John Henry Browne has tried more than 250 criminal matters, judgment, represent clients ranging from serial killer Ted Bundy to Colton Harris-Moore, known as the "Barefoot Bandit".
The 65-year-old said he has only three or four military cases taken into consideration. The soldier also will have at least one military lawyer.
Browne is a prominent figure in legal circles of Washington State since the 1970s. Long and stylish, he also known for his diligence in representing his clients and his flair for television cameras.
He has some of the most high-profile criminal cases in State treated. In addition to a lawyer for Bundy, in 1983 he helped Benjamin Ng avoid the death penalty after his condemnation in Washington the worst mass killing, the massacre of 13 people in a restaurant in Seattle.
One of his greatest victories guaranteed legal, Browne that a man who fled to Brazil after the imposition of a fire that killed four firefighters would not murder face charges upon his return because the extraditing country — Brazil — a felony murder statute equivalent to Washington's don't have.
Colton Harris-Moore, who represented Browne recently received international attention for stealing aircraft, boats and cars during a two-year run from the law. Browne and his co-counsel, Emma, helped Harris-Moore Scanlan reach State and federal plea deals, then a state judge to give him the low end of the range condemnation persuaded: seven years in prison.
Browne graduated from American University School of Law in 1971 and went a Ford Foundation Fellow at Northwestern University School of Law. He began his legal career as an Assistant Attorney General in Olympia, wash., the State capital of the.
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