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To: Donald Stone
Everyone in Maryland knows who he is but for those who dont:

SOURCE

Peter G. Angelos (with Georgia K.)
March 5, 2001

Peter Angelos wanted to be a politician, but he didn't get very far. Though he was briefly elected to the Baltimore City Council, voters rejected his bids for Maryland's state senate in the 1950s and for mayor in the '60s. But Angelos remains a politician at heart. The former criminal defense attorney has been called the "most powerful private citizen in Maryland." And as his campaign contributions and court cases demonstrate, his reach extends far beyond his home state.

Angelos has refashioned himself as attorney to the little guy, representing consumers and workers in class-action suits against the likes of Philip Morris and Motorola. The turning point in his career came in the early 1980s, when labor leaders cajoled him into accepting a suit on behalf of asbestos workers. Within a decade, asbestos had made Angelos a very rich man. His firm has reportedly made more than $100 million on asbestos rulings alone, and still handles as many as 500 cases each year.

His profile as a class-action litigator, and his fees, have since skyrocketed. As Maryland's lead counsel against the tobacco industry, he signed on for a 25 percent fee -- which turned out to be nearly $1 billion. (The state has since held up payment, arguing that Angelos' take was simply too large.) Angelos has also sued manufacturers of lead paint and the diet drug fen-phen, and is currently representing a man who claims that using a cell phone gave him brain cancer. The suit, which seeks more than $800 million in damages, worries cell phone providers like Motorola and Verizon Wireless. Though similar suits have failed, RCR Wireless News notes that the industry "has never faced a lawyer with the expertise, financial resources, and political firepower of a Peter Angelos."

Angelos, who led a group of investors that purchased the Baltimore Orioles in 1993 for a then-record $173 million, wields considerable financial and political clout at home. When he wants something from state lawmakers, the measures he supports are referred to simply as "Angelos bills." The state assembly gave lawyers like Angelos more time to sue by extending the statute of limitations on asbestos cases; the measure was sponsored by state Senator Norman Stone Jr., who later accepted a position with Angelos' firm. The assembly also created more judgeships to speed asbestos cases along; the bill passed after Angelos brought Orioles' superstar Cal Ripken Jr. for a photo opp with state legislators. "The idea that one person could provide all this major legislation has been amazing," House Minority Leader Robert Flanagan (R) told the Baltimore City Paper.

Angelos has extended his reach to international issues. In 1999, he became the first professional baseball owner to orchestrate a game with Cuba, reportedly securing a State Department waiver for his team's trip to Havana following a White House meeting with then-National Security Advisor Sandy Berger. He also drew the ire of Republicans last May by refusing to sign Cuban defectors to his ball club. Senator Jesse Helms (R.-N.C.), not known for his opposition to discrimination, demanded a federal probe of the Orioles to safeguard the rights of "Cubans who manage to flee the repressive regime of Fidel Castro." Jim Nicholson, chairman of the Republican National Committee, also expressed outrage that Angelos would "turn a blind eye to the atrocities committed by Castro's totalitarian state."

Republicans have other reasons to dislike Angelos. The trial lawyer has denounced GOP efforts to limit jury awards against corporations that harm consumers or workers. "I am opposed to a party which indulges in lawyer-bashing irresponsibly in order to collect campaign contributions from corporations," he has said. During the last election cycle, Angelos and his wife, Georgia, gave all of their donations to Democrats, including like-minded congressional candidates such as Michael Ciresi, one of Minnesota's tobacco lawyers, and Edward O'Brien, a steelworkers union official from Pennsylvania.

Angelos makes no apologies for the controvery his influence generates. "Whenever you do something unconventional, there will be protests and honest disagreements," he told Business Week. "If you're convinced it's the right thing to do, move forward."

-- Pam Smith

111 posted on 03/18/2002 12:11:43 PM PST by nunya bidness
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To: nunya bidness,Donald Stone,abundy,maica,freee-dame
I smell a big sellout deal with Angelos involved.

There will be a huge cash payout to Schultz, but no punishment for Braga.

This is how Angelos will get the FBI into his pocket where he keeps the Maryland legislature.

113 posted on 03/18/2002 12:17:21 PM PST by Travis McGee
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To: nunya bidness;Travis McGee

"From the horse's mouth"

For Immediate Release

January 21, 1998

Washington D.C. FBI National Press Office

Following the recent arrests of law enforcement officers in West New York, New Jersey; Starr County, Texas; Detroit, Michigan; and Cleveland, Ohio,

FBI Director Louis J. Freeh today said, "The insidious nature of police corruption inherently undermines the confidence of the American people in one of the basic tenets of democracy--that law enforcement officers will honestly and fairly protect and serve the citizens to whom they answer. The selfish and deceitful acts of a few cannot be allowed to impugn the integrity of the law enforcement profession. For these reasons, vigorous investigation of police corruption is a FBI national priority and will remain so."

Freeh made the comments following the arrest by FBI Special Agents today of 59 persons in the Cleveland area, including 42 officers from five law enforcement agencies in Cleveland and its suburbs charged in Federal warrants with conspiracy to distribute cocaine. The defendants include 18 police officers and 24 corrections officers. The agencies are the Cleveland Police Department; Cuyahoga County Sheriff's Office in Cleveland; Cleveland Heights Police Department; East Cleveland Police Department; and the Brooklyn, Ohio, Police Department. Nine other persons accused of impersonating law enforcement officers also were charged with conspiracy to distribute cocaine. In addition, eight persons were charged in an FBI undercover operation against organized crime.

"Great credit must go to the overwhelming majority of honest police throughout the country, including those in the Cleveland area, for their vigorous efforts to prevent and combat corruption," Freeh said. "National law enforcement organizations also have been unrelenting in efforts against corruption, and the FBI is proud to be the partner of all in this essential work. Nation-wide organizations taking such major steps include the International Association of Chiefs of Police, the National Sheriffs' Association, and the Major City Chiefs."

Freeh said part of the national scope of the allegations of police corruption was also shown in three other separate cases in which the FBI made arrests in the past week:

Three Detroit police officers were charged on January 14 with conspiring to commit a robbery of approximately $1 million. In Starr County, Texas, the sheriff, a justice of the peace, and five county jailers were charged on January 14 with bribery and conspiracy to commit bribery. Nine current or former West New York, New Jersey, police officers were charged on January 13 with racketeering involving protection of prostitution and illegal gambling.

"Those arrested and charged are innocent until proven guilty but I cite corruption allegations, particularly those systemic in nature, as part of a pattern that is of growing concern to all honest local, state, and federal law enforcement personnel throughout the country," Freeh said.

Freeh said, "In recent years the FBI has arrested police officers for corruption in every region of the nation, in large, medium-sized and small cities, towns and villages; from the inner city precincts to rural sheriff's departments.

"Statistics show the FBI's commitment in fighting these threats to the integrity of the criminal justice system," Freeh said. "From 1994 to 1997, a total of 508 persons were convicted in law enforcement corruption cases investigated by the FBI. Many more officers were convicted in cases stemming from organized crime, drugs, or on other non-corruption statutory basis. Nearly 45 percent of the police corruption cases during that period were drug related."

"To their great credit, police officials throughout the nation support efforts to expose corruption and many departments have created significant reforms," Freeh said. "We are all in this together and must join forces to root out corruption at every level: local, state, and federal; police departments from our largest cities to our smallest hamlets; sheriff's departments from urban areas to the most sparsely-settled countryside.

"No law enforcement agency, and certainly not the FBI, is immune from the scourge of corruption. The FBI is as tough or tougher on its own personnel as on any other agency, and we have arrested FBI Special Agents, and obtained convictions, on a variety of charges," Freeh said.

"Police corruption knows no state or regional borders. It must be attacked not only by everyone in the law enforcement profession but also by elected officials from the governor's office to the state legislature to the mayor's office to the city council," Freeh said. "Ultimately, it is the public that must demand from their elected officials and law enforcement executives an absolute commitment to integrity."

Freeh said, "Police corruption aids criminals and reduces the level of protection that police give to the public, particularly in those neighborhoods already victimized by crime. Law enforcement must have 100 percent dedication to its sacred oath to protect the public from harm, but corrupt police officers will not protect the public from anything--not the worst crimes.

"All law enforcement agencies must work to make certain that the men and women of their departments are held to the highest standards of integrity, and I cannot stress strongly enough the importance of joint, cooperative efforts by the FBI with all other law enforcement agencies in the nation to go forward together in this crucial fight against corruption," Freeh said.

"Together, we must ensure that the law enforcement profession hires only the best; trains those officers regarding integrity issues; closely supervises them; and aggressively investigates when allegations of misconduct arise. For it is only through a clear, forceful and united message by the vast majority of honest and dedicated law enforcement professionals-- that corruption will not be tolerated--that we can hope to retain the trust and confidence of the American people," Freeh said.

"For the FBI, a vigorous anti-corruption program is among our highest national priorities, and will continue to be," Freeh said.

158 posted on 03/19/2002 3:12:43 AM PST by Donald Stone
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