http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-pellicano25apr25,0,3102116.story?coll=la-home-headlines
From the Los Angeles Times
Chris Rock Turned to Pellicano in '99 Suit
The private eye allegedly checked police files on a model who filed a paternity claim.
By Greg Krikorian, Chuck Philips and Robert Welkos
Times Staff Writers
April 25, 2006
Private investigator Anthony Pellicano allegedly searched confidential
criminal databases for incriminating information on a Hungarian model
after she asserted a paternity claim against comedian Chris Rock, court
records and interviews show.
The disclosure adds the biggest celebrity name thus far to the list of
people whom Pellicano purportedly sought to help by intimidating
courtroom foes.
The model, Monika Zsibrita, 33, was named in a February indictment as
one of numerous victims of Pellicano's alleged wiretapping and
racketeering conspiracy on behalf of A-list Hollywood attorneys and
other prominent clients.
But federal authorities have never detailed why Pellicano was
interested in Zsibrita or who might have hired him to investigate the
model.
Matt Labov, Rock's spokesman, confirmed Monday that the comedian's
representatives had hired Pellicano after Zsibrita alleged in 1999 that
she was pregnant and carrying Rock's unborn child.
Two subsequent DNA tests indicated Rock was not the child's father,
according to several sources familiar with the paternity claim, which
Zsibrita ultimately pursued in court. Rock was separated from his wife
when he met Zsibrita. The case was sealed by a private judge and is now
concluded.
Labov said that Pellicano, at the time he was retained, had an
"excellent reputation" as an investigator and that no one associated
with Rock had any idea the private investigator would illegally access
police files, as federal authorities have alleged.
"No one from our camp would have ever knowingly entered into an
agreement with Pellicano to do anything illegal," Labov said. "Let me
put it like this: When you hire somebody to fix your TV, you don't
necessarily think he's going to hook you up for free cable."
According to a grand jury indictment released in February, Pellicano
used his connections with a Los Angeles Police Department detective to
illegally run a background check on Zsibrita on July 30, 1999.
At that time, the then-26-year-old model was pregnant and attempting to prove that Rock was the father of her child.
Zsibrita, who now owns a computer business in Los Angeles, declined to
comment about the paternity case or who was involved. Her current and
former attorneys, citing the confidential nature of the proceedings,
also have declined to comment about the paternity case.
But in a brief interview, Zsibrita said the government's indictment
only confirmed her suspicions that, years ago, someone had been after
her.
"They wiretapped me and they followed me around," Zsibrita said. "I was afraid. It was very unsettling."
Though she had told others at the time that she believed she was being
watched, Zsibrita said her suspicions were not confirmed until two
years ago, when an FBI agent told her that her personal records had
been accessed by someone working with Pellicano.
"When I told people about it, nobody believed me," she recalled. "People think you are crazy."
Zsibrita, who was raised in a small town in Hungary, comes from a
family of landowners and developers, according to Neville Johnson, her
current attorney. She arrived in the United States as a 22-year-old
student and graduated from the Otis College of Art and Design.
Norm Zada, publisher of Perfect 10, a men's magazine in which Zsibrita
appeared in 1998, recalls her stories about being followed.
"I remember back then that she told me she believed her apartment was broken into," Zada said.
Back then, Zada recalled, he often arranged Sunday brunches at the Four
Seasons in Beverly Hills. "I'd take a bunch of models there and
celebrities would hang around," said Zada, adding that Zsibrita was
among them.
Two former associates of Zsibrita also remember her telling them she was afraid that someone was after her.
"There was a time that Monika believed her house was being watched and
her movements were being watched," said one. "I never entertained the
idea" it could be true.
At the time, said the other, "there was nothing else going on in Monika Zsibrita's life" but the paternity suit.
Paul Barresi, a onetime employee of Pellicano, said in a recent
interview that he was assigned by the private eye to investigate the
model in 1999.
"He said he was going after this girl and wanted all the dirt I could
gather about her," said Barresi, who worked for Pellicano for nearly a
decade. "He told me he was helping out Chris Rock."
After making a few calls, Barresi said, he told Pellicano he had
checked into Zsibrita's background and found no evidence that she was
involved in any criminal behavior.
Another former employee of Pellicano, in a recent interview, described
how the private investigator had Zsibrita followed after Barresi left
the case.
The former employee, who spoke on condition of anonymity to avoid
becoming part of the ongoing investigation, told The Times that
Zsibrita was followed throughout the summer of 2001 and that videos
were taken of her then-toddler. "Most of the time he just wanted to do
surveillance on them," the former employee recalled. "That is when we
found out she worked [as a model] for Perfect 10" magazine.
Because paternity cases are confidential, records in the matter were
not publicly available. The civil court index in Los Angeles does not
include any reference to the case. But interviews show Rock had several
lawyers working for him.
One divorce attorney, Robert Clayton, confirmed that he had been
retained as a lawyer for Rock "some time ago" but he was prevented from
discussing the nature of the case because of a confidentiality
agreement. Clayton also said he had never hired Pellicano in a case.
Entertainment lawyer Stephen Barnes also said he has represented Rock.
But he declined to comment about the paternity case or any involvement
by Pellicano.
Robert Nachshin, another divorce attorney who represented Rock, did not
return phone calls or an e-mail seeking comment about working for Rock
during the time of the paternity case.
Meanwhile, Johnson and other attorneys representing Zsibrita described further legal action they are planning on her behalf.
As early as today they plan to file a claim against the city of Los
Angeles, alleging that the Police Department and Sgt. Mark Arneson, one
of Pellicano's co-defendants, violated Zsibrita's civil rights because
her confidential records were accessed and turned over to the private
eye and perhaps others. Both men have pleaded not guilty.
"She is very upset to learn that her privacy was violated in various ways," Johnson said.