Jake Ehrlich

Jake Ehrlich
Born Jake W. Ehrlich
October 15, 1900
Maryland, United States
Died December 24, 1971(1971-12-24) (aged 71)
United States
Occupation Lawyer

Jake W. Ehrlich (October 15, 1900 – December 24, 1971) was an American lawyer.[1]

Biography

Born near Rockville, Montgomery County, Maryland. Known as "the Master," Jake Ehrlich had a fifty-year career as a defense and divorce attorney in San Francisco. He authored a dozen books on the law, the Bible, and his own life story. Ehrlich's life was the model for television lawyers Perry Mason starring Raymond Burr and Sam Benedict, portrayed by Edmond O'Brien.[2]

He earned a law degree and later a doctorate at Georgetown University. He married Marjorie Mercer on June 30, 1920.

For much of his career, he was lead attorney for the San Francisco Police Officer's Association. Ehrlich defended prostitutes and police officers during the 1937 Grand Jury proceedings initiated by the work of Edwin Atherton, hired by the San Francisco DA to investigate police malfeasence. Ehrlich wrote for law journals, magazines and television.

Ehrlich's slogan was, "Never Plead Guilty."[3][4]

His celebrity clients include actors, writers, night club entertainers, directors, musicians, sports figures, industrialists, madames, murderers, bigamists and petty crooks. Included in his client list were; Alexander Pantages for statutory rape, Gene Krupa for cannabis, Billie Holiday for heroin, Errol Flynn and James Mason for divorce, Howard Hughes for the movie The Outlaw, and Gertrude Morris for murdering her husband in 1952.[5] He also defended rapist Caryl Chessman and stripper Sally Rand.

In 1957, he was lead attorney for Lawrence Ferlinghetti, proprietor of City Lights Books along with L. Speiser and A. Bendich, defending the sale of Allen Ginsberg's book Howl and Other Poems in the obscenity trial. In the 2010 feature film Howl, Ehrlich is played by actor Jon Hamm. In another connection to the world of entertainment, Ehrlich was father-in-law to famed recording star Guy Cherney.

The residence Ehrlich designed with a sliding glass roof at the top of Camino Alto Road in Marin County, in Northern California, was later owned by rock promoter Bill Graham. Ehrlich loved to tell people visiting his home that the electronic roof was actually powered by clients who were unable to pay their legal bills.

Bibliography

Books authored:

References

  1. The New York Times Obituary
  2. Never Plead Guilty by Bernard Averbach and John W. Noble – (1955) Balantine N.Y.
  3. Never Plead Guilty The Story of Jake Ehrlich (Hardcover)
  4. Never Plead Guilty, Google Books
  5. Gertrude Morris Trial: 1952 – Extraordinary Defense Opening, Defendant Flees Courtroom

External links

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