Anthony Pellicano

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Anthony Pellicano (born March 22, 1944, in Chicago, Illinois) is a former high-profile Los Angeles private investigator who recently served a sentence in federal prison for illegal possession of explosives and who was arrested on February 4, 2006, on unlawful wiretapping and racketeering charges.

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[edit] 2006 indictment

On February 6, 2006, Pellicano was indicted on 110 counts in federal court in Los Angeles alleging crimes of racketeering and conspiracy, wiretapping, witness tampering, identity theft and destruction of evidence. Six other associates were also charged.[1] Pellicano was denied bail. Pellicano presently is being held in general population at the Federal Detention Center in Los Angeles. His trial, and that of six other co-defendants, is scheduled to begin on August 22, 2007.[2] The trial date has been pushed back several times, due to a lengthy discovery process, according to press reports.

The indictment alleges, in part, that members of the Los Angeles and Beverly Hills police departments unlawfully accessed confidential records on celebrities and public figures that they turned over to Pellicano.[3] Pellicano and associates allegedly tapped actor Sylvester Stallone's telephone and accessed confidential police records on other public figures, including comedians Garry Shandling and Kevin Nealon.

The indictment was amended on February 15, 2006, to include two more charges of wiretapping and extortion, at which time prominent entertainment attorney Terry Christensen was also charged. To date, thirteen people have been charged in the pending matter.

On June 7, 2006, the Associated Press reported that Pellicano performed an illegal background check on a law enforcement official who was investigating client and con artist Christopher Rocancourt in a fake passport scheme.[4]

[edit] Once known as "P.I. to the stars"

Before his arrest and guilty plea on the explosives charge, Pellicano was known in the mass media as the "PI to the stars" because of his work for many prominent Hollywood celebrities. According to former associate Paul Barresi, Pellicano would purchase tabloid reporters' celebrity gossip before it became public. He then would offer to do damage control for $25,000 or more. "He says these people pursue him to hire him, when in fact, he pursues them," said Barresi.[5]

As a result of an investigation involving one of his former clients, actor Steven Seagal, FBI agents raided Pellicano's offices on November 21, 2002, searching for evidence he was involved in a threat against a Los Angeles Times reporter investigating Seagal and Julius Nasso. During the search, agents found two practice grenades modified to function as homemade bombs as well as military-grade C-4 plastic explosives sufficient to take down a passenger jet.

After his arrest in 2002, Pellicano pleaded guilty to illegal possession of dangerous materials and was sentenced to thirty months in federal prison. He was to be released on February 4, 2006 but, on February 3, was transferred to a Los Angeles County jail pending the new indictment on wiretapping and racketeering charges.

[edit] Related investigations and celebrity connections

The new charges are a result of a three-year federal investigation into his suspected illegal use of wiretaps and confidential law enforcement records. On January 11, 2006, Pellicano's girlfriend Sandra Will Carradine, the ex-wife of actor Keith Carradine, and veteran Beverly Hills police officer Craig Stevens pleaded guilty to lying about the former detective's use of wiretaps and other illegal tactics.[6] Vanity Fair magazine reported in 2004 that the FBI has also questioned Warren Beatty and Shandling about the matter. [7]

Pellicano's close friend and former record executive Robert Joseph Pfeifer was arrested on February 3, 2006, and charged him with unlawful wiretapping and conspiracy.[8]

On April 3, 2006, film director John McTiernan was charged in federal court with lying to the FBI. According to a report in the Los Angeles Times, McTiernan was charged with an information, rather than in grand jury indictment, which means he waived his right to an indictment and suggests he may have reached either a prior plea agreement with prosecutors or some sort of cooperating agreement.[9] McTiernan was arraigned and pled guilty on April 17, 2006.

On March 17, 2006, the "Page Six" gossip column in the New York Post reported that actress Nicole Kidman was questioned by the FBI as part of the ongoing Pellicano investigation. Telephone voice recordings of Kidman speaking to Cruise were found when authorities first raided Pellicano's offices in 2002. The tapes were allegedly made in 2001, shortly after Kidman and former husband Tom Cruise announced they were separating. Cruise used lawyer Dennis Wasser to negotiate his separation, and Wasser regularly retained Pellicano's services. Although he has not been charged in the case, Wasser has been told by the FBI he is a "person of interest."[10][11]

Prominent Hollywood attorney Bertram Fields a long-time client of Pellicano, has repeatedly been connected to the ongoing federal wiretapping investigation in the press because of allegations that his celebrity clients have benefited from the former PI's alleged illegal wiretaps directed against members of the media and prominent critics. Carradine and Stevens pleaded guilty to charges they lied about Pellicano's activities against an opponent of one of Fields's clients. Fields has said in statements release by his attorney that he had no knowledge of any potentially illegal activity. Variety reported in 2003 that Stallone was questioned by the FBI when it was revealed the actor's phone may have been illegally tapped by Pellicano, who was working at the time for a client of Fields.[12]

Former Los Angeles Times reporter Anita Busch had filed a civil lawsuit against Pellicano on May 28, 2004, alleging that he was part of a harassment campaign which included illegal wiretapping and a 2002 death threat. While investigating the former PI and his clients for an article she was writing, Busch's windshield was smashed and decorated with a dead fish, a rose, and a note which read "stop." Pellicano has also been indicted for this matter and is expected to stand trial in state court once he is released from prison.

Reports persist that former President Bill Clinton hired Pellicano, at separate times, to dig up information in order to intimidate or discredit Gennifer Flowers and Monica Lewinsky, two women who publicly stated they had had affairs with him.[13] Clinton has always denied the reports.[14]

[edit] Kerkorian connection

On August 10, 2006, the Los Angeles Times reported that billionaire Kirk Kerkorian's attorneys have been sued by his former wife Lisa's attorney because of their connection to Pellicano. Lisa's attorney alleges that Kerkorian's lawyers hired Pellicano to wiretap telephone calls illegally between him and Kerkorian in order to gain a tactical advantage in the divorce proceedings.[15]

[edit] New York Times controversy

On July 6, 2006, the Los Angeles Times reported that New York Times reporter Allison Weiner was barred from the main Los Angeles jail after allegedly misrepresenting herself as an attorney involved in the Pellicano case in order to see the jailed former detective. While Weiner is a member of the California Bar, she visited Pellicano as a reporter and is not involved in his defense. Weiner reportedly used her bar association card to see Pellicano in order to evade the warden's order that no one could see Pellicano, except for his lawyers or immediate family members.[16] To date, Weiner has written numerous articles about Pellicano for her employer newspaper.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060206/ap_on_re_us/private_eye_indicted_1
  2. ^ http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117954321.html?categoryid=18&cs=1&query=pellicano
  3. ^ http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-020606pellicano_lat,0,5795984.story?coll=la-home-headlines
  4. ^ http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=2628&ncid=2628&e=21&u=/ap/20060607/ap_on_re_us/hollywood_wiretaps_1
  5. ^ http://www.geocities.com/caselaw5000/pellic15.pdf
  6. ^ http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-pellicano11jan11,0,6907785.story?coll=la-home-headlines&track=morenews
  7. ^ Blum, Howard, Connolly, John (March 2004). "The Pellicano Brief": 222. as based on reproduction at http://www.geocities.com/caselaw5000/pellic01.pdf
  8. ^ Krikorian, Greg. "Music Figure Held in Pellicano Case", Los Angeles Times, 2006-02-05. Retrieved on 2006-09-11.
  9. ^ http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-pellicano4apr04,0,7658828,print.story
  10. ^ http://www.thestatesman.net/page.news.php?clid=8&theme=&usrsess=1&id=109997
  11. ^ http://www.digitalspy.co.uk/article/ds30609.html
  12. ^ Shprintz, Janet. "Stallone is queried in sleuth case", Variety, 2003-11-18. Retrieved on 2006-10-17.
  13. ^ http://www.newsmax.com/archives/ic/2003/11/17/02923.shtml
  14. ^ http://www.nydailynews.com/front/story/138866p-123345c.html
  15. ^ "Lawyer Files Suit Over Alleged Wiretapping", Los Angeles Times, 2006-08-10. Retrieved on 2006-09-11.
  16. ^ http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/la-me-pellicano6jul06,0,592498.story

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