Civil jury finds Blake guilty in slaying of wife

no1important

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Civil jury finds Blake guilty in slaying of wife


A civil jury has found Hollywood actor Robert Blake liable in the slaying of his wife and ordered him to pay her children $30 million in damages.

O.J. Simpson was also acquitted at a criminal trial in 1995 of murdering his ex-wife and a friend of hers, but was later found responsible for the slayings in a civil case and was ordered to pay $33.5 million.

Interesting. It was a 10-2 verdict.
 

Ocean Breeze

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no1important said:

Civil jury finds Blake guilty in slaying of wife


A civil jury has found Hollywood actor Robert Blake liable in the slaying of his wife and ordered him to pay her children $30 million in damages.

O.J. Simpson was also acquitted at a criminal trial in 1995 of murdering his ex-wife and a friend of hers, but was later found responsible for the slayings in a civil case and was ordered to pay $33.5 million.

Interesting. It was a 10-2 verdict.

interesting "legal" system , isn't it??

(personally , I think that Blake did it.....

what do you think , No. 1??? ( that old curiosity ...;-)
 

spaminator

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Robert Blake, actor acquitted in wife's killing, dies at 89
Bonny Lee Bakley shot dead outside a Studio City restaurant in 2001

Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Linda Deutsch
Published Mar 09, 2023 • Last updated 1 day ago • 5 minute read

LOS ANGELES — Robert Blake, the Emmy award-winning performer who went from acclaim for his acting to notoriety when he was tried and acquitted in the killing of his wife, died Thursday at age 89.


A statement released on behalf of his niece, Noreen Austin, said Blake died from heart disease, surrounded by family at home in Los Angeles.


Blake, star of the 1970s TV show, “Baretta,” had once hoped for a comeback, but he never recovered from the long ordeal which began with the shooting death of his wife, Bonny Lee Bakley, outside a Studio City restaurant on May 4, 2001. The story of their strange marriage, the child it produced and its violent end was a Hollywood tragedy played out in court.

Once hailed as among the finest actors of his generation, Blake became better known as the centre of a real-life murder trial, a story more bizarre than any in which he acted. Many remembered him not as the rugged, dark-haired star of “Baretta,” but as a spectral, white-haired murder defendant.


In a 2002 interview with The Associated Press while he was jailed awaiting trial, he bemoaned the change in his status with his fans nationwide: “It hurt because America is the only family I had.”

He was adamant that he had not killed his wife and a jury ultimately acquitted him. But a civil jury would find him liable for her death and order him to pay Bakley’s family $30 million, a judgment which sent him into bankruptcy. The daughter he and Bakley had together, Rose Lenore, was raised by other relatives and went for years without seeing Blake, until they spoke in 2019. She would tell People magazine that she called him “Robert,” not “Dad.”

It was an ignominious finale for a life lived in the spotlight from childhood. As a youngster, he starred in the “Our Gang” comedies and acted in a movie classic, “The Treasure of the Sierra Madre.” As an adult, he was praised for his portrayal of real-life murderer Perry Smith in the movie of Truman Capote’s true crime best seller “In Cold Blood.”


His career peaked with the 1975-78 TV cop series, “Baretta.” He starred as a detective who carried a pet cockatoo on his shoulder and was fond of disguises. It was typical of his specialty, portraying tough guys with soft hearts, and its signature line: “Don’t do the crime if you can’t do the time,” was often quoted.


Blake won a 1975 Emmy for his portrayal of Tony Baretta, although behind the scenes the show was wracked by disputes involving the temperamental star. He gained a reputation as one of Hollywood’s finest actors, but one of the most difficult to work with. He later admitted to struggles with alcohol and drug addiction in his early life.

In 1993, Blake won another Emmy as the title character in, “Judgment Day: the John List Story,” portraying a soft-spoken, churchgoing man who murdered his wife and three children.


Blake’s career had slowed down well before the trial. He made only a handful of screen appearances after the mid-1980s; his last project was in David Lynch’s “Lost Highway,” released in 1997. According to his niece, Blake had spent his recent years “enjoying jazz music, playing his guitar, reading poetry, and watching many Hollywood Classic films.”

He was born Michael James Gubitosi on Sept. 18, 1933, in Nutley, New Jersey. His father, an Italian immigrant and his mother, an Italian American, wanted their three children to succeed in show business. At age 2, Blake was performing with a brother and sister in a family vaudeville act called, “The Three Little Hillbillies.”

When his parents moved the family to Los Angeles, his mother found work for the kids as movie extras and little Mickey Gubitosi was plucked from the crowd by producers who cast him in the “Our Gang” comedies. He appeared in the series for five years and changed his name to Bobby Blake.

He went on to work with Hollywood legends, playing the young John Garfield in “Humoresque” in 1946 and the little boy who sells Humphrey Bogart a crucial lottery ticket in the Oscar-winning “The Treasure of the Sierra Madre.”


SAD FAREWELL - Robert Blake
As a kid he worked with Laurel and Hardy, Jack Benny, and was in Our Gang. As an adult he was in great films and did great TV. Things got really messed up after that. He has died at 89 and so I'm celebrating his work, which was consistently good. RIP pic.twitter.com/zJP2T1s2cW

— James L. Neibaur (@JimLNeibaur) March 10, 2023
In adulthood, he landed serious movie roles. The biggest breakthrough was in 1967 with “In Cold Blood.” Later there were films including, “Tell Them Willie Boy is Here” and “Electra Glide in Blue.”

In 1961, Blake and actress Sondra Kerr married and had two children, Noah and Delinah. They divorced in 1983.

His fateful meeting with Bakley came in 1999 at a jazz club where he went to escape loneliness.

“Here I was, 67 or 68 years old. My life was on hold. My career was stalled out,” he said in the AP interview. “I’d been alone for a long time.”

He said he had no reason to dislike Bakley: “She took me out of the stands and put me back in the arena. I had something to live for.”

When Bakley gave birth to a baby girl, she named Christian Brando — son of Marlon — as the father. But DNA tests pointed to Blake.


Blake first saw the little girl, named Rosie, when she was two months old and she became the focus of his life. He married Bakley because of the child.

“Rosie is my blood. Rosie is calling to me,” he said. “I have no doubt that Rosie and I are going to walk off into the sunset together.”

Prosecutors would claim that he planned to kill Bakley to get sole custody of the baby and tried to hire hitmen for the job. But evidence was muddled and a jury rejected that theory.

On her last night alive, Blake and his 44-year-old wife dined at a neighbourhood restaurant, Vitello’s. He claimed she was shot when he left her in the car and returned to the restaurant to retrieve a handgun he had inadvertently left behind. Police were initially baffled and Blake was not arrested until a year after the crime occurred.

Once a wealthy man, he spent millions on his defence and wound up living on social security and a Screen Actor’s Guild pension.

In a 2006 interview with the AP a year after his acquittal, Blake said he hoped to restart his career.

“I’d like to give my best performance,” he said. “I’d like to leave a legacy for Rosie about who I am. I’m not ready for a dog and fishing pole yet. I’d like to go to bed each night desperate to wake up each morning and create some magic.”

— Deutsch, the primary writer of this obituary, retired from The Associated Press in 2014.
 

spaminator

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In Robert Blake murder case, victim was more interesting
Author of the article:Brad Hunter
Published Mar 10, 2023 • Last updated 1 day ago • 3 minute read
The murder of Baretta star Robert Blakes wife was big news.
The murder of Baretta star Robert Blakes wife was big news.
A delusional astrologer would have slammed a torpedo into the side of the Robert Blake-Bonnie Lee Bakley love match.


On the one hand, there was Blake, a faded TV star whose best days had been left in the dust with his 1970s cop drama, Baretta.


On the other, there was Bakley. She was a serial grifter who lured in gullible men (she was married 10 times) with raunchy photos she’d send admirers by mail.

Blake pegged out at 89 years of age on Thursday. Bakley, well, she preceded him in death by two decades courtesy of a bullet.


It was the kind of pop culture, pseudo-tragic story that the New York Post — where I worked at the time — loves to this day. And the tale had enough moving parts to keep the tabloid machine greased for days.

Of the two, I found Bakley far more interesting than the thoroughly messed up Robert Blake. Unravelling her life took me on a whirlwind tour of New Jersey, Memphis and L.A.


Born in New Jersey, Bakley seemed to have stars in her eyes from the minute she left the womb. Dropping out of high school, she moved over the river to New York to pursue a modelling career.


Mostly, though, she was obsessed with celebrities. Rockabilly star Jerry Lee Lewis was an early target so she got close to his sisters.

“She was just like the groupies in Almost Famous,” Linda Gail Lewis told me in 2001, days after Bakley was slain. “She loved the music and the men who made it. She was definitely obsessed. She was a con artist, plain and simple, and a good one.”

Friends told me that all of her endeavours – including selling pornographic pictures of herself through the mail, running a sex chat line and phone-sex scams – allowed the starry-eyed Bakley to pursue her fanatical devotion to the famous.


Some of them landed her in the slammer.

Yet nothing dissuaded her from pursuing celebrities with the hopes of one day becoming a Hollywood princess by marrying one.

We learned she had a baby with the hell-raising rockabilly star, claimed to have had sex with Dean Martin, Christian Brando, Frankie Valli (he denies it) and countless others.

In 1999, Bakley met Blake, the once-celebrated star of In Cold Blood, in a jazz club. Soon, she was juggling Blake and Tinseltown scion Christian Brando when she became pregnant. A DNA test proved the kid was Baretta’s.


Clandestine romps continued with Jerry Lee Lewis and anyone else who had a star on the Hollywood Walk-of-Fame. Bakley also continued her lonely hearts scam.

But the marriage wasn’t a happy one.


On May 4, 2001, Blake took Bakley to dinner at Vitello’s Restaurant in Los Angeles. While she waited in the car for the actor to collect his gun from the resto, she was shot in the head.

One year later, Baretta was busted and charged with the murder of his wife, who he suspected was after his money.

But at trial, Blake was shockingly acquitted. Los Angeles County District Attorney Steve Cooley called Blake a “miserable human being” and added that the jurors were “incredibly stupid.”

Still, Blake was a long way from home free: In November of the same year, he was found liable for Bakley’s death. The actor was ordered to pay her four children $30 million.

Pleading poverty, the payday was cut in half to $15 million. A slew of appeals failed to overturn the ruling.

“I don’t think she had a lot of love in her,” Linda Gail Lewis told me. “[Bakley] wasn’t a sentimental person. She didn’t do drugs or drink much.

“Her addiction was celebrities. She was addicted to hanging around the famous.”

And in the end, it killed her.

bhunter@postmedia.com

@HunterTOSun