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Travolta's case became international news when Bahamian authorities arrested two people of trying to sell the actor an innocuous treatment document after his son's death. Travolta gave emotional testimony in the case against the suspects, a paramedic and former Bahamas senator, but the case ended in a mistrial. The actor has said he will testify again. Letterman chose to announce the case involving him on his late-night talk show after an arrest was made. An attorney for Robert J. "Joe" Halderman, the man accused of trying to blackmail Letterman, has denied any wrongdoing by his client, saying he was merely shopping a screenplay. "Evidence of celebrity misdeeds has a significant fair market value," Halderman's lawyer Gerald Shargel wrote. "... Evidence of such misdeeds is routinely suppressed through private business arrangement." Shapiro said extortion attempts can involve a lot of gray area. "Not to condone extortion, but at what point is extortion merely somebody exploiting somebody else's vulnerability," he said. Shapiro said extortion's secretive nature also makes it a relatively low-risk crime. "In terms of crimes, if you're going to gamble, it's certainly one of those that the rewards greatly exceeds the risks," Shapiro said. The publicity inherent with involving authorities in extortion cases is a tough call, Geragos and Singer said. "You can't really control it," Geragos said. "You have to relive it." Geragos, who represented Jackson shortly after his arrest on child molestation charges, said finding out someone is trying to sell secretly obtained information can provoke strong reactions. Geragos and Jackson were secretly videotaped on a private plane, and the attorney won a $20 million judgment against the plane's operator last year as a result. "It's a sickening feeling and an outrageous feeling," Geragos said. "When clients come, I tell them, 'I've been there, I can relate to you,'" he said.
[Associated
Press;
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