Harold Lee Giesler, known professionally as Jerry Giesler (November 2, 1886 – January 1, 1962) was an American trial attorney.
Giesler was the defense attorney of record for many of the highest-profile litigations, both criminal and civil, in the United States during the first half of the twentieth century. He represented Clarence Darrow, Charles Chaplin, Alexander Pantages (three times), Errol Flynn, Busby Berkeley, Bugsy Siegel, and Marilyn Monroe, among many others. His reputation for winning cases that appeared unwinnable was such that "Get me Giesler!" became a media epithet attached to any celebrity or prominent public figure facing serious criminal charges or an onerous civil dispute.[1]
Giesler served for a number of years on the board of governors of the State Bar of California, and as president of the Beverly Hills Bar Association.[2]
Early career
Giesler was born in Wilton Junction, Iowa, on November 2, 1886. Though christened Harold Lee Giesler, he preferred the nickname Jerry from a young age, and used it professionally throughout his career.[3] In 1906 he enrolled at the University of Iowa College of Law. After one year, he relocated to Los Angeles—where he remained for the rest of his life—and continued his law studies at the University of Southern California.[4] Midway through his second year, he began working in the office of the celebrated attorney Earl Rogers, and later left law school to become Rogers' full-time research assistant.[5] In 1910, he was admitted to the bar (a law degree was not a prerequisite for bar candidates at that time; law students could sit for the examination as soon as they felt qualified) and joined Rogers' firm as a junior associate.[6]
In early 1912, Clarence Darrow was charged with two counts of attempted bribery of prospective jurors during the McNamara brothers trial, and retained Rogers to defend him. During preparation, Darrow and Rogers asked Giesler to research a point of law for them. He submitted a 40-page brief, and was invited to join the defense team itself. "Never ... have I had another thrill," he later wrote, "to equal what I felt on being allowed to be a member of such a team."[7] The two charges were tried separately; the first trial ended with acquittal, and the second with a hung jury and dismissal of the case.[8] Darrow later invited Giesler to join his Chicago law firm. Though he considered it "the greatest possible honor", Giesler chose to remain with Rogers, and after Rogers' death, to open his own practice in Los Angeles.[9]
In December 1949, Giesler won an acquittal of incest and child molestation charges against Dr. George Hodel,[12] who later became a suspect in the still-unsolved Black Dahlia murder investigation.[13]
George Reeves's death from a gunshot wound to the head, in 1959, was ruled a suicide. Reeves's mother thought the ruling premature and peremptory, and retained Giesler to represent her in her bid to have the case reinvestigated as a possible murder. The findings of a second autopsy, conducted at Giesler's request, were the same as the first, except for a series of bruises of unknown origin about the head and body. A month later, having uncovered no additional evidence, Giesler announced that he was satisfied that the gunshot wound had been self-inflicted, and withdrew.[15][16]
^"Joan Bennett Sees Mate Shoot Agent –'Thought He Was Breaking Up My Home,' Says Wanger – Jennings Lang Hit by Two Bullets; Actress Denies Any Romance", Los Angeles Times, December 14, 1951, p. 1.
^Nelson M, Bayliss SH. Exquisite Corpse: Surrealism and the Black Dahlia Murder. New York: Bulfinch Press (2006), p. 26. ISBN0-8212-5819-2
^Black Dahlia Avenger: The True Story, by Steve Hodel, Harper 2004, page 500
^Paiva, Fred Melo (2008-04-06). "Go, Johnny, go". O Estado de S. Paulo (in Portuguese). p. J8.
^"Jerry Giesler, 75, lawyer, is dead". New York Times. January 2, 1962.
Further reading
Rasmussen, Cecilia (1998). "A Savior to the Stars". L.A. Unconventional: The Men and Women Who Did L.A. Their Way. Los Angeles: Los Angeles Times. pp. 61–63. ISBN978-1-883792-23-7. OCLC40701771.
External links
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