Las Vegas D.A. Hardliner Unlikely to Give Paris Hilton Special Treatment

Las Vegas D.A. Hardliner Unlikely to Give Paris Hilton Special Treatment

(Sept. 1, 2010 – Los Angeles, CA)  According to leading attorney DEBRA OPRI, Paris Hilton is about to discover what O.J. Simpson already knows – when it comes to justice, Las Vegas can be a lot tougher than Los Angeles.

Opri, the Los Angeles-based legal expert best known for high-profile cases from the Jackson family to James Brown and Anna Nicole Smith, is certain (L.V.) District Attorney David Roger is highly unlikely to offer Paris a plea bargain deal that won’t include formal probation with mandatory community service which may involve (minimal)  jail time on her felony cocaine possession charge

Can you imagine Paris Hilton picking up garbage on the side of the road in Las Vegas? “I can,” says Opri.

(Note:  The veteran Clark County, Nevada prosecutor – David Roger – put Simpson behind bars on robbery charges after the former football great beat murder charges in Los Angeles.)

Hilton is facing a felony drug possession charge that possibly could carry a prison sentence of one to four years. The man who arrested Hilton, Lt. Dennis Flynn, said a small plastic “bindle” of the drug fell out of her purse when she reached for a tube of lip balm.

Hilton claimed the purse she was carrying, where the .8 grams of cocaine was found, did not belong to her.  She reportedly told a Las Vegas police lieutenant that she had borrowed the purse from a friend, but acknowledged owning money, credit cards and a broken tablet of the prescription drug Albuterol that was also found in the bag.

The Vegas bust was the third encounter in three months with law enforcement for Hilton. “You’d better believe that even though Hilton’s other infractions and as well as reported possession of illegal drugs – and her 2007 DUIs for which she went to Jail – were outside of Nevada jurisdiction, the presiding Judge will certainly take these earlier brushes with the law into serious consideration when Paris is in his court.  It’s going to be extremely difficult for Paris to get out of these charges, even with the brilliant legal skills of her experienced criminal defense lawyer,” says OPRI.

Las Vegas D.A. Hardliner Unlikely to Give Paris Hilton Special Treatment

Debra Opri – KFWB on Lindsey Lohan

Debra Opri – KFWB on Lindsey Lohan

Debra Opri – KFWB on Lindsey Lohan

debra opri on lindsay lohan KFWB

Debra Opri – KFWB on Lindsey Lohan

Debra Opri on Today’s CELEBRITY JUSTICE NEWS

Debra Opri on Today’s CELEBRITY JUSTICE NEWS

Today’s CELEBRITY JUSTICE NEWS

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Debra Opri

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Debra Opri on Today’s CELEBRITY JUSTICE NEWS

The death of Mitrice Richardson

The death of Mitrice Richardson

Family law expert DEBRA OPRI speaks about the preventable death of Mitrice Richardson on KFWB NewsTalk 980 during height of morning drive.

DEBRA OPRI speaks about the preventable death of Mitrice Richardson

The death of Mitrice Richardson

Tonight Live Debra Opri on Jane Velez-Mitchell on HLN

Tonight Live Debra Opri on Jane Velez-Mitchell on HLN

Tonight Live Debra Opri on Jane Velez-Mitchell on HLN as her key expert covering the news of the day.  Don’t forget to tune in!

Tonight Live Debra Opri on Jane Velez-Mitchell on HLN

Riveting analysis by Debra Opri tonight on Issues with Jane Velez-Mitchell

Riveting analysis by Debra Opri tonight on Issues with Jane Velez-Mitchell

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Lindsay Lohan Will Not Get Out of Jail Time, Says Expert

Lindsay Lohan Will Not Get Out of Jail Time, Says Expert

by Marilyn Beck and Stacy Jenel Smith • July 9, 2010

Think Lindsay Lohan will get out of most of her 90-day jail sentence? Think again.

Debra Opri“It’s county jail. If she were a regular Jane Doe, she might get processed out in 23, 30 days. But the county knows it’s going to be looked at. They don’t want people to say she got out too fast,” believes leading Hollywood-based celebrity attorney Debra Opri. She considers it more likely that the trouble-plagued starlet will serve 60-70 percent of her sentence for violating the terms of her probation on counts of driving under the influence and reckless driving.

“It’s going to be hell on earth,” adds the lawyer known for numerous high-profile clients including the Jackson Family and James Brown. “I don’t think there’s going to be any special treatment, but they will take steps to protect her. Many people in there would like to say, ‘I beat up Lindsay Lohan’” — or worse.

Opri is definitely part of the camp that believes Superior Court Judge Marsha Revel’s harsh sentence will ultimately prove beneficial for the 24-year-old, who flouted the law by missing seven court-ordered alcohol counseling sessions (not to mention the obscenity she had painted on her middle fingernail at her hearing this week). “In my opinion, she will survive this and will be like Robert Downey Jr. She is too good of an actress, too good,” says Opri, who’d love to see Downey meet with Lohan. “I believe she is going to overcome the addictions and thank the judge eventually. If it weren’t for this, the system’s tough love, she would die of addiction. She was headed for death in a matter of years.”

When Lohan went through rehab in 2007, her one-time movie mom, Jamie Lee Curtis, told us that “I have great confidence in her talent, and I have great confidence in her intelligence and in her ability to make good choices.”

Curtis herself went through her own lost period with cocaine and booze — though certainly never as publicly or with the severity of Lohan. She has talked about bonding with her father, ’50s matinee idol Tony Curtis, by doing cocaine together over a period of time. When she realized the habit had become destructive and decided to quit, their closeness evaporated for years — but she became wildly successful in both her personal and professional lives. Here’s hoping Lohan looks to her example.

Source: http://www.jaxobserver.com/2010/07/09/lindsay-lohan-will-not-get-out-of-jail-time-says-expert/

Lindsay Lohan Will Not Get Out of Jail Time, Says Expert

Celebrity Trials…. Why the Celebrity Must Testify

by Debra Opri – Attorney and Legal Analyst

Our reality today turns upon what we see and hear on television and the internet. All this information…. in a moment of time Everything fast. Nowhere to hide. A world that has become so small, that even a trial is seen and experienced as it unravels before us. Celebrity trials are no different and certainly more examined in the brilliant glare of the media’s bright lights. No longer tucked far away in a little courtroom, to be read about in the newsprint after editors have eclipsed the visual demonstrations of the emotions of the words from the examining eyes of reporters interpreting everything that’s said, done, and shown, we live to know everything about the celebrity…. and to judge for ourselves, their guilt or innocence, live on television.

All too often in recent days, we have seen the celebrities fall to their knees before the eyes of the law, and to be judged by a jury of their ‘peer’, really, though, just regular folk who don’t have any idea what kind of life this celebrity who stands before them really has… certainly not theirs.

We have recently seen Winona Ryder sit through her own criminal trial for theft. She sat there as witness after witness, and each piece of evidence was shown to the jury. She just sat there as we all wondered, watching on television each night….what is she going to say when she testifies? Will she explain herself? Will we believe her? She did not testify, though. She just sat there, and when the verdict came in, she was found guilty. All of us thought, if she was going to go to trial, why didn’t she testify? Why wouldn’t she tell her side of the story? If she has nothing to say, we wondered, well then, I guess she must be guilty. Of course, a juror would never admit this, because of a jury admonition that states you cannot hold it against a defendant if they do not testify. But we are also human beings, and reasonable, rationale conclusions are always the rule of law in our very human thought processes.

There are other celebrities going to trial soon: Michael Jackson, Robert Blake, Phil Spector, and the new ‘media’ celebrity, Scott Peterson. There is an ongoing trial now, that of Martha Stewart, in a New York courtroom.

And the question is: Will Martha Stewart testify? I hope so, because everyone…including that jury…wants to hear her side of the story. I mean, we’re only human. If it were us, we argue, we would testify, if we had nothing to hide. But let’s be fair. We do want to know what she was thinking when she sold her stocks, and when she talked to the federal investigators? And, what did she really tell the investigators? Why did she talk with them? What did she know about the company at the time she sold those stocks? Did she lie to cover it up? And did she really make those comments to her secretary and best friend, and what did she say to Fanuell, and was she as ‘mean’ and ‘cruel’ as he depicted her? Well, we are thinking, if she doesn’t testify, the jury will have only one version – the government’s – to rely upon in their analysis of this celebrity. And we will never know the ‘truth’.

I was a new attorney preparing to do my first trial, when I asked my mother how, if she was a juror hearing this case, I could best make the jury understand that my client was innocent, and whether or not I should have the client testify? Her words are with me today. She told me, “there are always 3 truths: your truth, my truth, and the real truth.” She continued, “it is the jury’s job to decide which truth they will believe. Always make it easy for them, let them hear from everyone and let them decide. If your client doesn’t testify, they’ll never really know his side, will they?”

My mother’s common sense approach is not unique, but it is lost to a world of individuals who don’t have that much common sense anymore. Mostly us lawyers, folks. We seem to forget that those 12 people in the jury box aren’t stupid, they just don’t go to court everyday because they’re in the real world dealing with real people, and when you’re being lied to, you kind of know it.

Well, the same goes for all those celebrities that are getting dragged into court lately. They may be somewhat different from the rest of us, in that they get paid more to work, and instead of typing all day, or sweeping floors, or waiting tables, they are in hair and makeup and learning lines, or being fitted for a photo shoot or whatever. But one thing is certain. The celebrity is no longer a mysterious person hiding behind studio power machines who print what’s good for the star. In many instances, it is the media that is now the enemy of the celebrity, for their quest is not to make the celebrity shine, but to rub away at the sparkle and lay bare for the public the truth they have uncovered. The celebrity is more alone today than ever before, for it is now on the shoulders of the individual celebrity to fight their own battle of the truth and to speak directly to the public, and in the instance of a celebrity trial, to the jury. Now that the media and internet coverage is immediate and spontaneous, we need to understand that the jury can no longer rely upon the aura of the celebrity, but on the testimony the celebrity provides to challenge what has been said against them.

As the Martha Stewart trial has unraveled, I have found it striking to speak with those of the media who have meticulously outlined the evidence and testimony they witnessed as an audience member in the courtroom. They would listen and then, acting as a juror, but without the restraints, go out and tell the public how bad it was for her and how it was certain that she would be found guilty. They arguably provided a great service to the many people out there, by determining – prior to the jury verdict – how simply ‘guilty’ Martha is. They have also, however, done a great disservice to Ms. Stewart, by simultaneously with their findings, certifiably state that it is highly unlikely that a celebrity of her stature could be found guilty, despite her guilt. With press like this, maybe the old Hollywood ways are better?

While the days of a star like Fatty Arbuckle at trial for the death of a young wannabee star, having been allegedly raped with a coke bottle at a ‘Hollywood party’ are gone in terms of the privacy he was afforded throughout his trial, we still have celebrities who will experience the criminal trial, only this time on television, with another kind of jury – the one called the public The ever-present face on television, in the movies, in newspaper and magazines… they,re everywhere. It’s the way these trials are covered that is different. Coverage that guarantees that nothing will be left hidden from view.

While Fatty Arbuckle was never convicted of this crime, his career was, in a way, over. And, while there are many other criminal cases to look at, most recently in our generation, that of OJ Simpson, we now know that, no matter what the outcome, the charges and trial will destroy any celebrity…. who doesn’t fight back.

What I mean to say is, that all of us, no matter what age, economic level, or part of the world we live in, expect someone to fight for themselves. They expect the accused to come out fighting and to tell their side of the story. They expect it. The law may tell them they can’t judge the accused for not testifying, but be assured, this is an area of the law that no one will ever be able to police since the juror need only state they did not take into consideration the fact that the accused did not testify.

I am convinced that Martha Stewart’s only chance at being acquitted is her taking the stand and testifying…….. she must testify. She has no other choice. The public won’t accept anything less. Watch closely all you other celebrities….. listen and learn.

From the courtroom to your living room, this has been another edition of THE OPRI OPINION.

Joy Behar Show – June 9, 2010

Recently I was placed as the legal expert on the Joy Behar Show panel.  Speaking on issues surrounding Gary Coleman, I was joined by Victor Perillo, Coleman family spokesperson and Kevin Frazier, weekend anchor “Entertainment Tonight”.

To view the show follow the link below:

http://www.facebook.com/home.php?#!/video/video.php?v=685124807481&ref=mf

BEHAR: Gary Coleman`s will has been made public and the actor said only true friends are welcome at his funeral. No Hollywood hangers-on. Also his death-bed photos which are out today were reportedly sold for as much as $10,000 each.

With me to discuss this is Victor Perillo, Coleman`s former agent and spokesman for his parents; Debra Opri, defense attorney who has represented James Brown and Michael Jackson`s parents; and Kevin Frazier, weekend anchor at “Entertainment Tonight”. Welcome to the show you guys.

To see the rest of the show’s transcript visit:

http://archives.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/1006/09/joy.01.html