Storied Miss. Lawyer Indicted, Still Partying

Town rallies around high-profile Grisham pal accused of bribery
By Kevin Spak,  Newser Staff
Posted Dec 4, 2007 4:35 PM CST
Storied Miss. Lawyer Indicted, Still Partying
Attorney Richard "Dickie" Scruggs leaves the federal courthouse in Oxford, Miss., Wednesday, Nov. 28, 2007, after being indicted by a federal grand jury on criminal charges that he and other lawyers engaged in a scheme to bribe a judge. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)   (Associated Press)

As he greeted party guests, Richard “Dickie” Scruggs—the trial lawyer famous for taking down Big Tobacco and taking on Katrina insurance companies—didn’t look like someone who had just been indicted. And though prosecutors say he conspired to bribe the judge in his latest case, Oxford, Miss., isn't buying it. The Wall Street Journal pays a visit.

“That doesn't sound like the Dickie Scruggs that I know,” pal John Grisham says of Trent Lott's brother-in-law, who brought the state millions in a tobacco lawsuit and sealed his crusader image fighting insurance companies after Katrina. But of the man who paid the judge, “This is a clear case of a young man wanting to endear himself to Dickie Scruggs,” says another. (More Dickie Scruggs stories.)

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