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Percy Foreman
Percy Foreman
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Percy Eugene Foreman (June 21, 1902 – August 25, 1988) was an American criminal defense attorney from Houston, Texas largely known for representing many famous clients.

Key Information

Early life

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Foreman was born near Bold Springs, Texas on June 21, 1902.[1] Foreman moved to Livingston, Texas, when he was six years old.[2] He was the son of Ransom Parson Hill Foreman and William Pinckney (Rogers) Foreman, a former sheriff of Polk County, Texas.[3]

Foreman attended Staunton Military Academy in Virginia for one year, graduated from the University of Texas Law School in 1927,[4] and was admitted to the Texas Bar on January 17, 1928.[5]

Career

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Foreman was a respected master of tactics. He lost only 53 of 1500 death penalty cases and only one case resulted in execution (Steve Mitchell, electrocuted in Texas in 1951).[6][7] He established himself as a lawyer and became wealthy through representing women in divorce cases, later he gained notoriety by defending accused murderers.[8]

Foreman's clients included General Edwin Walker,[9] James Earl Ray,[10][11][12] Charles Harrelson,[13] Candy Mossler,[14] and various organized crime kingpins.

Foreman represented Dallas mobster Joseph Civello, he successfully overturned his 1959 "conspiracy" conviction on appeal.[15] In 1962 he was hired by the far-right anti-communist general Edwin Walker after Walker was arrested on the charge that he "did forcibly assault, resist, impede, intimidate and interfere with United States marshals….while they were engaged in performance of their official duties" during the Ole Miss riot. The charges were later dropped.[16] Jack Ruby requested that Foreman represent him after he shot Lee Harvey Oswald. Foreman declared "I go where I'm needed most. And right now, I can't think of anyone who needs my services more than Jack Ruby".[17] However his representation lasted for only a few days before he quit over disagreements on legal strategy with Ruby's family.[18]

Famed defense attorneys Richard Haynes[19] and Dick DeGuerin[20] both worked with Foreman early in their careers and credit him as a mentor.

In November 1968 he represented James Earl Ray, who was accused of assassinating Martin Luther King. Ray had dismissed his previous lawyer, Arthur J. Hanes, thirty six hours before he was to go to trial, hiring Foreman as his replacement. Under Foreman's representation Ray entered a guilty plea in exchange for a 99-year sentence. Ray would later say that he only did was so because he had been pressured by Foreman to enter a plea in order to avoid the electric chair. Ray maintained that his only role in the assassination was to purchase the murder weapon and give it to a man named "Raoul".[21][22] Ray claimed that Foreman told him if he pled guilty he would be out in two years, because Foreman knew who the next governor of Tennessee was going to be and he would pardon Ray. Foreman denied the allegation, stating that Ray told him "I don't care how long a sentence I get. I will be out of there in two years. There isn't a penitentiary that can hold me".[23]

In December 1973, Ray filed a $500,000 lawsuit against Tennessee seeking his release from prison on the grounds that crucial evidence in his case was mishandled by Foreman.[24][25] Foreman denied Ray's allegations, saying that he "spent approximately 20 hours over 4 1/2 days cross-examing Ray… At no time did he ever implicate anything or anybody other than himself."[26] On 13 November 1978 Foreman testified before the House Select Committee on Assassinations (HSCA), which had been set up to reinvestigate the King and Kennedy assassinations.[27]

He defended Charles Harrelson when he was tried for the 1968 murder of Alan Harry Berg. On September 22, 1970, he was acquitted by a jury in Angleton, Texas.[28]

In July 1975 Foreman was indicted on obstruction of justice charges alongside Nelson Bunker Hunt, William Herbert Hunt, and others, after it was alleged that two private detectives had been bribed in return for their non-cooperation with the police. They were all acquitted.[29][30]

In 1966, Foreman received the Golden Plate Award of the American Academy of Achievement.[31] In April 1968 he appeared in a CBS news special, The Trial Lawyer, alongside his fellow lawyers Melvin Belli, F. Lee Bailey, and Edward Bennett Williams, where they discussed the merits and demerits of trial by jury.[32] He went on to become one of the best known trial lawyers in Texas, with the Texas Criminal Defense Lawyers Association creating the Percy Foreman Lawyer of the Year Award in 1984.[33]

Personal life

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Foreman was married twice. Foreman had a son, William, with his first wife and a daughter, Marguerite, with his second wife.[3][18]

His sister Carrin Foreman was superintendent of the Sugar Land Independent School District from 1924 to 1930.[34]

See also

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Notes

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Further reading

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Percy Eugene Foreman (June 21, 1902 – August 25, 1988) was a , -based criminal defense attorney distinguished by his unconventional trial tactics and extraordinary success in capital cases. Born near Bold Springs, , to a county sheriff, Foreman left formal schooling at age 15 to pursue entrepreneurial ventures before earning a from the University of in 1927 and establishing a private practice after brief stints as a . Over six decades, he handled more than 1,000 defenses—sometimes cited as up to 1,500 capital cases—with only one resulting in execution, often resolving fewer than half by trial through plea negotiations or jury persuasion. His approach emphasized dramatic showmanship and psychological insight, amassing wealth not only from high-stakes criminal work but also society divorces, while serving as president of the National Association of Defense Lawyers. Foreman's most prominent cases involved notorious figures, including persuading James Earl Ray to plead guilty in the 1968 assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., securing a 99-year sentence over the death penalty—a decision Ray later contested as coerced. He achieved acquittals for clients like Melvin Lane Powers in a sensational murder trial and negotiated a 15-year term for Charles Harrelson in a contract killing, underscoring his reputation for turning dire circumstances into mitigated outcomes despite the gravity of the charges. Though occasionally withdrawing from cases like Jack Ruby's appeal, Foreman's career exemplified a staunch opposition to capital punishment amid relentless advocacy for the accused.

Early Life and Education

Childhood and Upbringing

Percy Eugene Foreman was born on June 21, 1902, in a log cabin in rural Polk County, Texas, the son of Ransom Parson Foreman, sheriff of Polk County, and Willie Pinckney Rogers Foreman. Foreman grew up in Livingston, the Polk County seat, amid a large family that included several siblings. His father's role as sheriff provided early exposure to the criminal justice system, as Foreman observed courtroom trials and helped serve meals to county inmates during his childhood. By age six, he worked as a shoeshine boy on the streets of Livingston, reflecting the modest, self-reliant circumstances of his rural East Texas upbringing. At fifteen, Foreman left school to support himself through various odd jobs, including managing shoeshine stands, collecting garbage, and selling newspapers.

Academic and Professional Training

Foreman enrolled at the School of Law, graduating in 1927. To finance his studies, he typed manuscripts for additional income and lectured on the circuit, where he developed his abilities by sharing stages with performers in rural venues. Upon graduation, Foreman was admitted to the and began his professional career in public prosecution. He served several years as a county prosecutor and assistant in Montgomery County, prosecuting criminal cases and acquiring practical courtroom experience. This prosecutorial role, which he later described as foundational to his defense strategies, preceded his entry into private practice around 1933, when he partnered with J. S. Lockett to form the firm Lockett and Foreman in .

Initial Practice and Development

Following his graduation from the University of Texas School of Law in 1927, Percy Foreman was admitted to the on January 17, 1928. He commenced his legal career in prosecution, serving several years as a county prosecutor and assistant , roles that provided foundational experience in courtroom tactics and criminal procedure. Foreman transitioned to private practice in , joining as a junior partner in the firm Lockett and Foreman. Initially, his caseload emphasized civil matters, including high-profile society divorces, which generated substantial fees and established financial stability; he later recounted retaining a $5 bill from one of his earliest payments as a memento of his modest beginnings in defense work. This phase allowed him to cultivate client networks among affluent Houstonians while honing negotiation skills outside the adversarial glare of criminal trials. As Foreman developed his independent practice, he increasingly specialized in criminal defense, representing accused individuals in capital cases and leveraging insights from his prosecutorial background to anticipate state strategies. His early successes in securing acquittals or reduced charges—amid a broader career defending over 1,000 suspects with only one execution—built a reputation for meticulous preparation and unorthodox juror influence, drawing referrals from both private clients and public defenders. Fees accumulated in diverse forms, including cash, jewelry, and , transforming him into a multimillionaire and enabling expansion into more complex litigation.

Major Cases and Trials

Foreman defended approximately 1,500 clients in capital cases over his career, with only one receiving the death penalty and subsequent execution: Steve Mitchell, convicted of shooting his estranged wife in the head and executed on September 25, 1951. One of Foreman's landmark victories came in the murder trial of socialite and her nephew , accused of conspiring to kill Mossler's husband, millionaire banker Alfred Mossler, in their home on June 2, . Foreman served as lead counsel for both defendants in the high-profile case, which featured sensational testimony about an alleged incestuous relationship and financial motives tied to Mossler's inheritance of up to $33 million. In a lasting over six hours, Foreman shifted blame to alternative suspects, including a jealous business rival, while undermining and witness credibility; the jury acquitted Mossler and Powers on March 6, 1966, after a seven-week trial. In November 1968, Foreman joined the defense team for James Earl Ray, indicted for the April 4, 1968, assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. in Memphis, Tennessee. Assessing the evidence against Ray—including fingerprints, the murder weapon, and eyewitness accounts—Foreman advised a guilty plea to first-degree murder to secure a 99-year sentence instead of risking execution at trial; Ray entered the plea on March 10, 1969, before Judge W. Preston Battle. Ray later sought to withdraw it, claiming Foreman coerced him and alleging a conspiracy, but the plea stood, sparing Ray the death penalty amid strong prosecutorial evidence. Foreman maintained the plea was in Ray's best interest given the case's weaknesses for innocence claims. Foreman briefly represented following Ruby's November 24, 1963, shooting of , the accused assassin of President . Hired in early 1964 after Ruby's death sentence conviction, Foreman withdrew within days, citing interference from Ruby's family over case strategy and fee disputes. Foreman also handled cases for clients like organized crime associate , convicted hitman, and retired General , target of an earlier assassination attempt by Oswald, though these did not yield the same level of trial prominence as the Mossler or Ray matters.

Trial Strategies and Reputation

Foreman earned a reputation as one of the most formidable criminal defense attorneys in the United States, particularly in , where he was regarded as the benchmark against which other lawyers were measured for his unyielding commitment to clients and courtroom dominance. Over a 60-year career, he defended more than 1,000 individuals accused of murder, securing acquittals in over 300 cases and achieving a success rate that saw only one client executed. He handled approximately 1,500 capital cases, with fewer than half proceeding to trial, and lost just 53 overall, while serving as president of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers. Foreman opposed the death penalty and positioned himself as a bulwark against prosecutorial overreach, often representing high-profile or marginalized clients such as , , and , which amplified his national notoriety. His trial strategies emphasized psychological manipulation, theatrical flair, and redirection of jury focus away from the defendant toward victims, witnesses, or systemic flaws. Physically imposing at 6 feet 5 inches and around 300 pounds, Foreman leveraged his presence—dressed impeccably—to command attention, employing distractions like combing his hair mid-argument to undermine prosecution points. He frequently dissected the victim's character through psychoanalytic techniques, as in cases where he analyzed personal writings to portray them as morally flawed or provocative, thereby eliciting sympathy for the accused. In the 1964 Mossler murder trial, Foreman shifted blame by depicting the victim, Jacques Mossler, as a ruthless businessman with deviant sexual appetites and numerous enemies who had received death threats, while alleging prosecutorial fabrication without . Foreman's closings were legendary for their oratorical marathon—often exceeding five hours—and integration of literature, poetry, Scripture, and philosophy to evoke emotion and underscore constitutional protections, quoting figures from Shakespeare and to in the Mossler case to secure acquittals for and Melvin Powers on March 18, 1966. He accepted unconventional fees, such as appliances or even a circus elephant, to represent indigent "little guys," but insisted on cash or property equivalents, reflecting a pragmatic approach to client commitment. In strategic pleas, such as advising to enter a guilty plea on March 10, 1969, for a 99-year sentence instead of risking execution at trial, Foreman prioritized life preservation over full exoneration, estimating a 99 percent conviction risk in . These methods, blending , induction, and narrative reframing, cemented his legacy as a master tactician who influenced Houston's defense bar to resist easy pleas and fight aggressively.

Personal Life

Family and Relationships

Percy Foreman was married twice during his lifetime. His first marriage produced no biological children, but he and his first wife adopted a son named William Foreman. Foreman's second marriage occurred on April 21, 1957, to Marguerite Obert, a German-born woman; the couple had one daughter, Marguerite Foreman, born on February 18, 1958. Marguerite Obert Foreman predeceased her husband, dying in 1979. At the time of Foreman's in 1988, his son resided in , while his daughter Marguerite lived in .

Later Years and Death

In his later years, Percy Foreman continued to maintain an active presence in Houston's legal community, drawing on over six decades of experience in criminal defense, though he scaled back high-profile trials as he aged. Known for his opposition to the penalty throughout his , Foreman reflected on his strategies in interviews, emphasizing jury persuasion over appeals to emotion. By the 1980s, health concerns began to limit his courtroom appearances, but he remained a figure of reverence among peers for his unconventional tactics and success in notorious cases. Foreman was hospitalized at Methodist Hospital in in August 1988 for treatment of an infection when he suffered a heart attack on August 19. A second heart attack followed on August 25, leading to and his death at 4:45 p.m. that day at age 86. He was buried at Forest Park Westheimer Cemetery in .

Legacy and Influence

Professional Achievements

Foreman established an unparalleled record in criminal defense, handling approximately 1,500 death penalty cases over his career, with only one client, Mitchell—who was convicted of shooting his estranged wife—sentenced to and executed by on September 25, 1951. In defending over 1,000 accused murderers across six decades of practice, he achieved outcomes that spared all but that single defendant from execution, often resolving fewer than half of capital matters through by or plea. This success stemmed from his mastery of , psychological tactics, and dramatic courtroom presentations, such as cracking a during a to demonstrate a client's claim in a spousal case. Among his notable victories, Foreman secured an acquittal for Melvin Lane Powers in 1964, who was charged with the axe murder of his wealthy aunt's husband amid allegations of incest and financial motive. In 1970, he negotiated a 15-year prison sentence for Charles Harrelson on federal contract killing charges, avoiding a potential life term or death penalty. His representation of James Earl Ray, assassin of Martin Luther King Jr., culminated in Ray's guilty plea on March 10, 1969, yielding a 99-year sentence in lieu of a capital trial Foreman deemed too risky. Foreman's reputation enabled him to amass a multimillion-dollar practice, compensated often in cash, jewelry, or from clients facing dire accusations, underscoring his status as a preferred for the accused in high-stakes trials. He served as president of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, further cementing his influence in elevating defense advocacy standards. Posthumously inducted into the Trial Lawyer Hall of Fame in 2011, his tactical innovations and win rate in capital proceedings remain benchmarks for criminal defense practitioners.

Criticisms and Controversies

Foreman faced significant criticism for his handling of James Earl Ray's 1969 guilty plea to the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., where he advised Ray to accept a 99-year sentence to avoid the death penalty. Ray recanted the plea three days after sentencing on March 13, 1969, alleging that Foreman had coerced him into entering it without adequate investigation or consultation. Ray further claimed in a 1970 petition for a new trial that Foreman had promised a pardon within two years in exchange for the plea, a contention Foreman denied. These accusations fueled ongoing debates about whether Foreman's strategy prioritized expediency over Ray's innocence claims, though Foreman maintained the plea was the best option given the overwhelming evidence and risk of execution. In the civil case Singleton v. Foreman (435 F.2d 962, 5th Cir. 1970), client Geneva Ann Singleton sued Foreman, alleging unethical conduct including threats to ruin her and her husband professionally and personally if they sought replacement after dissatisfaction with his services. The lawsuit highlighted tensions over Foreman's retention practices and client relations, though the court focused on procedural issues rather than substantiating the threats as proven misconduct. Foreman's courtroom tactics, such as portraying victims as deserving of their fate—famously arguing in one case that a victim "needed killing"—drew ire from legal peers who viewed them as manipulative showmanship undermining judicial . Critics within the , including fellow attorneys, accused him of and jealousy-inducing success, with some attributing professional rivalries to his unorthodox, aggressive style that prioritized acquittals over traditional ethics. These methods, while effective in over 1,000 capital cases with only one execution, were seen by detractors as prioritizing spectacle over substantive defense, particularly in high-profile representations like Jack Ruby's, where Foreman faced public backlash for involvement despite later withdrawing.

Enduring Impact on Criminal Defense

Percy Foreman's approach to criminal defense emphasized exhaustive preparation and psychological insight into jurors, treating every case as if it would proceed to regardless of prospects. He defended over 1,000 individuals accused of across a 60-year career, achieving a remarkable record where only one client faced execution. This success stemmed from his insistence on thorough investigations and strategic negotiations, as demonstrated in his 1968 representation of , where Foreman persuaded the defendant to enter a guilty in exchange for a life sentence, avoiding a potential death penalty. His unconventional trial tactics, including theatrical courtroom performances to evoke empathy or doubt, influenced subsequent generations of defense attorneys by highlighting the power of narrative control over strict . Foreman served as president of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, advocating for robust defense practices that prioritized client outcomes over procedural rigidity. Through his firm, Foreman & DeGuerin, he mentored prominent lawyers such as Mike DeGuerin, whose training under Foreman enabled the firm to handle more criminal cases than any other in by 1982. DeGuerin, in turn, trained other attorneys, extending Foreman's emphasis on aggressive and into modern practice. Foreman's legacy endures in the Houston criminal defense bar, which traces its roots to his firm alongside contemporaries like Racehorse Haynes, fostering a tradition of high-stakes representation in capital cases. His induction into the Trial Lawyer Hall of Fame in underscores his role in elevating criminal defense as a specialized field demanding both intellectual rigor and performative skill. By demonstrating that innovative strategies could yield acquittals or mitigated sentences in seemingly indefensible cases, Foreman set a benchmark for prioritizing empirical case-building over deference to prosecutorial narratives.

References

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