Harold Lee Giesler , known professionally as Jerry Giesler (November 2, 1886 - January 1, 1962) is an American court lawyer.
Giesler is a defense attorney record for many high profile trials, both criminal and civilian, in the United States during the first half of the twentieth century. He represents Clarence Darrow, Charles Chaplin, Alexander Pantages (three times), Errol Flynn, Busby Berkeley, Bugsy Siegel, and Marilyn Monroe, among many others. His reputation for winning seemingly unaccountable cases is such that "Get me Giesler!" be a media appraisal attached to celebrities or prominent public figures who face serious criminal charges or aggravating civil disputes.
Giesler served for several years on the board of governors of State Bar of California, and as president of the Beverly Hills Bar Association.
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Giesler was born in Wilton Junction, Iowa, on November 2, 1886. Despite being baptized by Harold Lee Giesler, he prefers Jerry's nickname from a young age, and uses it professionally throughout his career. In 1906, he enrolled at the University of Iowa College of Law. After a year, he moved to Los Angeles - where he lived for the rest of his life - and continued his law studies at the University of Southern California. In the second half of the year, he started working at the renowned attorney office of Earl Rogers, and later left law school to become a full-time research assistant at Rogers. In 1910, he was accepted into a bar (a law degree was not a prerequisite for a bar candidate at the time; law students could sit for an examination as soon as they felt qualified) and join Rogers' company as a junior associate.
In early 1912, Clarence Darrow was charged with two counts of bribery of jury candidates during the McNamara sisters trial, and defended Rogers to defend him. During the preparation, Darrow and Rogers asked Giesler to examine a legal point for them. He submitted a 40-page summary, and was invited to join the defense team itself. "Never... have I ever felt any other sensation," he then wrote, "to match what I feel for being allowed to be a member of such a team." Both charges were tried separately; the first trial ended with the release, and the second with the jury hanging and dismissal of the case. Darrow then invited Giesler to join his law firm in Chicago. Though he regarded it as "the greatest honor", Giesler chose to remain with Rogers, and after the death of Rogers, to open his own practice in Los Angeles.
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Giesler garnered attention in the 1920s by defending a woman involved in the famous "Love in the Loft Case", but became truly famous for defending the theater maestro Alexander Pantages. Errol Flynn relied on him to win the acquittal on charges of rape by law. Other notable clients include actor Robert Mitchum, and director of Busby Berkeley. After the first two trials for murder ended with a hanging jury, Berkeley was released in third.
Giesler also won the liberation for Lili St. Cyr, Charlie Chaplin, gangster Bugsy Siegel, producer Walter Wanger - is accused of shooting an agent who is too concerned about actress Joan Bennett, Wanger's wife, and Buron Fitts, an accused prosecutor. entered. In the case of "White Flame Murder", Giesler won the freedom of his client with a temporary insanity defense.
In December 1949, Giesler won the acquittal on charges of incest and child molestation against Dr. George Hodel, who later became a suspect in the investigation of the Black Dahlia murder that has not been revealed.
In 1958, Giesler defended the 14-year-old Cheryl Crane, daughter of actress Lana Turner, who was accused of stabbing her fatal mother's lover, gangster Johnny Stompanato. The assassination finally decided to be justified.
George Reeves' death from a gunshot wound to the head, in 1959, was mastered by suicide. Mrs. Reeves thinks the ruling and ruling authorities, and retains Giesler to represent him in his quest to have the case re-investigated as a possible murder. The findings of the second autopsy, made at the request of Giesler, are equal to the first, except for a series of unknown bruises about the head and body. A month later, after finding no additional evidence, Giesler announced that he was satisfied that the gunshot wound was caused by himself, and resigned.
Giesler handles civil and criminal cases. She represents Marilyn Monroe in her 1955 divorce from Joe DiMaggio. Other prominent divorce clients include Rudolph Valentino, Zsa Zsa Gabor, Barbara Hutton, John Crawford, and Shelley Winters.
Death
Jerry Giesler died at the age of 75 on New Year's Day in 1962, following a series of heart attacks, the last and most serious in October 1961, and was buried in a tomb in the Great Mausoleum of Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale, California.
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External links
- Des Moines Register, Famous Iowans
- Jerry Giesler in the Search of the Mausoleum
Source of the article : Wikipedia