Anthony Pellicano, former celebrity detective, was sentenced
Monday to 15 years in prison in his long-standing trials on wiretapping and
racketeering charges and will only be eligible for release when in his late
seventies.
Anthony Pellicano’s trial was delayed for years but it
finally commenced in early March in Los
Angeles. Once known as “private eye to the stars,”
Pellicano stood trial for racketeering, fraud and conspiracy, as the mastermind
behind an elaborate scheme of wiretapping, briberies to law-enforcement
officials, telephone company employees and others in order to uncover
compromising information for clients preparing themselves for divorce, civil
lawsuits and even criminal charges.
Prosecutors said the 64-year-old wiretapped such
high-profile individuals as Sylvester Stallone and Keith Carradine and bribed
police officers to check police databases for information on comedians such as
Garry Shandling and Kevin Nealon. Celebrities, Hollywood
executives and attorneys were both clients and victims in Pellicano’s
operation.
Earlier this year, he was convicted in two criminal trials
of a combined 78 counts, including wiretapping, racketeering, conspiracy and
wire fraud.
U.S. District Judge Dale S. Fischer sentenced Pellicano
Monday, December 15, to 15 years in prison and condemned him for his
“reprehensible behavior. Probation officials had recommended five years and ten
months behind bars, not sufficient for the wiretapping scheme he ran for many
years “eagerly, sometimes maliciously, and with pride,” as characterized by
Fischer.
Prosecutors had previously asked for a 15-year 8-month
sentence.
Pellicano and two other defendants, former Los Angeles police Sgt. Mark Arneson and former
telephone company employee Ray Turner, were also ordered to forfeit a total of
$2 million. Arneson and Turner are scheduled to be sentenced in January.
In November, Fischer sentenced attorney Terry Christensen,
Pellicano’s co-conspirator, to three years in prison. Probation officials had
recommended house arrest for him. Fourteen persons have been charged in the
wiretapping case and half of these pleaded guilty to charges including perjury
and conspiracy, including film director John McTiernan and former Hollywood Records
president Robert Pfeifer.
Pellicano represented himself at the federal trials. He only
enlisted the help of attorneys before receiving his sentence. Defense attorney
Steve Gruel plans to appeal Pellicano’s conviction.
The former sleuth was previously sentenced to jail time in
2003 after pleading guilty to possession of illegal weapons; he was released
from prison in 2006 and then indicted on the wiretapping charges.
The drama that unfolded in court and the aftermath are to
find their way on our television screens reports Variety, as Pellicano’s wife
and three daughters wish to star in a reality show focusing on their attempts
to restore his detective agency.