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Saturday, October 31, 2009 - 4:36 PM
It all started with a dead fish with a red rose in its mouth.
In 2002, freelance reporter Anita Busch had found both items on the
smashed windshield of her car along with a note that simply said,
"Stop." At the time, Busch was writing separate articles
about actor Steven Segal's involvement with the Mafia and former
super-agent and short-lived Disney president Michael Ovitz's
difficulties re-establishing himself as an agent. Busch reported the incident to the police, who initiated an investigation. Later
that year an FBI informant secretly recorded a career criminal named
Alexander Proctor, 62, admitting that he put the fish, the rose, and
the note on Busch's car, and that he had done it for Los Angeles
private eye Anthony Pellicano. In that same conversation,
the German-born Proctor, who has several drug convictions on his
record, bragged that he "could sell a million of 'em," referring to
Ecstasy pills.  Anthony Pellicano
As
a result of Proctor's incriminating statements on tape, FBI agents
obtained a warrant to search Anthony Pellicano's office on Sunset
Boulevard in Los Angeles. Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire In November 2003, agents found two hand grenades, a brick of C-4 plastic explosive, and $200,000. Pellicano pleaded guilty to weapons charges and was sentenced to 30 months in prison. But the truly explosive material was uncovered in a subsequent FBI raid on his office.
Following a lead that Anita Busch's telephones had been tapped, agents
returned to Pellicano's office on January 14, 2003, looking for
evidence of wiretapping. The agents penetrated
Pellicano's "War Room" and seized "11 computers, including five Macs,
23 external hard drives, a Palm V digital assistant, 52 diskettes, 34 Zip drives, 92 CD-Roms, and two DVDs," according to Vanity Fair.
This equipment contained "3.868 terabytes of data," the New York Times
reported, "the equivalent of two billion pages of double-spaced text."
The content of these electronic files was Pellicano's work product as
Hollywood's wiretapper to the stars, illegally intercepted telephone
conversations of the rich and famous. Some of these wiretaps were ordered by powerful attorneys and executives seeking an unfair advantage in legal disputes. Some of the intercepted conversations concerned personal matters, like divorce and child custody disputes. Much of it was business as usual, Hollywood-style. All of it was obtained illegally. As news of the seizure of Pellicano's files spread like brush fire, people in the "biz" became very nervous. Many of Hollywood's top movers and shakers had used Pellicano's services or had retained attorneys who did. If the FBI listened to those tapes, indictments would certainly follow. Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire Hollywood held its breath, waiting to see where the ax would fall.
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