May 20. 2006 5:40PM
Wiretapping case blurs fact, fiction about Hollywood private eyes
By LINDA DEUTSCH
AP Special Correspondent
In the world of Hollywood fantasy, no occupation has been
quite as mythologized as the private detective - the gumshoe in the
shadows bending the law while spying on cheating spouses or lying
business partners.
In
their endless push for fame and fortune, some Hollywood power brokers
bought into the character and found a real-life private eye with a
dubious reputation.
Federal prosecutors now say Anthony
Pellicano used wiretaps, threats and blackmail to help lawyers and
their clients win high-stakes legal disputes.
Other private eyes
complain the case has confused fact and fiction about their work while
showing how far people in Hollywood expect them to go.
"This has
perpetuated the myth that investigators can and will do anything" if
they're paid enough money, said Scott Ross, a private investigator who
has worked for legal teams defending Michael Jackson and Robert Blake,
among others.
"It's untrue," Ross said. "I'm not going to sit in a two-by-four cage because your wife wants to have sex with the gardener."
Harold
Copus, a private eye in Atlanta who has investigated the disappearance
of Natalee Holloway in Aruba, considers Pellicano a rogue and said
publicity from the case has brought disturbing demands from prospective
clients.
"Many times people approach us now for wiretaps," he said. "But that's show biz. That's not the real world."
Pellicano,
62, has pleaded not guilty and is awaiting trial on charges of
wiretapping such stars as Sylvester Stallone and Keith Carradine and
paying police officers tens of thousands of dollars to run names,
including comedians Garry Shandling and Kevin Nealon, through a
government database.
Thirteen other defendants have been
charged. Among the most notable, "Die Hard" director John McTiernan
pleaded guilty to making false statements to an FBI agent, and former
Hollywood Records president Robert Pfeifer admitted hiring Pellicano to
wiretap the phone of his former girlfriend.
Pellicano was indicted in February after completing a 30-month federal prison sentence for possessing explosives.
Lawyers and private investigators said he was known in Hollywood as a source of last resort for clients.
A
tough-talking native of Chicago, his fees were high but that didn't
prevent top entertainment lawyers and stars from keeping him busy.
Tinseltown
was the perfect setting for Pellicano, said Laurie Levenson, a former
federal prosecutor who teaches at Loyola Law School.
"In Hollywood people don't have the same boundaries. They're used to bending the rules," she said.
They also like to get their way.
"Hollywood people are much more demanding of your time," Ross said. "They want to be more hands-on."
While pitching his services, Pellicano portrayed himself as a colorful character.
Attorney
Harland Braun, who represented Blake during the early days of his
murder case, remembered getting calls years ago from the private eye
looking for work.
"I smelled a rat and I stayed away from him," Braun said.
Pellicano sometimes put Braun on hold during those calls.
"I would have to wait through 45 seconds of Italian opera before he came back on the line," he said.
Levenson said Pellicano wanted to be a big shot but was actually "trapped in his own 'Sopranos' movie."
"This is a city of eccentric people and he was one of them," she said.
Adam
Dawson spent 20 years as an investigative reporter before becoming a
private eye and working on cases involving former Hollywood madam Heidi
Fleiss and more recently an accused Chinese-American double agent and a
pedophile priest.
Forget about the fantasy, he said. The reality
of being a detective is no match for the movies. Most of the work is
poring over documents and computer files.
"We're not constantly getting in fights and high-speed chases," he said. "We leave that to the TV detectives."
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