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Robert Simone, controversial lawyer (great front page obit, Phila. Inquirer)

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bway...@gmail.com

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Jul 13, 2007, 6:21:43 PM7/13/07
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Thu, Jul. 12, 2007

Robert F. Simone; theatrical trial lawyer dies at 73
By George Anastasia
Inquirer Staff Writer

Robert F. Simone, 73, a quintessential Philadelphia criminal-defense
lawyer whose client list was a cross between Guys and Dolls and
Goodfellas, died Tuesday night at Hahnemann University Hospital after
a long illness.

Mr. Simone was a tenacious defender whose courtroom style was that of
a counter-puncher. Quick on his feet and a master at cross-
examination, he could often say more to a jury with a grimace, squint
or shrug than another lawyer could convey in a two-hour summation.

"He was the last of the big-city, big-time, hard-hitting criminal
lawyers," said Edwin Jacobs Jr., a longtime friend and fellow defense
attorney.

Known as "Bobby" to clients and colleagues, Mr. Simone fought his most
storied legal battles on behalf of the mob boss Nicodemo "Little
Nicky" Scarfo, who became his friend as well as his client.

But his confrontations also included several battles in which he
defended himself against criminal charges. He was convicted in 1992 in
a mob-related racketeering and extortion case, and ultimately served
nearly three years in prison.

He vehemently denied the charges in the case, claiming he was the
target of a government vendetta. But he also was quick to admit that
his lifestyle - a penchant for gambling, nightlife, and a good glass
of liquor - often created problems that his courtroom skills couldn't
solve.

During his 40-year career as one of the city's top defense lawyers,
his clients included the glamorous and the infamous. Scarfo, mob
leader Angelo Bruno, union boss John McCullough, and porn-film star
Linda Lovelace all called on Simone for legal assistance.

"When he was on top of his game, there was nobody better," said
defense lawyer Donald Manno. "He was a combination of instinct, charm
and legal talent."

Mr. Simone's career was launched with the high-profile defense of
Lillian Reis, a Philadelphia showgirl who was charged with
masterminding the theft of $478,000 from the home of Pottsville coal
baron John Rich in 1959.

His most infamous client was Scarfo, whom he defended in numerous
federal and city cases in the 1980s.

The two developed a close friendship that resulted, among other
things, in Mr. Simone's showing up on FBI surveillance photos taken at
Scarfo's home and on his yacht, Usual Suspects, in Fort Lauderdale,
Fla., in the early 1980s.

Mr. Simone was unapologetic about his personal association with the
mob boss.

"When I had problems, he was one of the people who stood behind me,"
Mr. Simone said in a 1988 interview before the start of a Common Pleas
Court murder trial in which he successfully defended Scarfo.

"I consider him a loyal friend to have."

Mr. Simone's career often had him clashing with federal prosecutors in
court and ducking federal investigators on the streets.

He was indicted four times by federal grand juries. Putting the lie to
the adage that a lawyer should never defend himself, he successfully
beat an income-tax-evasion charge in 1984 and a perjury case in 1986.

His defense in the tax-evasion case, in which authorities alleged he
had hidden assets and avoided the payment of nearly $1 million in
taxes, was classic Bobby Simone.

After the indictment was announced and reporters asked him about the
charges, he explained that his money had gone to pay gambling debts.

"Who was I supposed to pay, the IRS or the loan sharks?" he asked with
a look that said the answer was self-evident. "The interest is about
the same. The health aspect is a little different."

Mr. Simone, however, lost his last battle with the federal government
when he was convicted of racketeering and extortion charges in a 1992
case tied to the Scarfo mob. Authorities alleged he had become the
"unofficial consigliere" of the crime family, an allegation he
vehemently denied.

He subsequently pleaded guilty to a related income-tax-evasion charge,
and was sentenced to four years in prison and stripped of his license
to practice law.

Mr. Simone wrote extensively about the case and about what he
considered the government's abuse of the legal system by making deals
with criminal informants in his book The Last Mouthpiece: The Man Who
Dared To Defend the Mob.

A memoir that highlighted most of his major cases, the book was
published in 2001 after he had completed his sentence on the
racketeering and tax charges.

He eventually had his license to practice law restored, and was again
working as a defense lawyer when he was sidelined with the illness
that took his life.

"He was an outstanding lawyer who went toe to toe with the government
and never gave an inch," said Norris Gelman, a defense lawyer who
worked on cases with Mr. Simone. "He was the last of a breed. . . . He
knew tactics, he knew strategy, he knew how to cross-examine."

Many of today's young defense lawyers, Gelman said, are like "tax
accountants," well versed in the minutiae of deal making and the point
system judges use to level sentences, but often lost in front of a
jury.

"Bobby was not a tax accountant," Gelman said.

Even prosecutors, who investigated and built cases around what one
referred to as Mr. Simone's "dark side," said he was a master in the
courtroom.

"He was one of the best trial lawyers I ever went up against," said
Louis Pichini, a former federal prosecutor and Organized Crime Strike
Force attorney who won numerous battles with Simone, including the
major racketeering case that sent Scarfo and his top associates to
prison in 1988.

"When he was cross-examining a witness, he had an intuitive sense of
what to ask and, as important, when to stop asking," Pichini said. "It
was like a surgical strike. Get in and get out."

Robert Madden, a former federal prosecutor who later became a defense
lawyer, said Mr. Simone "was a legend . . . a great lawyer."

More important, Madden said, "he was a man of his word. If he told you
something, you could bank on it. That's the way it was going to be."

The son of a first-generation Italian American father and a mother
born in South Philadelphia, Mr. Simone grew up in the Logan section of
the city, attended Olney High School, and went on to Temple University
and Temple Law School.

In his book, he said that from the time he was a boy, he dreamed of
becoming a lawyer.

"Whenever I saw a courtroom scene in the movies and later on
television, I always imagined myself to be the lawyer representing the
underdog," he wrote. " . . . There was no other profession or business
that interested me."

He began practicing law in 1959, opening a small office in Center
City. After work, he would often stop into the Celebrity Room, a
famous Locust Street nightspot run by Reis.

They became friends, and she hired him to represent her in several
classic battles with the city and Capt. Clarence Ferguson of the
police vice squad, who was always trying to shut Reis' club down on
morals charges.

When Reis was implicated in the Pottsville heist, she turned to Mr.
Simone, who defended her through two trials. The first ended in a hung
jury. The second ended with a conviction that was overturned on
appeal. The charges against her were then dropped.

In the 1988 interview, Mr. Simone acknowledged that he often became
friends with his clients and also with individuals whose reputations
were less than pristine. These would include many prominent mob
figures, including Reis' boyfriend and codefendant in the Pottsville
case, Ralph "Junior" Staino.

"I can't help it," Mr. Simone said. "That's the way I am. . . . I've
had dinner with them. I'm not afraid to be seen with them."

Then he smiled and offered one of those crooked glances that were so
much a part of his courtroom style.

"Most have records as clean . . . as the judges in City Hall."

Mr. Simone acknowledged in his book that his lifestyle was often at
odds with his profession. He liked to drink and to gamble, and to
associate with people who shared those interests.

But he also contended that he was the victim of federal authorities
who targeted him because he was such a strong advocate for those he
considered "the underdog."

"I have paid a hefty price for my long-ago decision to take on the
causes of the most undesirable and unpopular among us," Mr. Simone
wrote in the prologue to his book. ". . . And while some of my former
clients currently sit in jail or have met ends as untimely as they
were grisly, I can tell you that many of them were, and still are, my
close friends."

Mr. Simone died after a long battle with chronic obstructive pulmonary
disease, according to his brother, Joseph.

In addition to his brother, he is survived by a son, Scott; a
daughter, Kimberly Ikehara; and two grandchildren.

A viewing will be held from 7 to 9 p.m. tomorrow and from 9:45 to
10:45 a.m. Saturday at the Baldi Funeral Home, 1331 S. Broad St. A
Funeral Mass will be said at 11:30 a.m. Saturday at St. Monica Roman
Catholic Church, 17th and Ritner Streets. Burial will be in Holy
Sepulchre Cemetery, Cheltenham.

Donations may be made to the American Lung Association, 303 S. 13th
St., Philadelphia 19107.

Contact staff writer George Anastasia at 856-779-3846 or
ganas...@phillynews.com.
Find this article at:
http://www.philly.com/inquirer/home_top_stories/8450857.html
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