Barry Cohen (attorney)
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Barry Cohen is a criminal and personal injury attorney in Florida's Tampa Bay Area, and one of the best known attorneys in Florida. He is characterized as a fighter for his aggressive legal tactics.[1][2]
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[edit] Legal methods
Cohen has a media savvy, especially useful when his clients have a high public profile and are uncomfortable with the extra publicity drawn to their case. While many attorneys ignore the media's coverage, Cohen typically goes on a sophisticated "media offensive". Cohen has been quoted as saying that "defenders have to try to balance an inherent media advantage enjoyed by prosecutors."[3]
His history of winning cases and the large legal fees he is now able to command have put Cohen in the position of being able to choose the cases he wants to handle, including accepting clients that cannot afford his fees such as school teacher, Jennifer Porter.[3] As have many excellent defense lawyers, Cohen began taking personal injury cases. "The same investigative, negotiating and trial skills that made him an outstanding defense lawyer also made him an excellent personal injury lawyer."[3]
[edit] Sample cases
William A. LaTorre, a Clearwater, Florida , chiropractor at the wheel of his 35-foot (11 m) cigarette boat on Memorial Day weekend in 1989, collided with a 17-foot (5 m) boat full of teenagers. Four teenagers were killed and several more injured. LaTorre was charged with four counts of vessel homicide. Cohen painted a picture in the media as an unavoidable tragic event for everyone concerned. He portrayed LaTorre's arrest as politically motivated, and managed press conferences with LaTorre's tearful wife.[3] LaTorre was eventually acquitted of all four deaths.[1]
Cohen spent considerable effort, ultimately successful, to remove United States Attorney Robert Merkle from office, starting in 1987.[4] Merkle was removed from office in 1989.
In 1992, former Chief Judge Dennis Alverez of Hillsborough County hired Cohen to represent him in an FBI inquiry into his handling of a legal dispute over the disposition of former Tampa Bay Buccaneers owner Hugh Culverhouse's multi-million dollar estate.[5]
In 1994, Cohen represented Sheriff Everett Rice and the Pinellas County Sheriff's Office when it was threatened with a lawsuit by former U.S. Attorney Robert Merkle for damages stemming from a false arrest charge after Merkle was acquitted of battery in a traffic confrontation. The Pinellas County Commission voted to hire Cohen as a special counsel at Rice’s request.[6]
In 2005, Barry Cohen represented Pinellas County, Florida Judge George Greer when Greer was threatened with impeachment for his decisions in the Terri Schiavo case.[7]
Jennifer Porter hired Barry Cohen before she announced she was the driver of the Toyota Echo involved in a hit and run accident that killed two children and put two in the hospital in March of 2004. When she drove away after the collision with the four siblings, ages 2 to 13, she hid for two days and acquired Cohen as her attorney before she stepped forward in a carefully managed press conference along with press releases. Initially she was charged with two counts of vehicular homicide (carrying a maximum sentence of 15 years in prison) and leaving the scene of an accident. She eventually pleaded guilty to a felony, but did not receive a prison sentence. Her sentence was reduced to two years house arrest through a judge's ruling engineered by Cohen.[8][3] After she had completed all but six months of her sentence, Porter requested that her teaching certificate be restored. Cohen said her excellent character references plus the expert testimony provided through Cohen's efforts, explaining how she suffered psychological trauma, testimony that convinced the judge to give her house arrest, should also persuade the state panel to let Porter maintain her teaching certification.[9]
In September of 2007, Barry Cohen was hired briefly to represent Nick Bollea, son of professional wrestler Hulk Hogan. Bollea, age 17, was driving a yellow Toyota Supra at high speed when he lost control, according to police. His passenger was severely injured.[10] "A lawyer can drop a client, just as a client can drop an attorney", Cohen is reported to have said, making a general statement when announcing his withdrawal from the case.[11]
[edit] Aisenberg case
In 1997 Steven and Marlene Aisenberg hired Barry Cohen two days after their five-month-old baby, Sabrina, disappeared from her crib in the Aisenberg home. Baby Sabrina still has not been found and the reason for her disappearance remains a mystery. From the beginning the parents were the only suspects the prosecution investigators pursued.[12]
Cohen, as the Aisenberg's attorney, appeared with the Aisenbergs as a guest on Larry King Live in 2001 along with several other guests to discuss the still unsolved case. The Aisenberg case has continued to receiving national attention in 2007, ten years after the child has been missing.
Cohen said the police have a right to investigate the parents of a missing child, but it was law enforcement's continued and relentless focus solely on the parents to the exclusion of other possibilities and leads that was problematic and abusive in this case. For example, prosecution investigators, having received an illegally obtained warrant, recorded over 255 private conversations in the Aisenberg home. The tapes were inaudible for the most part and none provided any evidence to prosecute the Aisenbergs. The tapes were transcribed into transcripts for the judge and for presentation to a grand jury.[13]
[edit] Hyde Amendment
Eventually in 2007, the charges against the Aisenbergs were dropped for lack of evidence. In U.S. v. Aisenberg, Cohen sued the federal government for malicious prosecution on behalf of the Aisenbergs for reimbursement of legal fees under the Hyde Amendment, a federal statute enacted in 1997 to pay the legal fees of defendants who were victims of prosecutorial abuse. On February 1, 2003, the Aisenberg's were awarded $2.9 million to pay the legal fees for the then five-year-old case, the largest award in the ten years since the Hyde Amendment was enacted. In fact, very rarely is suing for reimbursement of legal fees under the Hyde Amendment successful. As of 2007, the award remains the largest to date. Although Cohen did not receive the $7 million requested in the suit, the amount awarded was far more than the $250,000 the prosecution was originally willing to pay.[14]
In a 98-page document, Judge Merryday of the Middle District of Florida reviewed the case and explained why he ordered the federal government to pay the record-setting $2.9 million in legal fees and expenses under the Hyde Amendment. The judge called the prosecution's case “vexatious, frivolous, or in bad faith.” The judge's lengthy decision is highly critical of the prosecutor's tactics. Further, the judge ordered the government to release to the public the grand jury transcripts as “the public is entitled to know” about the “misdirected and overzealous prosecutorial exertions” in this case.[15]
The controversy surrounding the Aisenberg case has been covered on numerous media outlets, including the CBS program 48 Hours [16] as well as the Oprah Winfrey Show, Dateline NBC, Good Morning America, and the Today Show. [17]
[edit] Other noteworthy clients
- Admitted mobster Henry Hill. Hill was portrayed by actor Ray Liotta in the Martin Scorsese film Good Fellas and was charged with the beating of a Tampa business owner over purported gambling debts. [18]
- Baseball star Gary Sheffield, who was charged by the police with fighting and resisting arrest. [19]
- Former Hillsborough County Chief Justice Arden Mays Merckle, who was accused of violating the civil rights of former Miami Dolphins running back Jack Harper. [20]
- Hillsborough County State Attorney E.J. Salcines, who was investigated by then-U.S. Attorney Bob Merkle for alleged public corruption. [21]
[edit] Community activism
Barry Cohen was so deeply moved by the Denzel Washington-directed film The Great Debaters in 2008 that he launched an initiative in Tampa Bay to bring Hillsborough County its first-ever Urban Debate League for at-risk schoolchildren. He's also lobbying to air the movie in every public school across the United States. On May 15, 2008 Cohen underwrote a special screening of The Great Debaters for 250 underpriviliged Tampa children, along with special guests Doug Williams (the first African-American quarterback to win the Super Bowl) and actress Jurnee Smollett, who won the 2008 NAACP Image Award for her performance as the female lead in the film.[22]
[edit] Bar admissions
- Florida Bar, 1966
- Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals - 1973
- Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, 1973
- U.S. Supreme Court, 1973
- District of Columbia, 1981
- Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals, 1981
[edit] Education
- B.A. degree from Florida State University in 1962.[1]
- LL.B. from Mercer University in 1966.
[edit] References
- ^ a b People involved. The St Petersburg Times (September 10 1999). Retrieved on 2007-11-01.
- ^ Profile: Attorney Barry Cohen. Tampa Bay Life (1991). Retrieved on 2007-11-09.
- ^ a b c d e Courting the Media: Public Relations for the Accused and the Accuser. Greenwood Press. Retrieved on 2007-11-01.
- ^ Stormy Prosecutor Roils Political Waters in Florida. New York Times (January 20 1987). Retrieved on 2007-11-13.
- ^ Ex-judge hires lawyer with a high profile. St Petersburg Times (May 8 2002). Retrieved on 2007-11-13.
- ^ Merkle for the Defense. Florida Business/Tampa Bay (November 1989). Retrieved on 2007-11-12.
- ^ D. C. Docket No. CV-05-00530. abstractappeal.com (March 25 2005). Retrieved on 2007-11-12.
- ^ The Jennifer Porter Case. Tampa Tribune (November 5 2005). Retrieved on 2007-11-09.
- ^ Child Killer Wants teaching Certificate Restored (April 19 2007). Retrieved on 2007-11-09.
- ^ Barry Cohen out as Bollea's attorney (August 28 2007). Retrieved on 2007-11-09.
- ^ 2nd Lawyer Now Off Hogan Case. Tampa Tribune Online (September 19 2007). Retrieved on 2007-11-01.
- ^ The Problem with the Aisenberg's. Glenn Bleck official site. Premiere Radio Networks (2001). Retrieved on 2007-11-09. (article no longer available)
- ^ Larry King Live - What Happened to Sabrina Aisenberg?. CNN (March 7 2001). Retrieved on 2007-11-09.
- ^ Aisenberg bill for feds: $2.9-million. Saint Petersburg Times (February 1 2003). Retrieved on 2007-11-09.
- ^ Punch & Jurists - The Cutting Edge of Federal Criminal Law. fedcrimlaw.com (May 5 2003). Retrieved on 2007-11-10.
- ^ Where's Baby Sabrina?. CBS News (January 13 2005). Retrieved on 2005-01-13.
- ^ Events in the disappearance of Sabrina Aisenberg. St. Petersburg Times (September 1999). Retrieved on 1999-09-10.
- ^ Profile: Attorney Barry Cohen. Tampa Bay Life (1991). Retrieved on 2007-11-09.
- ^ Profile: Attorney Barry Cohen. Tampa Bay Life (1991). Retrieved on 2007-11-09.
- ^ Profile: Attorney Barry Cohen. Tampa Bay Life (1991). Retrieved on 2007-11-09.
- ^ Profile: Attorney Barry Cohen. Tampa Bay Life (1991). Retrieved on 2007-11-09.
- ^ "The Great Debaters". WTSP-TV (CBS affiliate) (May 15 2008). Retrieved on 2008-05-15.
[edit] External links
- "The Great Debaters"; 250 Children Attend Barry Cohen's Free Movie Screening
- Tampa lawyer argues for launching urban debate league
- Hit and Run—links to Jennifer Porter articles
- Merkle for the Defense
- The Law Firm of Cohen, Jayson & Foster, P.A.

