Robert Blake behind wife’s death, jury says

? Eight months after Robert Blake was acquitted at a criminal trial of murdering his wife, a civil jury decided Friday the tough-guy actor was behind the slaying, and ordered him to pay her children $30 million in damages.

The jury decided that Blake’s handyman, Earle Caldwell, did not collaborate with Blake to kill Bonny Lee Bakley.

After eight days of deliberations, the jury determined by a vote of 10-2 that the former “Baretta” star “intentionally caused the death” of Bakley, who was gunned down in 2001 in the actor’s car outside a restaurant where the couple had just dined.

Blake, dressed in a black suit and tie, looked down as the verdicts were read.

The plaintiffs had argued that Blake either killed Bakley himself or hired someone to do so. The jury was not asked to decide which theory it believed.

Blake was acquitted at his murder trial in March. But Bakley’s four children sued the 72-year-old actor in 2002, claiming he should be held responsible for their mother’s death and forced to pay damages.

Similarly, O.J. Simpson was acquitted at a criminal trial in 1995 of murdering his ex-wife and a friend of hers, but two years later the former football star was found responsible for the slayings in a civil case and was ordered to pay $33.5 million.

Actor Robert Blake awaits word on the jury's verdict in the civil wrongful death case against him Friday outside the Los Angeles Superior courthouse in Burbank, Calif. He was found liable in the death of his wife, Bonny Lee Bakley.

Unlike Blake’s criminal trial, where 12 jurors had to decide guilt unanimously and beyond a reasonable doubt, the civil wrongful-death case required only that nine of 12 jurors believe by a “preponderance” of the evidence that Blake was responsible for the crime.

Eric Dubin, an attorney for the children, contended that Blake despised Bakley, believing she trapped him into marriage by getting pregnant, and that he decided to get rid of her so he could raise the daughter he adored, Rosie, by himself.

Blake did not testify in the criminal trial but took the stand in the civil case and denied the allegations.

He said that on the night of the killing, he left the 44-year-old Bakley in the car while he went back inside the restaurant to retrieve a gun he carried for protection but had accidentally left in their booth. Blake said he found Bakley wounded when he went back out to the car.

Blake’s attorney, Peter Ezzell, argued there were many people who wanted Bakley dead. He portrayed her as a grifter who preyed on lonely men, selling them nude pictures of herself and extracting money with promises of sex and marriage. She was on probation for fraud when Blake married her.

Ezell also suggested that Christian Brando, Marlon Brando’s son, killed Bakley. Bakley at one time claimed Christian Brando had fathered her child, and the jury listened to a taped telephone conversation in which Brando told Bakley she was lucky someone didn’t put a bullet in her head.

The younger Brando took the stand and refused to testify, invoking his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination.

Also, a criminalist testified for Blake that there were only scant traces of gunshot residue on the actor’s clothing.

Prosecutors at the criminal trial relied heavily on two stuntmen who claimed Blake tried to get them to kill his wife. But their credibility was undermined by testimony about their extensive drug use.

Dubin used testimony from the criminal trial from one of the stuntmen and called the other as a witness.

The attorney also used depositions from Blake, an investigator for the actor and others to claim that Blake had a plan to kidnap Rosie and get Bakley arrested and jailed, and if that failed, to have Bakley killed.

Blake got his start as sad-eyed Mickey in the “Our Gang” movie shorts and gained critical acclaim for his role as a murderer in the 1967 movie “In Cold Blood.” He starred as a street-wise detective in TV’s “Baretta” during the 1970s.

By the time the civil trial began, Blake, once a wealthy man, said he was broke, his money having gone to a long succession of lawyers.

The civil trial, which lasted two months, was by turns comical and combative. During Blake’s eight days on the stand, the tough-talking actor lashed out at Dubin and elicited laughter from the jurors, lodging his own objections and calling the lawyer “chief,” “junior” or “sonny.”

“My fervent hope and prayers,” he said on his last day of testimony, “are that when this is over that everyone get on with their lives.”