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Dunkirk101
03-29-2005, 06:47 PM
Superstar Lawyer Johnnie Cochran Dies

14 minutes ago U.S. National - AP


By GREG RISLING, Associated Press Writer

LOS ANGELES - Johnnie L. Cochran Jr., who became a legal superstar after helping clear O.J. Simpson during a sensational murder trial in which he uttered the famous quote "If it doesn't fit, you must acquit," died Tuesday. He was 67.

http://us.news2.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/p/ap/20050329/capt.ny20203292330.obit_cochran_ny202.jpg



Cochran died of a brain disorder in Los Angeles, said law partner Randy McMurray.


"Certainly, Johnnie's career will be noted as one marked by celebrity cases and clientele," his family said in a statement. "But he and his family were most proud of the work he did on behalf of those in the community."


With his colorful suits and ties, his gift for courtroom oratory and a knack for coining memorable phrases, Cochran was a vivid addition to the pantheon of great American barristers.


The "if it doesn't fit" phrase would be quoted and parodied for years afterward. It derived from a dramatic moment during which Simpson tried on a pair of bloodstained "murder gloves" to show jurors they did not fit. Some legal experts called it the turning point in the trial.


Soon after, jurors found the Hall of Fame football star not guilty of the 1994 slayings of his ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ronald Goldman.


For Cochran, Simpson's acquittal was the crowning achievement in a career notable for victories, often in cases with racial themes. He was a black man known for championing the causes of black defendants. Some of them, like Simpson, were famous, but more often than not they were unknowns.


"The clients I've cared about the most are the No Js, the ones who nobody knows," said Cochran, who proudly displayed copies in his office of the multimillion-dollar checks he won for ordinary citizens who said they were abused by police.


"People in New York and Los Angeles, especially mothers in the African-American community, are more afraid of the police injuring or killing their children than they are of muggers on the corner," he once said.


By the time Simpson called, the byword in the black community for defendants facing serious charges was: "Get Johnnie." <end>

Heres the link : http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20050329/ap_on_re_us/obit_cochran

M&Mdelite
03-29-2005, 08:00 PM
He'll be greatly missed. Rest in Peace Johnnie. :(

~Sal~
03-29-2005, 08:05 PM
somehow I've managed to miss this...thanks for the news!

jerejerebinks
03-31-2005, 02:43 PM
Not surprising, Sal.

I cant understand why the media did not show interest in his death. He is probably the most infamous attourney of our generation, and yet his death fades into the oblivious abyss of forgotten news.

Goes to show how much the media affects us. They report Terry Schiavo or Michael Jackson and we are hooked. They dont report Cochrane or a suspected racial hate crime in Texas and the news passes us like a doldrum breeze.

So strange.

Beside all that, he will be greatly missed.

silverbulletkc
03-31-2005, 03:29 PM
....but the first place I saw it and heard about it was right from the television itself.

LionelHutz
03-31-2005, 07:38 PM
Originally posted by jerejerebinks
I cant understand why the media did not show interest in his death.

You're kidding, right?

M&Mdelite
03-31-2005, 08:24 PM
I seen quite a bit of TV coverage but there was more focus put on OJ than Johnnie. I thought that was very tacky. OJ's case and Johnnie's death are totally two different things. This is a lunatic world.

silverbulletkc
03-31-2005, 09:01 PM
Anybody, famous or infamous, pretty much gets some kind of media attention when they die.

Darth Be'lal
03-31-2005, 09:12 PM
It's somewhat hard for me to mourn for a man who passed away who used racism and this general feeling that black people had been shafted by whites for decades and its time to get some payback to get a man guilty of murdering his ex wife and her boyfriend acquited. Not that I've tried very hard to find sympathy.