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-   -   Johnnie Cochran's Funeral: He was much more than just OJ's lawyer (https://gfy.com/showthread.php?t=453119)

CashLikeWhoa_Mike 04-07-2005 07:20 AM

Johnnie Cochran's Funeral: He was much more than just OJ's lawyer
 
There was plenty of heated discussion on GFY last week when famed attorney Johnnie Cochran died of a brain tumor. Whether you loved him or hated him, you gotta respect the fact that he did much more important legal work throughout his career than just the Simpson trial.
__________________________________________________ ____________

This is today's Los Angeles Times article on Cochran's funeral:
(from link: http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la...home-headlines)

An A-List Turnout Does Cochran Justice

Celebrity clients are among 5,000 admirers saying farewell to the L.A. attorney who fought for civil rights and police reform.

By Carla Hall
Times Staff Writer

April 7, 2005

In a funeral overflowing with guests and speakers, emotions and stories, Johnnie L. Cochran Jr., the charismatic attorney who became a household name after successfully defending O.J. Simpson, was eulogized as a man who saw his real calling in the civil rights cases that he undertook on his "journey to justice."

The 3 1/2 -hour funeral, as extravagant as Cochran's colorful suits, lasted longer than it took the jury to deliberate the fate of Simpson, his most famous client, who sat among the 5,000 worshipers at the West Angeles Cathedral in South Los Angeles.

"The nation needs to understand why we're all here today?. Johnnie Cochran represented to us justice personified," said the Rev. Al Sharpton, noting that when the Los Angeles-based attorney made a second home in New York, where Sharpton lives, he worked on police brutality and racial-profiling cases, among others.

"Johnnie Cochran was to this era what Thurgood Marshall was to the era before," Sharpton said, referring to the civil rights attorney and first black Supreme Court justice who was one of Cochran's idols.

Directing his gaze at Simpson, Sharpton continued, "With all due respect to you, Brother Simpson, when we heard about the acquittal, we weren't clapping for O.J., we were clapping for Johnnie."

The mourners roared their approval.

"We were clapping because for decades our brothers, our cousins, our uncles had to stand in the well with no one to stand up for them. And finally a black man came and said, if it don't fit ? you must acquit."

The mourners gave a standing ovation as Sharpton delivered Cochran's most famous line from the Simpson trial.

It was one of many dramatic moments during a funeral that, like Cochran, was an engaging and indefatigable mix ? funny and poignant, smart and passionate.

Dr. Calvin Butts, pastor of Abyssinian Baptist Church in New York, one of the oldest and most influential black churches in the nation ? who, along with Cochran's pastor, Dr. William S. Epps of Second Baptist Church in Los Angeles, presided ? gently but repeatedly urged speakers to be brief.

But the people who came to eulogize Cochran just couldn't abide by that. Cochran was just too rich and vivid a figure in their lives. After all, among those gathered under one elegant and expansive roof, were two preachers and former presidential candidates (Jesse Jackson and Sharpton), a music mogul and former Cochran client (Sean "P. Diddy" Combs), a congressman (Charles B. Rangel), a lawyer turned TV personality (Star Jones Reynolds) and the man whose eventual court victory Cochran considered his most important (Geronimo Pratt, now Geronimo ji Jaga).

And those were just some of the two dozen people who spoke to the assembled mourners, including his wife, Dale Mason Cochran, his sisters, his children, and his father, Johnnie L. Cochran Sr. At the front of the church lay the polished coffin covered with white roses, begonias and gladiola. In addition to a choir from the Second Baptist Church, Stevie Wonder performed a song, crooning gently, "I'll be your comfort through the pain?. "

Scattered throughout the church were politicians and activists, members of his law firm, business tycoons and the people who took care of him during his illness. Seated along the wall were 225 red-jacketed members of Kappa Alpha Psi, the venerable black fraternity, who rose from their seats when called upon, creating a blanket of color.

Film director Spike Lee, businessman and former Laker star Magic Johnson, actress Angela Bassett, Los Angeles Councilman Bernard C. Parks, Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Los Angeles), attorney Gloria Allred and F. Lee Bailey, a former co-counsel on the Simpson criminal case, were present. Among the people who sat behind the pulpit and waited for their turns to speak were attorneys Barry Scheck and Peter Neufeld, who worked with Cochran and also formed a law firm with him to tackle civil rights cases.

Neufeld recalled Cochran taking the case of the Haitian immigrant, Abner Louima, who was brutally sodomized by New York police. Neufeld said that in that case as in others, Cochran believed that it wasn't enough to win a large settlement. He also demanded reforms.

"He thought this would be an opportunity not to just deal with police brutality," he said, but to challenge the policy that allowed police officers to decline interrogation for 48 hours. The policy has since been changed.

When Butts called on Cochran's clients in the audience to stand, the group across the main floor of the church included Simpson and Louima.

"I believe Johnnie was a voice for those who could not speak for themselves," Louima said as he listened to the service. Cochran won him an $8.75-million settlement. Louima now lives in Miami. "Besides being my lawyer, he was my friend," he said.

Michael Jackson ? who was represented by Cochran in his financial settlement with sexual-abuse accusers in 1993 ? sat with his current attorney, Thomas A. Mesereau Jr. After the funeral, he declined to speak about Cochran as he was ushered to a waiting car. But Simpson, who departed the funeral as photographers snapped away and onlookers called his name, spoke glowingly of the architect of his criminal defense.

"This turnout shows what he meant to the community," Simpson said. "He was a Christian man. He just happened to be a great lawyer."

In the pulpit, speakers mixed scriptural verse with anecdotes. Mayor James K. Hahn spoke of going to the River Jordan in Israel on a trip with Cochran.

"He didn't just love justice or admire justice, he did justice, he achieved justice, he fought for justice," said Hahn, referring to the theme of the service, "Journey to Justice," which is also the title of Cochran's first memoir.

"He was a commander of the court and a maestro of the jury," said Connie Rice, a co-director of the Advancement Project, an organization she started with former colleagues from the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund. She said the second phone call she got after she joined the NAACP was from Cochran, who offered his help. Noting that the NAACP was once Marshall's law firm, Cochran told her, "Anything you want, you call me."

Family members, including his daughters Melodie and Tiffany, and his son Jonathan, spoke eloquently of how they shared him with the world but knew he cherished them above all else.

"He loved basking in the sunshine of celebrity," said William Baker Sr., the husband of Cochran's sister, Pearl Cochran Baker, and his longtime friend. "But home with his family was where he came to exhale."

Friends marveled at the closeness of Cochran and his wife, whom they credited with taking extraordinary care of him.

Cochran loved big Southern dinners and was a "devourer of barbecue," as Baker put it. He wanted to take singing lessons, but he "suffered from extreme rhythm deprivation," Baker said.

Battling the effects of the brain tumor that eventually killed him, Cochran struggled through physical therapy last summer so he could walk his daughter, Tiffany, down the aisle at her wedding, unassisted.

"He did it as only my dad could do it," Tiffany Cochran Edwards told the mourners. "With grace and style, elegance and his signature smile. I learned more about determination that day than I did from any trial," she said, her voice wavering.

Combs recalled Cochran as "Uncle Johnnie."

"I really got to know him one night in December," he deadpanned about the night in 1999 when he got himself "in a situation," which eventually led to a weapons possession charge. "I begged him to please come get me out of jail. It didn't matter that it was the night after Christmas. It didn't matter that he was on vacation. He came."

Cochran got him acquitted of the charges. "He saved my life. Because of him, I get to see my kids, I get to see my mother, I get to make music, and I get to be here today with you."

Like several others, Combs recounted the dazzling figure that Cochran cut.

"When Johnnie walked, it was like the theme from 'Shaft' was playing in the background," said Combs, as the audience broke into laughter.

Cochran's law partner, Eric Ferrer Jr., serenaded the group with a haunting melody on an African instrument he said he played for Cochran while visiting him during his illness.

When he went to pay his respects, Ferrer said, he could think only of all the cases he still wanted to work on with Cochran. But then he realized that he was prepared to go on without him.

"He trained us to continue his work," Ferrer said. "The only way to do him justice is to do justice in the world."

EroticySteve 04-07-2005 07:26 AM

I didn't realize that he was as old as he was. I would have guessed him 20 years younger.

Bansheelinks 04-07-2005 07:39 AM

he was a piece of shit

eroswebmaster 04-07-2005 08:19 AM

Yeah but people applauded OJ at the funeral...so no matter how you cut it they all loved Johnny for getting a murderer off.
I hope JC enjoys hell.

BVF 04-07-2005 08:21 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by eroswebmaster
Yeah but people applauded OJ at the funeral...so no matter how you cut it they all loved Johnny for getting a murderer off.
I hope JC enjoys hell.

I'm sure he'll tell you all about it once YOU get there yourself Mr. Pornographer.

eroswebmaster 04-07-2005 08:27 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BVF
I'm sure he'll tell you all about it once YOU get there yourself Mr. Pornographer.

Hope so...so I can spend eternity slicing his throat in remembrance of Nicole.

Suzette 04-07-2005 08:28 AM

I know that the XBiz'ers have got be happy that there is now a free parking spot in the building LOLOLOLOLOLOL

CashLikeWhoa_Mike 04-07-2005 08:38 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BVF
I'm sure he'll tell you all about it once YOU get there yourself Mr. Pornographer.

:1orglaugh :1orglaugh :1orglaugh

Bansheelinks 04-07-2005 09:14 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by eroswebmaster
Hope so...so I can spend eternity slicing his throat in remembrance of Nicole.

I say again, Johnnie Cochran was nothing more than a piece of shit.

Radical Rick 04-07-2005 09:17 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bansheelinks
I say again, Johnnie Cochran was nothing more than a piece of shit.

well, he was also a really good attorney....

Vitasoy 04-07-2005 09:21 AM

He was good at what he did.

CashLikeWhoa_Mike 04-07-2005 09:32 AM

So many people hate cochran, but maybe the hate should be aimed at the idiot prosecutors Marcia Clark and Christopher Darden. They are the ones who repeatedly fucked up - big time. They are the ones who let down Nicole's family. Shit the gloves never fit OJ in the first place, even when he was a sideline reporter for football games on NBC. If you recall, Court TV showed that clip of him wearing the gloves - which nicole bought for him as a gift - time and time again. He was holding his microphone while reporting from the sidelines and it clearly showed the gloves NEVER fit and were too small in the first place. And the gloves certainly would not fit after being crumpled and caked in dried up blood. How stupid of Clark and Darden to parade those gloves out into the trial for the world to see. Johnnie Cochran would have never had his now famous "if the gloves don't fit" line if the prosecutors were not dumb enough to put on that shit on display without doing their homework. It really was the most costly mistake the prosecutors made during the entire trial. Johnnie Cochran used his skills to win the legal duel, but he also benefited from the fuck ups of the prosecutors over and over and over. they made his job pretty damn easy.

Dina_C9 04-07-2005 09:46 AM

who cares?!

69pornlinks 04-07-2005 02:09 PM

ya'll just mad a Black man killed two white folks and got away it :1orglaugh :1orglaugh go ahead and admit, you can be real...

Geronimo Pratt <------- this was his 1st case and by far the greatest ever.... :thumbsup

69pornlinks 04-07-2005 02:11 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by eroswebmaster
Yeah but people applauded OJ at the funeral...so no matter how you cut it they all loved Johnny for getting a murderer off.
I hope JC enjoys hell.

so dude that rep Blake is going to hell also, or what about that lawyers that rep'd Emmitt Till killers...they're lawayers fruitcake they job is to get their client free...fucking homo :1orglaugh

TheGoldenChild 04-07-2005 02:12 PM

" If the coffin don't fit, you must dig a pit"

Screaming 04-07-2005 02:12 PM

despite what happen with oj i think he was a good lawyer

eroswebmaster 04-07-2005 02:12 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by 69pornlinks
so dude that rep Blake is going to hell also, or what about that lawyers that rep'd Emmitt Till killers...they're lawayers fruitcake they job is to get their client free...fucking homo :1orglaugh

Engrish?

mahoney 04-07-2005 02:13 PM

Rip Johnny. Ya know he was in the same offices as Giga Cash. I wonder if he really believed OJ was innocent lol.

http://www.news.harvard.edu/gazette/...-rose3-225.jpg

TheGoldenChild 04-07-2005 02:14 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mahoney
Rip Johnny. Ya know he was in the same offices as Giga Cash. I wonder if he really believed OJ was innocent lol.

http://www.news.harvard.edu/gazette/...-rose3-225.jpg

Wow I didn't know that - I have been in those offices before and I guess I never noticed his name on the Marquis...

Interesting- and a great location in LA.
:pimp

ytcracker 04-07-2005 02:57 PM

eh hes a laywer

just like the rest of them

DomBuyer 04-07-2005 03:17 PM

When Al Sharpton dresses you down, you must have done something really bad, like murder two people.

Tawana Brawley...cough...

Johnny played the game well. Don't hate the player, hate the system.

BVF 04-07-2005 03:48 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by eroswebmaster
Yeah but people applauded OJ at the funeral...so no matter how you cut it they all loved Johnny for getting a murderer off.
I hope JC enjoys hell.

No They Didn't! They were applauding Al Sharpton....

Who do you buy your weed from? I want summa dat.

BVF 04-07-2005 03:50 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DomBuyer
Tawana Brawley...cough...

I went to college with Tawana Brawley. She was a freshman the same year I came in. When I saw her I didn't really believe it was her and she caught me staring at her one day so she gave me a "what in the fuck are you looking at" look...

Her body was BEAUTIFUL....With one of the bestest roundest phattest booties in all of Howard University...I never got to fuck her though...She was only fucking with the quasi-drug dealing students from New York.

CashLikeWhoa_Mike 04-07-2005 07:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bansheelinks
he was a piece of shit

pornographers should love johnnie cochran and all defense attorneys.
the goal of their job is the exact same goal as our job -- "get people off!" :1orglaugh :1orglaugh

Bansheelinks 04-07-2005 08:30 PM

http://www.news.harvard.edu/gazette/...-rose3-225.jpg
Quote:

Hi, I was Johnnie Cochran. Now I am dead. While I was alive, I was a piece of shit, of refuse, of waste. I was a piece of shit, so please acquit!

Redrob 04-07-2005 09:29 PM

He was good at his job. Amen.

Bansheelinks 04-07-2005 09:40 PM

http://www.news.harvard.edu/gazette/...-rose3-225.jpg
Quote:

Hi I was Johnnie Cochran. People say I was good at my job. Maybe I was. But I also have to admit, I was a lying sack of shit. Uh Oh! Someone is standing over my grave and taking a dump. Ugh! Its Fred Goldman. Can't say I blame him. He's taking a shit on a piece of shit, me.

reynold 04-07-2005 11:20 PM

I never knew him that much but I hope he rests in peace.


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