Blake attorney appeals wrongful death verdict

The attorney for Robert Blake on Wednesday appealed a 30 million U.S. dollar wrongful death verdict against the actor, claiming the award to the family of Bonny Lee Bakley was the result of prejudice and jury misconduct and should be reversed.

    M. Gerald Schwarzbach wrote in a 55-page appeal that jurors discussed O.J. Simpson, ignored the lack of evidence that Blake killed his wife and decided to "send a message that celebrities and rich people cannot get away with murder."

    Bakley was shot to death as she sat in Blake's car outside a restaurant where the two had just dined in May 2001. Blake told police he had left her alone briefly while he returned to the restaurant to get a gun he carried for protection and had unintentionally left behind.

    As was the case with Simpson, Blake was acquitted of his wife's shooting death at his criminal trial in 2005 but found liable in the civil trial a few months later.

    In the document filed Wednesday with the California 2nd District Court of Appeal, Schwartzbach cited detailed post-trial affidavits from three jurors who also said one panelist cited the Bible as the basis for a finding of liability and another concealed that her daughter was under life sentence in a murder case.

    The appeal claims a juror who had a hearing impairment and said he missed most of the testimony was prodded into voting for the verdict by other panelists, who warned he would force a mistrial if he didn't agree with them.

    "In a case featuring no forensic evidence or confession linking appellant Robert Blake to the murder of decedent Bonny Lee Bakley, nor any testimony by an eyewitness to the killing, a jury found him liable for her death and imposed a gargantuan award of 30 million dollars for compensatory damages," the appeal says.

    Schwartzbach argues in the filing that the jurors’ intent was to punish Blake, something they were prohibited from doing in a case that did not address punitive damages.

    "Jurors discussed setting the damage figure high enough to ‘send a message’ that celebrities and rich people cannot get away with murder ... [and] the fact that O.J. Simpson and Michael Jackson had escaped punishment," the appeal said.

    Jackson was acquitted of child molestation charges in June 2005; Simpson was acquitted of murder in 1995 but was later found liable in a civil trial.

    The filing also noted that jurors expressed dislike for Blake from the start and wanted to set the award so high that it would force Blake to relinquish custody of his and Bakley's daughter, Rosie, to the Bakley family. That did not happen; Rosie was adopted by Blake's adult daughter and her husband.

    Blake has filed for bankruptcy and is unlikely to pay the award.

    Schwartzbach has said he wants the verdict reversed to preserve Blake's reputation as the actor who starred in "In Cold Blood" and the "Baretta" TV series.

    Recently it was disclosed that the Police Department's internal affairs division is investigating a complaint alleging misconduct by the lead investigator. The complaint against Detective Ron Ito was filed a year ago and has yet to be resolved. It contends that Blake's celebrity status led police to assume he was guilty and close the case after his acquittal without pursuing any other suspects.

 

 

 

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