Monday, December 28, 2009

Pellicano pleads no contest to threatening former L.A. Times reporter

Hollywood private eye Anthony Pellicano and another man, accused of threatening reporter Anita Busch in 2002 to scare her off a story, pleaded no contest today to making a criminal threat.

Pellicano, 65, and Alexander Proctor, 66, were charged four years ago in the threat on Busch's life. Busch, who was then working for the Los Angeles Times, found a fish with a rose in its mouth on the broken windshield of her car along with a sign reading "Stop," court documents allege.

The windshield was punctured and made to appear like a bullet hole, prosecutors wrote in the complaint against the two men.

In June, both men pleaded not guilty to the charges.

The case against Pellicano and Proctor was put on hold while the closely watched federal trial against Pellicano and his accomplices moved through the courts. At the conclusion of that trial in December, Pellicano was sentenced to 15 years in prison on a long list of federal wiretapping and racketeering charges. Pellicano and Proctor were transferred to state custody for their arraignment.

According the district attorney's office, they were sentenced to the maximum of three years in prison. "The state terms are to be served concurrently with their remaining federal prison sentences, prosecutors said.


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Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Former Hollywood private eye pleads no contest in LA to criminal threat against reporter

LOS ANGELES - Former Hollywood private eye Anthony Pellicano and an associate pleaded no contest Friday to threatening a newspaper reporter who was working on a story about actor Steven Seagal's possible ties to organized crime.

Pellicano and Alexander Proctor entered their pleas in Superior Court and were sentenced to the maximum three years in prison for leaving a dead fish for then-Los Angeles Times reporter Anita Busch, the Los Angeles County District Attorney's office said. A conspiracy charge was dismissed against the two as a result of their pleas.

"It's been a long time... for this to come to justice," Busch said. "I'm very glad to know that people can't threaten journalists in this country and get away with it."

According to court papers, Pellicano hired Proctor in 2002 to intimidate Busch, who found a bullet-sized hole on the windshield of her car along with a dead fish, a rose and a note with the word "Stop."

Busch told authorities she believed the threat stemmed from a story she was putting together on Seagal and his former producing partner, Julius Nasso. Earlier that year, Nasso was indicted with New York mob figures for plotting to extort money from Seagal.

Seagal denied hiring Pellicano and was never charged in the case.

The investigation led federal authorities to raid Pellicano's offices, where they found explosives, and he was later convicted of weapons charges. The raids also led to a federal wiretapping case. Pellicano was accused of wiretapping stars such as Sylvester Stallone and bribing police officers to run names of people, including comedian Garry Shandling, through law enforcement databases.

Authorities also found information on Busch containing her physical description, home address and the license plate number of her car, prosecutors said.

Pellicano was convicted of 78 counts including wiretapping, racketeering and wire fraud in two separate trials last year. He is serving 15 years in federal prison.


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