Source: Houston Chronicle Pubdate: Saturday, July 26, 1997, page 1 Contact: Jury finds actor not guilty of slander By ANN W. O'NEILL and JOE MOZINGO Los Angeles Times LOS ANGELES A jury unanimously found Friday that actor Carroll O'Connor did not defame his son's "cocaine connection," ending an emotionpacked civil court trial that blended fame, tragedy and freedom of speech. After deliberating about six hours over two days, the six men and six women underscored, with their verdicts, the grieving father's right publicly to expose his dead son's drug supplier. O'Connor sighed with relief and smiled slightly as the jury found that he had not ruined the reputation of Harry Perzigian by calling him "a partner in murder." Jurors later said they agreed with O'Connor and thought his comments were appropriate. Perzigian has been convicted of supplying cocaine to 32yearold Hugh O'Connor, an addict who shot himself to death during a binge in March 1995. "Personally, I see him as a lawbreaker," juror Ernest Haro, 46, said of Perzigian. "I tried to put myself in the position of Carroll O'Connor. I have four sons of my own, and I probably would have done what he'd done or worse." O'Connor, who for more than a dozen years portrayed the crusty bigot Archie Bunker on TV's All in the Family, emotionally thanked half a dozen jurors, walking in on their news conference. "You did a great job," he told them. "I knew a jury wasn't going to say I was wrong. I knew a jury would back me up, and you did. I'm very, very grateful." The jury's decision closed the curtain on a twoweek trial that Superior Court Judge Malcolm Mackey said "fit the bill" for courtroom drama. "It has drugs, Hollywood, suicide, the First Amendment and freedom of speech," Mackey said in dismissing the jurors. O'Connor vowed to continue his crusade against people who supply drugs. "The jury said I could. The jury's the boss," he said. Later, his eyes brimming during a quiet moment, he said, softly, "My poor Hugh." The 72yearold actor said he was surprised the verdicts were unanimous. "Some of the things I said, although I always felt they were just, they were pretty strong," he acknowledged. "I would not have been surprised if a couple of jurors thought, `Well, you went over the top on that one.' " O'Connor's lawyer, Lucy Inman, called the jury's decision "a tremendous victory for free speech in this country." Only nine jurors were required to agree for O'Connor to prevail, but the vote was unanimous on every question they considered. Perzigian, a 41yearold musician, said the decision showed "L.A. loves celebrities. You're not going to get a fair shake in L.A. if you sue a celebrity." His lawyer, Allan Sigel, said, "It only establishes once more that Los Angeles loves its celebrities. They mix the character with the person. And Harry here's a victim of that adulation for Carroll O'Connor." Jurors denied that O'Connor's fame played any role in their deliberations. Douglas Mirell, a Los Angeles attorney who specializes in libel and freespeech issues, said the case carried a different lesson. "It's difficult to conceive of a case in which a convicted felon has a reputation that is capable of being resuscitated by means of a defamation suit," he said. "Given the relatively high profile this one had, I would hope it would chill future frivolous litigation of this type." What began as a trial to determine whether O'Connor damaged Perzigian's reputation with harsh words became, by its end, the soap box from which the wellknown actor waged his antidrug crusade before a national audience. The actor said his battle against the evils of drug dealers has become "a very important outlet" for his grief. And, O'Connor has helped convince legislators in three states to enact measures allowing victims to sue drug dealers and seize their assets. In Florida, the law is known as the Hugh O'Connor Memorial Law. The trial continued a long ordeal for Hugh O'Connor's widow. "It felt tortuous," said Angela O'Connor, who is the mother of the couple's 4yearold son, Sean Carroll O'Connor. "I had to relive my husband's death over and over," she said. "It was outrageous and hurtful." Carroll O'Connor's wife, Nancy, said there were some benefits. The trial, she said, raised her son's memory as "a gifted, talented, adorable man who was also addicted." And, she added, "I think we had a chance to do something to reveal the wickedness of drugs." Hugh O'Connor's suicide on March 28, 1995, ended a battle with drug addiction that consumed half his life. On that night, his father stood before television cameras and condemned Perzigian for supplying drugs to Hugh. Perzigian sued O'Connor for slander and infliction of emotional distress after the actor held his photograph in front of the cameras and branded him as a drug dealer responsible for the death of his son. Police, who had been investigating Perzigian at the elder O'Connor's insistence, arrested him the day after the suicide. He was convicted last year of supplying but not selling cocaine to the younger O'Connor, who starred with his father for eight years in the police drama In the Heat of the Night. Perzigian sought $10 million in damages from O'Connor, but by the trial's end indicated he would settle for a public apology. None was forthcoming.