Joe Halderman: I Was Only Trying To Sell Letterman A Screenplay

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JENNIFER PELTZ | 11/10/09 07:38 PM | AP

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Joe Halderman

NEW YORK — David Letterman was on the receiving end of a sales pitch, not a shakedown, a defense lawyer said Tuesday as he argued that a TV producer accused of extorting the comic was simply peddling a screenplay.

Robert J. "Joe" Halderman's lawyer asked a judge to toss the attempted first-degree grand larceny case, which spurred Letterman to acknowledge his office dalliances in a startling on-air monologue last month. Attorney Gerald Shargel said the $2 million exchange was business, not blackmail.

"This was a commercial transaction. Nothing more," he said.

The first outlines of Halderman's defense spotlighted Letterman's behavior, drawing a sharp response from the "Late Show" host's camp. A lawyer for Letterman said the comic was prepared to testify if the case went to trial.

"It's classic blackmail, no matter how Mr. Halderman's lawyer wants to dress it up," Letterman attorney Daniel J. Horwitz said outside court.

In papers filed Tuesday, Shargel argued that the indictment against Halderman should be dismissed because his conduct wasn't a crime, among other claims. Assistant District Attorney Judy Salwen said she was confident a judge would find the indictment was on solid legal ground.

State Supreme Court Justice Charles Solomon is expected to rule in January.

Halderman acknowledges giving Letterman's driver a package on Sept. 9 that included the supposed screenplay "treatment" – or synopsis – and some "source material."

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Authorities say the materials included a letter saying Halderman needed to make "a large chunk of money" and a claim that the screenplay would depict how Letterman's world would "collapse around him" when information about his private life was disclosed. Photos, personal correspondence and portions of a diary also were enclosed, authorities said.

The diary entries were allegedly written by Halderman's former girlfriend and outlined her affair with Letterman.

Authorities then taped two conversations between Letterman's lawyer and Halderman – including an exchange in which the lawyer gave Halderman a phony $2 million check after he demanded it as hush money, the Manhattan district attorney's office said. Halderman was arrested after depositing it.

The day before prosecutors unveiled the case last month, Letterman divulged it on his show, acknowledging he had had sex with women who worked for him.

Shargel's court filing said Halderman simply realized he had "a valuable subject for a book or a movie" and sold it to Letterman, threatening to do nothing more than sell it elsewhere if the TV host rejected it.

"I have no plans to do anything other than either sell you this option – this screenplay – to you and therefore you own the story. Or if you don't and you're not interested, as I've said, then that's fine, and I will proceed, and I will do what I want to do, which is what I've been thinking about doing, anyway – which is writing a book," Halderman told Letterman's lawyer in one of the taped exchanges, according to the filing.

Letterman's lawyer said criminal charges would follow if Halderman released the information himself, the filing said. Halderman, it said, responded: "I don't agree with your position on that."

Some other defendants in extortion cases have argued they were just doing business. In the 1980s, a Maryland union official accused of demanding cash to approve payments to a building contractor maintained the two had a business dispute over construction costs for the union headquarters; the union official eventually pleaded guilty.

Legal experts say the line between extortion and playing hardball can be blurry.

"A lot of blackmail and hush-money cases play right at the edge of legitimate transactions," said Pace Law School professor David N. Dorfman.

But Letterman's lawyer said Halderman's threats and tactics – such as delivering his message to the comic's car around 6 a.m. and demanding a response within two hours – blunt any claim that his aims were purely commercial.

Halderman had changed the characters' names but envisioned a behind-the-scenes tale of the "atmosphere and conduct" of Letterman and the "Late Show," his court filing said.

It said Halderman had evidence that "Letterman had created and fostered an environment of workplace sexual misconduct" that amounted to sexual harassment – a question that has become an issue since the comic's disclosure of his office affairs.

The president of the National Organization for Women called on CBS last month to "recognize that Letterman's behavior creates a toxic environment." The network declined to respond publicly.

Shargel did not detail what Halderman said he had found. The court filing noted that Letterman himself described his conduct with female employees as "creepy" and cited a recent Vanity Fair article by a writer who said she quit Letterman's NBC talk show in 1990 partly because of alleged sexual favoritism and a hostile work environment. Officials from Letterman's production company, Worldwide Pants Inc., have declined to comment on the article.

Letterman's lawyer strove to keep the focus on the extortion case but added that no one has ever made a formal sexual harassment claim against the comic.

"His conduct's not an issue here," Horwitz said after the brief court session.

Halderman declined to comment. The 52-year-old producer for CBS' "48 Hours Mystery" has pleaded not guilty. He could face five to 15 years in prison if convicted.

CBS declined to discuss his status at the network, where he has worked for more than 27 years.

NEW YORK — David Letterman was on the receiving end of a sales pitch, not a shakedown, a defense lawyer said Tuesday as he argued that a TV producer accused of extorting the comic was simply ped...
NEW YORK — David Letterman was on the receiving end of a sales pitch, not a shakedown, a defense lawyer said Tuesday as he argued that a TV producer accused of extorting the comic was simply ped...
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What if Halderman would have told Letterman to read the screenplay, wouldn't have asked or demanded an amount or deadline, not mentioned that it would ruin his reputation and that it was for sale? What if he would have approached it as if he was looking to entertain offers before it went to the highest bidder on the open market. Would that be extortion or just a business proposition?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:41 PM on 11/19/2009
- Jeff Norman - Huffpost Blogger I'm a Fan of Jeff Norman 15 fans permalink

None of the posters below who claim to be sure it was extortion have bothered to cite exactly what Halderman said that constitutes extortion.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:12 PM on 11/15/2009

What if Halderman would have told Letterman to read the screenplay, wouldn't have asked or demanded an amount or deadline, not mentioned that it would ruin his reputation and that it was for sale? What if he would have approached it as if he was looking to entertain offers before it went to the highest bidder on the open market. Would that be extortion or just a business proposition?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:54 PM on 11/19/2009
- Jeff Norman - Huffpost Blogger I'm a Fan of Jeff Norman 15 fans permalink

No. Furthermore, we know of no evidence it was extortion the way he did it. It appears to be a legitimate business proposition.

What makes you think Halderman "mentioned that it would ruin [Letterman's] reputation?"

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:55 PM on 11/19/2009
- Charity I'm a Fan of Charity 16 fans permalink
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gee i wish i could become a h 0 ff p@ st blogger with a big orange banner so that i could be a paid sh8ll for someone who is going to be spending a long time in pri son. nothing like hi jack 1ng a thread.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:49 PM on 11/11/2009
- esgabel I'm a Fan of esgabel 31 fans permalink
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...and we are offering you, Mr Halderman, a Court Reality Series!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:43 PM on 11/11/2009
- mcmutter I'm a Fan of mcmutter 100 fans permalink
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15 YEARS....e­njoy em

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:04 PM on 11/11/2009
- katielady I'm a Fan of katielady 19 fans permalink

why do I think his pants are on fire????

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:02 PM on 11/11/2009
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If this is the best the guy's attorney can come up with, he's going to be able to do a really good screenplay on what happens to chubby little writer-type guys in prison. Depending on how you define the term, it might even be called a love story.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:29 PM on 11/11/2009
- MrSmith1 I'm a Fan of MrSmith1 2 fans permalink

Jeez, that's a lousy analogy. No-one is publicly humiliated or has their career ruined by people knowing their favorite color.

Come on, you know it wasn't a negotiation in any sense of the word.
It was a threat from a blackmailer looking to play 'gotcha' with the person he was blackmailing.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:24 PM on 11/11/2009
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give this guy a cell mate that can teach the living s... out of him. Halderman shows no remorse or misgivings for what he did to Dave and his family.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:23 PM on 11/11/2009

Ahhhh, the old "it was a screenplay not a shakedown defense". Is this what they are teaching in law school now?

This case is no different that a guy walking into a bank with a robbery note to make an immediate withdrawl. Except the bank is Letterman and the robbery note is his "screenplay".

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:10 PM on 11/11/2009
- Amalek I'm a Fan of Amalek 107 fans permalink
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I'd like to hire this lawyer to do my taxes. He is clearly pretty clever and has no ethics. Not much of chance on this case either.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:29 AM on 11/11/2009
- OtayPanky I'm a Fan of OtayPanky 66 fans permalink
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His name is Gerald Shargel. Look him up on Wikipedia. Along with Bruce Cutler, he got moster John Gotti acquitted.

But I wouldn't want him dealing with my taxes. That's a different specialty in law altogether.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:47 PM on 11/11/2009
- asta1968 I'm a Fan of asta1968 5 fans permalink

The sooner Dave wipes this excrement off the bottom of his shoe the better.

I hope this guy goes to trial and does the max! I think Letterman can handle it. It's called taking responsibility (on both sides).

Also, doesn't this guy look like your worst stalking/serial killer nightmare? I'm sure the jury will pick up on that!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:54 AM on 11/11/2009
- maillady I'm a Fan of maillady 3 fans permalink

Halderman obviously didn't spend any money on a quality attorney. If this is the best defense argument he can come up with, Halderman would have been better off defending himself. This juvenile response only serves to insult everyone's intelligence. Sorry Joe, you are going to jail.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:42 AM on 11/11/2009

If he used material from the gals diary then he's a plagiarist­...he stole material and the idea from her. It wasn't really his. And isn't just a little odd that he just happened to approach Letterman, the man mentioned in those diaries, with the "screenplay" based on them? Why would Letterman want to buy a screenplay for some program that dealt with a "Letterman-like show"? Dave has a Letterman-like show. And he's never produced a suspense or drama like this. So why approach him?

In addition, it doesn't sound like there was much of a screenplay actually written...­so $2 million? Has this guy ever gotten anywhere near that amount for anything he's written.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:34 AM on 11/11/2009
- henryberry I'm a Fan of henryberry 37 fans permalink
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Halderman probably could have gotten more than $2 million if he had he sold the story elsewhere. I think this story/case has to be seen in the context of the entertainment industry. Halderman will probably explain that he went to Letterman first with the treatment for the screenplay because this was the likely road to the quickest sale, though not necessary the largest sum.

As for the plagiarism, under the circumstances this too is not well-founded. What were the circumstances under which Halderman found Birkettt's diary? Why was she keeping it in the first place? She would have known it was damaging to Letterman. Maybe she was jealous about something, and wanted Halderman to find it.

There are too many unknowns and variables at this point to make any conclusions.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:27 AM on 11/11/2009

Letterman doesn't make movies.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:30 AM on 11/11/2009
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Exactly. This Halderman guy is sinking.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:42 AM on 11/11/2009
- Jeff Norman - Huffpost Blogger I'm a Fan of Jeff Norman 15 fans permalink

So what Letterman doesn't make movies? He could. Furthermore, it's perfectly logical to consider that the subject of what would be an unauthorized biography might want to transform the story into an authorized biography, or bury the project. To act in accordance with such logic is not necessarily a crime.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:24 PM on 11/11/2009
- loncowber I'm a Fan of loncowber 7 fans permalink
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Is that what you are saying he did? He "considered that the subject of what would be an unauthorized biography might want to transform the story into an authorized biography, or bury the project." Ohhhh kay.....

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:58 PM on 11/11/2009
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