Francis Lee Bailey Jr. (June 10, 1933 – June 3, 2021) was an American criminal defense attorney. Bailey's name first came to nationwide attention for his involvement in the second murder trial of Sam Sheppard, a surgeon accused of murdering his wife. He later served as the attorney in several other high-profile cases, such as Albert DeSalvo, a suspect in the "Boston Strangler" murders, heiress Patty Hearst's trial for bank robberies committed during her involvement with the Symbionese Liberation Army, and US Army Captain Ernest Medina for the My Lai Massacre. He was a member of the "Dream Team" in the trial of former football player O. J. Simpson, who was accused of murdering Nicole Brown Simpson and Ron Goldman.
For most of his career, he was licensed in Florida and Massachusetts, where he was disbarred in 2001 and 2003, respectively, for
misconduct while defending marijuana dealer Claude Louis DuBoc. Following his disbarment, he moved to Maine,
where he ran a consulting firm. He later sat for the bar exam in the state of
Maine, though in 2013 he was denied a law license by the Maine Board of Bar Examiners, a decision Bailey appealed in 2013
where the appellate court overturned the initial license denial. The Board of Examiners appealed the
appellate court decision, and in 2014 the original denial was upheld by the Maine Supreme Judicial Court.
Early life
Bailey was born June 10, 1933, in Waltham, Massachusetts.
His mother, Grace (Mitchell), was a
teacher and nursery school director, and his father, Francis Lee Bailey Sr., was an advertising salesman. His parents
divorced when he was ten. Bailey attended Cardigan
Mountain School and then Kimball
Union Academy, where he graduated in 1950. He studied at Harvard College but dropped out in 1952
to join the United States Navy and
later transferred to the Marine Corps.
He was commissioned as an officer and, following flight training, received his
naval aviator wings in 1954. He served as a jet fighter pilot and then began
to serve as a squadron legal officer at Cherry
Point, North Carolina.
He briefly returned to Harvard before being admitted to Boston University School of Law in
1957, which accepted his military experience in place of the requirement for
students to have completed at least three years of undergraduate college
courses. While attending Boston
University, he achieved the highest grade point average in the school's
history. He graduated with an LL.B. in 1960 and was ranked first in his class.
Notable cases
Sam Sheppard
In 1954, Sam Sheppard
was found guilty in the murder of his wife Marilyn in a case that was one of
the inspirations for the television series The
Fugitive (1963–1967). In the 1960s, Bailey, at the time a resident of Rocky
River, Ohio, was hired by Sheppard's brother Stephen to help in Sheppard'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.
"Boston Strangler"
In 1964, Bailey defended Albert DeSalvo for a series of sexual assaults known as the "Green Man" or "Measuring Man" incidents.
Bailey later said that DeSalvo confessed that he had also committed the "Boston Strangler" murders.
DeSalvo was found guilty of the assaults but was never tried for the murders.
Carl A. Coppolino
Carl A. Coppolino
was accused of the July 30, 1963, murder of retired Army Col. William Farber, his neighbor and the husband of Marjorie Farber, with whom Coppolino
was having an affair. He was also accused of the August 28, 1965, murder of his
wife, Carmela Coppolino. The prosecution claimed that Coppolino injected his
victims with a paralyzing drug called succinylcholine chloride, which at the
time was undetectable due to limited forensic technology. Bailey successfully
defended Coppolino in the New Jersey case over the death of Farber in December
1966. However, Coppolino was convicted of murdering his wife in Florida. He was
paroled after serving 12 years of his sentence.
George Edgerly
Bailey attended Keeler
Polygraph Institute in Chicago, where he became an expert in lie detector
tests. It was in this capacity that he was enlisted by the defense in the case
of George Edgerly, a mechanic
charged with murdering his wife. When Edgerly's attorney was incapacitated by a
heart attack, Bailey took over the defense. Edgerly—whose story was one of
several that served as the basis for the television series and film The Fugitive—was acquitted.
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. Medina was court-martialed for allegedly allowing the
men in the company he commanded to murder My Lai non-combatants. Medina claimed
that he never gave orders to kill non-combatants and that his men killed
non-combatants of their own volition. Medina also testified that he was unable
to stop the massacre because he did not become aware of it until it was too
late. Medina additionally denied personally killing any Vietnamese
non-combatants at My Lai, except for a young woman whom two soldiers
testified that they had found hiding in a ditch. When she emerged with her
hands held up, Medina shot her because, as he claimed at his court-martial, he
thought she had a grenade. Medina was acquitted and subsequently left the Army.
He later worked at an Enstrom Helicopter
Corporation plant in which Bailey had an ownership stake.
Patty Hearst
The prosecution 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. In her autobiography,
Hearst described his closing argument as "disjointed"
and said that she suspected he had been drinking. During his closing argument,
Bailey spilled a glass of water on his pants. Hearst was convicted and
sentenced to seven years in prison. She served 22 months before her sentence
was commuted by President Jimmy Carter
in 1977. She was pardoned by President
Bill Clinton in 2001.
While Hearst was convicted at trial, Bailey did protect her
from further death-penalty prosecution. On April 28, 1975, members of the SLA robbed a Crocker Bank branch in
Carmichael, California. Hearst drove one of the getaway cars. A customer was
killed when one of the robbers' guns discharged. The Symbionese Liberation Army members participating in the robbery
were therefore subject to the death penalty under the felony murder rule.
Bailey negotiated with prosecutors for Hearst to receive immunity in exchange
for her testimony about the Carmichael robbery, thus protecting her from a
possible death sentence.
Claude DuBoc
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
said 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 1996, Bailey 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.
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, before he cross-examined 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 to be the key to
Simpson's acquittal. In front of a predominantly Black jury, Bailey got Fuhrman
to claim, "Marine to Marine",
he never used the word nigger to describe Blacks at any time during the
previous 10 years, a claim the defense team later found evidence to refute.
Ultimately, the statement that Bailey drew from the detective forced Fuhrman to
plead the Fifth in his next courtroom appearance. Bailey also attracted minor
attention for keeping a silver flask on the defense table, which fellow defense
attorney Robert Kardashian claimed
contained only coffee.
Bailey published a book about the Simpson trial shortly
before his death, titled The Truth about
the O.J. Simpson Trial: By the Architect of the Defense.
William and Chantal
McCorkle
British citizen Chantal
McCorkle, along with her American husband William, were tried and convicted in 1998 in Florida for her part
in a financial fraud. The McCorkles sold kits, advertised in infomercials,
purporting to show buyers how to get rich by buying property in foreclosures
and government auctions. 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.
Chantal, 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.
Korean Air Lines
Flight 007
A strike to Bailey's credibility came when he took on the
case of aggrieved families of passengers on Korean Air Lines Flight 007, which was shot down over the Soviet
Union in 1983. Though he made several public statements attesting to his
commitment to the case, his law firm put in a much smaller number of hours on
the case than the two other law firms working on it. He aggravated other
clients by traveling to Libya to discuss defending two men who were charged
with blowing up Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland, even after
undertaking the cause of the relatives of that bombing's victims. To the
latter, the expedition to Tripoli was a clear conflict of interest; Bailey
denied that he intended to defend the Libyans, though a letter he had written
to the U.S. Government suggested
otherwise.
Koscot Interplanetary
Koscot Interplanetary
and Dare to be Great were
multi-level marketing companies owned by Glenn
W. Turner. In 1973, Turner, Bailey, and eight others were indicted by a
federal grand jury on conspiracy and mail fraud charges. The indictment said
that Bailey had appeared in a film made for Turner's organization and had
appeared with Turner at several rallies. A nine-month trial ended in a hung
jury. Charges were then dropped against Bailey. In 1975, Turner pleaded guilty
to a single misdemeanor charge of violating securities laws and was given
probation.
"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
referring to Beatle Paul McCartney.
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 he had made up the whole thing. 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.
Television career
In 1967, Bailey became host of the short-lived ABC
television series Good Company, a
series in which he would interview celebrities in their homes in a format
similar to Edward R. Murrow's Person to
Person. In 1983, Bailey again became a television host, when he was named
the host of a short-lived syndicated television show called Lie Detector. Guests were questioned by
Bailey and were then submitted to a polygraph test.
Personal legal issues
and professional status
Drunk driving case
On February 28, 1982, Bailey was arrested for drunk driving
in California. He was acquitted, thanks in large part to the defense conducted
by Robert Shapiro, who employed Bailey on the O. J. Simpson criminal defense team 12 years later. The drunk
driving trial so enraged Bailey that he wrote a book, How to Protect Yourself Against Cops in California and Other Strange Places, which alleged
serious abuses by police and argued that driving under the influence of alcohol
had become "a number, not a
condition". He furthermore asserted that political pressure had
motivated police to go after celebrities in particular.
Disbarment
Bailey's high public profile came both as a result of the
cases he took on and his own actions. 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 shares in a pharmaceutical
company named Biochem Pharma during
his representation of marijuana dealer Claude
DuBoc. Bailey had transferred a large portion of DuBoc's assets into his
own accounts. The stock, worth about $5.9 million, was supposed to be included
in the forfeiture of assets that DuBoc made as part of a plea bargain. It had
been held by Bailey because it would be sold immediately if it came into
government possession, but it was expected to rise dramatically in value.
Bailey later refused to turn it over, saying that it was the payment of his legal
fees and not part of DuBoc's asset forfeiture. In addition, Bailey said that
the stock was collateral for loans that he had received, and so could not be
sold until the loans were repaid. These arguments were rejected by the court;
the stock rose in value to about $20 million, and Bailey then argued that, if
he turned over the stock so that it could be sold, he was entitled to keep the
difference between what it was valued at when he received it and its new,
higher price. After Bailey was imprisoned for six weeks in 1996 for contempt of
court, his brother raised the money that enabled Bailey to turn the stock over
to the government, and he was released. He was later found guilty of seven
counts of attorney misconduct by the Florida
Supreme Court, and in 2001 he was disbarred. Massachusetts disbarred Bailey
two years later.
In early 2003, a judge ordered Bailey to pay $5 million in
taxes and penalties on income connected with the Duboc case. The judge later
reversed the decision, although Bailey still had an unpaid tax bill of nearly $2
million, which he disputed. In March 2005, Bailey filed to regain his law
license in Massachusetts but failed.
Application to
practice law in Maine
In 2009, Bailey moved to Yarmouth, Maine, where he was a
partner in the Bailey & Elliott
consulting business with his girlfriend Debbie
Elliott. In 2012, Bailey passed the Maine bar examination and applied for a
law license; 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. Bailey appealed, petitioning the Maine Supreme Judicial Court to review the denial. In March 2013, a
two-day hearing was held by Supreme
Judicial Court Justice Donald G. Alexander in which Bailey's suitability to
practice law was examined. Justice Alexander filed a 57-page ruling on April
19, 2013, stating that Bailey "was
almost fit to practice law, except for an outstanding tax debt of nearly $2
million". Bailey was allowed to move for reconsideration of the
decision "if [he] offer[ed] a plan
to repay the nearly $2 million he owes in back taxes to the federal
government". Initially, the government had claimed that Bailey owed $4
million in back taxes. However, representing himself before the tax court,
Bailey was successful in having the amount owed reduced to $2 million.
In June 2013, Bailey's attorney, Peter DeTroy, filed a motion for reconsideration of the decision.
After oral arguments were heard on the reconsideration, Justice Alexander
granted the motion, stating that "[a]
general survey of the state precedent on the debt payment issue suggests that
the existence of a debt, by itself, may not result in a finding of lack of good
moral character .... Rather, findings of failure of proof of good moral
character tend to be based on misconduct regarding effort—or lack of effort—to
pay the debt, or misconduct referencing the debt payment obligation in the bar
admission process." This cleared the way for Bailey to obtain a Maine
law license. However, Maine's Board of
Bar Examiners appealed Justice Alexander's decision to the entire Supreme
Court, minus Alexander.
On April 10, 2014, the Maine
Supreme Court voted 4-to-2 to side with the Bar Examiners and reverse Justice Alexander's decision, which
continued to prevent Bailey from practicing law in Maine.
In 2016, Bailey lived in Maine and operated the Bailey & Elliott consulting
business.
Personal life
Bailey was married four times. His first marriage, to Florence Gott, ended in divorce in
1961; his second marriage, to Froma
Portley, lasted until their divorce in 1972; his third marriage, to Lynda Hart, lasted from 1972 until
their divorce in 1980; and his fourth marriage, to Patricia Shiers, lasted from 1985 until she died in 1999. He had
two sons from his first marriage and another son from his second marriage.
Bailey moved to Georgia towards the end of his life. After a
period of ill health, he died under hospice care in Atlanta on June 3, 2021,
aged 87.
In popular culture
Bailey was portrayed by Nathan
Lane in the 2016 miniseries The
People v. O. J. Simpson: American Crime Story.
In Ezra Edelman's
2016 documentary O.J.: Made in America,
Bailey is featured heavily through interviews and archive footage of the
Simpson murder trial, particularly his cross-examination of Mark Fuhrman. In his interview, Bailey
continued to assert that Fuhrman deliberately planted the incriminating glove
on Simpson's estate in an attempt to frame him. When asked by Edelman what
motive Fuhrman would have, Bailey responded that Simpson had married a white
woman, which he described as "a
capital offense in Fuhrman's eyes".
Bailey is portrayed by Luke
Kirby in the 2023 film Boston
Strangler.
Publications
Non-fiction
Aronson, Harvey
(Co-author) (1971). The Defense Never
Rests. Stein and Day. ISBN 0-8128-1441-X.
For the Defense.
Atheneum. 1975. ISBN 0-689-10667-X.
Greeya, John
(Co-author) (1977). Cleared for the
Approach: In Defense of Flying. Prentice Hall. 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.
Rabe, Jean
(Co-author) (2008). When the Husband is
the Suspect: From Sam Shepperd to Scott Peterson – The Public's Passion for
Spousal Homicide. Forge Books. ISBN 978-0765355232.
Rabe, Jean
(Co-author) (2013). Excellence in
Cross-Examination. Thomson West.
Sisson, Jennifer
(Co-author) (2021). The Truth about the
O. J. Simpson Trial: By the Architect of the Defense. Skyhorse. ISBN
978-1510765849.
Fiction
Secrets. Stein
& Day. 1978. ISBN 978-0812825275.
Magazine
Gallery,
publisher (1972). (In October 1972, Bailey became "the showcase publisher of Gallery", a new magazine based
on Playboy and Penthouse, but later
dropped out as publisher.)
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