Word: criminalled
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Her captors were "crazy people" who were "decidedly serious that they could overthrow the United States of America through terrorist tactics." After she was frightened into submission, she also became convinced that the FBI would kill her if she tried to escape?a conviction, Bailey went on, that was only...
Bailey investigators went to work retracing Patty's 591-day trail from kidnap to capture. Says Harvard Law Professor Alan Dershowitz, who is helping with the Hearst legal strategy: "Bailey is virtually the only criminal lawyer I've met who has mastered the art of pretrial investigation." Once an investigator...
In 1952, when he was in his sophomore year at Harvard, Bailey became bored with academe and joined the Navy. He just missed the Korean War, but found two permanent passions: flying and the law, which he considers integrally related. "If I ran a school for criminal lawyers," he wrote...
Bailey graduated first in his class, despite spending much of his time watching actual trials and running a successful investigative firm servicing local lawyers. During classes he often read in apparent boredom; when his professors tried to tag him with sudden questions, he would smugly answer in minute detail, then...
Bailey's only worry about entering criminal law was that there would not be much money in it, and he did not strike it rich immediately. But he did the next best thing: he became almost instantly famous.