tarlow and fellow nationally prominent defense lawyer Gerry Spence said they feel Ito’s reproof of Cochran and Douglas may be more damaging than it may first appear.

“Money isn’t the issue here,” Spence said. “This is lollipop money for these lawyers. I’d pay a fortune to delete from the record a judge’s statement that I acted in reckless disregard of the truth. A man’s reputation is worth more than money, and this is a serious blow to Cochran’s reputation.”

Tarlow concurred. ” ‘Mr. Johnnie’ certainly won’t miss $950, but as a crimi-nal defense lawyer all you really have is your reputation. In that light, Ito’s critical comments are extraordinarily harsh. I’d give $100,000 to charity — and I know Johnnie would too — rather than have those things written about me. The judge’s damning words will be with these lawyers for the rest of their lives. That makes this anything but a slap on the wrist.”

Cochran said the defense team is not taking “this sanction lightly.”

“I have practiced law for more than 30 years and Carl for more than 15,” he said. “Neither Carl nor I ever have been sanctioned before. We have lived and built our reputations carefully. They are more important to us than I can say. Integrity means everything to me.”

Cochran went on to point out that Douglas assumed responsibility as the de-fense team’s “custodian of discovery only on Jan. 2, and I took over as lead counsel from Bob Shapiro shortly after that. We should not be held responsible for things that may have occurred before that time.

“We have never hidden reports or tapes,” Cochran added. “We are being tarred with an unfair brush. Bill Pavelic (the private investigator who interviewed Lo-pez), worked for Shapiro and his reports went to him. Everything ultimately was transferred to our office, but there are 30,000 documents and hundreds of wit-nesses.

“We asked Pavelic whether there were any other documents and tapes and he told us there were not. We relied on his word. What am I supposed to do, poly-graph the guy? Pavelic will do a sworn declaration that he never told us about the existence of that tape.”

Cochran also said he is “worried about the partiality with which Judge Ito is treating the prosecutors. But the issue should not be whether Judge Ito is being fair to the lawyers, but whether he is being fair to O.J. Simpson. We may choose to be silent on our own behalf, but unfairness to our client is something we cannot abide.”

San Diego defense attorney Elisabeth Semel agrees that Ito’s proposed admoni-tion is unfair to Simpson.

“The person being punished is the defendant, because the presumption of inno-cence to which he is entitled is being undermined,” she said. “This instruction lightens the prosecutors’ burden of proof. It gives them a way to assail the credibility of a witness to which they are not entitled.”

But Spence and USC law professor Erwin Chemerinsky said Ito’s instruction to the jury could be read without violating Simpson’s 6th Amendment rights to a fair trial.

Last week’s contentious proceedings in the case have left many lawyers wor-ried that the fallout may further damage the image of defense attorneys and com-promise the rights of defendants far outside Ito’s reach.

“What we’re seeing is poor legal work,” Morrissey said. “But I am concerned that the rest of the world thinks this is dishonesty and deceit. If half the public shares that perception, then defense lawyers — and, more important, their clients — have been severely harmed by this.”

Chaleff said “this whole case is sending the wrong message. Every day in that same building prosecutors and defense lawyers are . . . exchanging discovery, following the rules and proceeding in a quiet but effective manner for their side. I hope that this case does not cause future clients to believe that their lawyers should engage in win-at-any-cost tactics.”

Spence mused that “it seems to me that this whole trial is characterized by lawyers playing fast and loose with the truth. If Marcia Clark’s statement to the court Friday before last concerning her child care problems was false, as her estranged husband now says under oath, that also is very troubling. If a judge can’t believe the lawyers, it confirms what people always have suspected — that lawyers cheat and lie.”

* THE SPIN: The televised trial of O.J. Simpson is a boost for Newt Gin-grich’s populist visions. B1

LOAD-DATE: March 6, 1995

LANGUAGE: ENGLISH

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Jul 22 1994

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Investigators Make Formidable Team

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The Boston Herald
July 22, 1994 Friday THIRD EDITION

BYLINE: HELEN KENNEDY
SECTION: NEWS; Pg. 004
LENGTH: 277 words

The detectives hired to help clear O.J. Simpson include a respected veteran gumshoe and a bitter former Los Angeles police officer with a possible grudge against the department. John McNally, a former New York City police detective sergeant who joined the case Wednesday, has been the right hand of Simpson’s lawyers for 20 years.

‘He’s a top-notch investigator who is excellent in interviewing and reinterviewing witnesses,’ said attorney Dan Leonard, partner of Simpson defense attorney F. Lee Bailey. McNally is best known for his single-handed 1964 arrest of notorious jewel thief Jack ‘Murf the Surf’ Murphy. He also spent three years working on the Patty Hearst bank robbery with Bailey and Boston lawyer J. Albert Johnson, who called McNally ‘extremely thorough and highly effective.’

The other investigator, Zvonko G. ‘Bill’ Pavelic, retired abruptly from the LAPD in 1992 - just before passing the 20-year mark which would have allowed him to collect his pension. Pavelic, who often publicly attacked the LAPD and former chief Darryl Gates, told the Associated Press he quit because he was ’sick and tired of watching innocent people get framed, especially members of minority groups.’

Pavelic was originally scheduled to be called as a witness in the Reginald Denny beating case to testify that the black men being charged were victims of a racist department. Prosecutors called Pavelic angry, bitter and paranoid.

Mike Pirouzian, president of Private Investigators of California, said neither detective has a private investigators license and questioned whether any evidence they turn up would be legally admissable.

LOAD-DATE: March 08, 1995
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH
Copyright 1994 Boston Herald Inc.

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Sep 02 1987

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‘i sell blood for a living,’ attempted murder de-fendant quoted as saying

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The Associated Press

September 2, 1987, Wednesday, AM cycle

‘I Sell Blood For A Living,’ Attempted Murder De-fendant Quoted As Saying

BYLINE: By LINDA DEUTSCH, Associated Press Writer

SECTION: Domestic News

LENGTH: 622 words

DATELINE: LOS ANGELES

Two days before his arrest for selling his AIDS-tainted blood, Joseph Markowski told police: “I’m a prostitute and I sell blood for a living,” a de-tective testified Wednesday.

Los Angeles police detective Bill Pavelic said Markowski, who is charged with attempted murder, gave that response when asked his occupation.

“He was extremely agitated, belligerent,” said Pavelic. “He used scurrilous language. … He repeatedly talked about the fact he had AIDS.”

Markowski, 29, whose case is believed to be the first of its kind in the na-tion, has been charged with four counts of attempted murder for selling his blood and for having sex while knowing he had AIDS.

He also is charged with two counts of assault with great bodily injury and two counts of attempted poisoning for alleged acts of prostitution.

Municipal Court Judge Alban Niles is conducting a preliminary hearing to de-termine whether Markowski should stand trial.
Pavelic, who was assigned to the mental evaluation unit, said that even after Markowski told him he had been tested at County-USC Medical Center, he did not believe that the man had AIDS.

“I was still dumbfounded,” Pavelic said of the June 23 conversation. “I did-n’t take it very seriously.”

Even after officers found a receipt for a blood donation in Markowksi’s per-sonal effects, Pavelic said, “I still wasn’t convinced I had, quote unquote, a crime.”

He said he ordered Markowski held at County-USC Medical Center for 72 hours of psychiatric observation with instructions that the detective be called before Markowski’s release. But the next day, he called and found Markowski had been released.
Pavelic’s testimony about Markowski’s arrest when he returned to a plasma center to sell blood brought into evidence statements which had been attributed to the defendant earlier by the district attorney’s office.

The judge barred admission of more statements made by Markowski during the first encounter with Pavelic because he had not been advised of his legal rights at that time.

Markowski was first taken into custody June 23, after screaming “Kill me! Kill me! I have AIDS!” in a Hollywood bank while attempting to grab a security guard’s gun.

Pavelic said Markowski told him he had been diagnosed as having the AIDS vi-rus as early as 1985 and had lost 10 to 12 pounds in the week before his arrest.

“He was a homeless sort of person,” said Pavelic. “He said he was broke and had a substance abuse and alcohol abuse problem. He basically described his life as being totally shattered.”

In other testimony, Lawrence Roberts, a police department paramedic, testi-fied he had contact with Markowski on May 28. He said Markowski announced that he had AIDS.

“Mr. Markowksi never said anything about taking affirmative steps to transmit the disease, did he?” asked defense attorney Guy O’Brien.

“No, he didn’t,” said the witness.

The prosecution is seeking to show that Markowski had the intent to transmit AIDS to others, a required element of the attempted murder charge.

At Wednesday’s court session, a deputy escorting Markowski in and out of court wore plastic surgical gloves.
It is extremely rare for AIDS-infected blood to pass undetected through the blood screening process, according to the American Red Cross. Since a nationwide blood screening program was instituted in spring 1985, 24 million units of blood have been screened, according to a Red Cross spokesman.

Markowski, who pleaded not guilty at his arraignment on June 29, was ordered held on $1 million bail.

Acquired immunne deficiency syndrome, which destroys the body’s ability to fight disease, is spread by a virus passed through blood and semen, but not through casual contact, medical authorities say.

LANGUAGE: ENGLISH

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