Blake verdict doesn’t
feel like justice
Actor wasn’t acquitted
in court of public opinion
![]() Nick Ut / EPA via Sipa Press Some courtroom observers feel that the case was so flimsy that Robert Blake didn't need attorney Gerald Schwartzbach -- that he could have won even with a public defender. |
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In the 1967 film, “In Cold Blood,” Robert Blake played a petty criminal who, along with a partner, murders a family in Kansas. They’re arrested, tried, sentenced to death and executed.
That true-life crime drama, based on a book by Truman Capote, would have been vastly different had Blake’s character Perry Smith escaped the gallows in the final scene. Of course, he didn’t, and the audience walked away satisfied.
On Wednesday at about 2:30 p.m. Pacific Time, the audience did not walk away satisfied. It was left confused, frustrated, even angry. This was not a movie based on real life, but real life itself, and this time Blake went free in the end.
“In Cold Blood” felt like justice. This did not.
I have no idea who shot and killed Bonny Lee Bakley, but I do know that Robert Blake was bursting with anger and motive. He shot off his mouth more than once about wanting to do in his wife. According to Bonny Lee’s sister Margerry, who was interviewed on Court TV Wednesday after the verdict came down in favor of Blake, the actor told Bonny Lee that he was going to kill her, and that he would get away with it because “I’m Robert Blake.”
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Now, it’s a bit silly to think Blake’s global celebrity kept him from going to prison, because he didn’t really have global celebrity until this case. Before this he was a Hollywood oddity, a former child actor in “Our Gang” comedies, a promising young thespian in pictures such as “Tell Them Willie Boy Is Here” and the star of the TV series “Baretta.” But he was more well-known for his troublesome personality than his credits.
Yet he was the recipient of “not guilty” verdicts on two of three counts Wednesday — and a hung jury on the third, with the jury leaning 11-1 for acquittal — because the prosecutors had a weak case, not because he was clearly innocent.
Blake has used up reservoir of public goodwill
No, Blake will enjoy the kind of post-criminal trial life that O.J. Simpson has experienced, although to a much lesser extent because his involvement in the actual killing is much less clear. Still, the public will view him as a man who got away with murder.
I’ve been to Vitello’s, the Studio City restaurant outside of which the murder took place, many times. I frequented the place well before it became infamous. The last time I went was in January, and the infamous pasta dish named after Blake was still on the menu. People now go to Vitello’s for the same reason they used to go to Mezzaluna in Brentwood, where Ron Goldman worked and where Nicole Simpson had her last meal.
But now that Blake has been set free, the attitude toward him won’t be as trivial as a plate of pasta. Blake has already used up his reservoir of favorable opinion that comes with fame. Now folks will look at him as somebody who pulled a fast one and got away with it. He hated his wife, he felt she was an unfit mother for their child, she’s dead and out of his life, and he emerged relatively unscathed.
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