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  • Lawyer maintains =?UNKNOWN?Q?Peterson=92s?= innocence

    Lawyer maintains Peterson's innocence
    By Kristin Moritz, Desk Editor

    Stanford Daily
    Feb 28 2005

    Mark Geragos, the prominent criminal defense lawyer who recently
    represented Scott Peterson, who was recently convicted of killing his
    wife, Laci and their unborn son, spoke Friday about his career and
    defending clients in highly-publicized trials.

    According to sophomore Seepan Parseghian, president of the Armenian
    Students Association, which sponsored the event, the group asked
    Geragos to speak in order further its goal of "contributing the
    Armenian perspective to the Stanford community in an academic and
    social context."

    "I am well aware of [Geragos's] charisma and vibrant personality when
    in the spotlight," Parseghian said. "But I give more emphasis to his
    dedication to the Armenian-American community. He has taken on
    numerous cases involving a wide range of Armenian issues."

    Geragos, an Armenian American who attended Haverford College and
    Loyola Law School, founded a private law firm with his father in 1983
    and has specialized in criminal defense work ever since. Geragos said
    it is becoming increasingly difficult to defend accused criminals due
    to wide-spread media coverage.

    "What's happened with cable TV is that you have a 'Foxification' of
    criminal law," Geragos said. "You get these high-profile criminal
    cases and the mainstream media covers them in the most sensational
    way possible. With the internet, any rumor is quickly picked up and
    once it is on cable TV mainstream media feels compelled to run with
    the story."

    This "Foxification," said Geragos, was especially prevalent during
    Peterson's murder trial.

    "So many times during the case people were bringing up rumors about
    evidence that was not even presented," he said.

    Although jurors convicted Peterson of murdering his wife Lacy and
    their unborn son, Geragos maintains Peterson's innocence. He said he
    took the case originally because he felt moved by the scene that he
    observed when Peterson was initially brought into custody.

    "I became so incensed when he was arrested," Geragos said. "There was
    a throng of people outside holding up signs that he should die. I
    never thought that in this day and age that I would see anything like
    that. It was a very troubling thing for me to see -- someone being
    railroaded and confronted by a virtual lynch mob."

    Geragos did not speak specifically about the trial because he is
    under a gag-order until Peterson's sentencing in March. He did,
    however, say that much of the press coverage did not accurately
    represent the evidence or facts of the case. He attributed much of
    this misinformation to the fact that the judge did not sequester
    jurors.

    "During the course of the case we were able to expose three separate
    stealth jurors who lied in order to try to get on the jury," Geragos
    said. "There was so much community fervor against Scott that many of
    the jurors wanted to be on the jury because they had their own
    private agenda."

    Geragos called what happened on the day of the verdict -- thousands of
    people lined up outside of the courthouse and cheering the outcome --
    "one of the sickest things [he had] ever seen."

    "There is truly nothing worse than to see a guy you believe is
    innocent get sentenced to death," Geragos said.

    Although Peterson has not yet been sentenced, upon his conviction,
    jurors recommended that he receive the death penalty. Geragos called
    capital punishment "abhorrent."

    Junior Louise Nutt is taking a class on the death penalty and came to
    the talk specifically to ask Geragos about his opinion on the
    subject.

    "He brought up a lot of points about the death penalty that I think
    are very important, but that people outside of the law don't usually
    hear about," Nutt said.

    In addition to defending Peterson, Geragos has also been involved in
    numerous other high-profile cases. In the late 1990s, he represented
    Susan McDougal, a close friend of former President Bill Clinton, when
    she was tried and convicted on fraud charges related to the
    Whitewater scandal.

    Despite his role in criminal cases, Geragos called a class-action
    lawsuit that he filed for survivors of the Armenian genocide one of
    his biggest successes. The suit, which was filed against New York
    Life Insurance on behalf of 2,300 Armenian Americans who purchased
    insurance policies when they immigrated to the United States during
    the genocide, resulted in a $20 million settlement for the thousands
    of people who were originally denied the right to collect on their
    policies. Part of the settlement was also earmarked for Armenian
    charities.

    Mazi Pielsticker, a first-year law student, said he enjoyed Geragos's
    speech and appreciated the opportunity to hear such a prominent
    lawyer speak.

    "I thought he was awesome, very charismatic," Pielsticker said.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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