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Arrest In Slaying Of Lawyer's Wife

An arrest has been made in the slaying of the wife of criminal defense lawyer Daniel Horowitz, a family friend said Thursday.

Attorney Bob Massi said he was with family members of Pamela Vitale when they were notified that an arrest was made in her killing.

A 16-year-old boy who lived near Vitale and Horowitz's hilltop estate was taken into custody, according to the San Francisco Chronicle and The Contra Costa Times, which cited law enforcement sources on their Web sites.

Contra Costa County Sheriff's Department spokesman Jimmy Lee would not confirm an arrest had been made, but a news conference was scheduled for late Thursday morning.

Usually, Horowitz, a celebrity defense lawyer, analyzes criminal cases on television news shows.

But, says CBS News correspondent John Blackstone, the murder of his wife on their estate north of San Francisco had turned the television tables on Horowitz, focusing the attention of his fellow TV lawyers on analyzing a case involving his family.

Horowitz found wife Pamela Vitale's body Saturday at the trailer home they were staying in while their dream house was finished elsewhere on the estate. Authorities say she was beaten to death.

Police questioned dozens of people, including Horowitz. He returned to his home Wednesday to collect photos for Vitale's funeral Thursday.

Horowitz told reporters Wednesday that he somehow found it comforting, visiting the place where Vitale died.

"Even though it was horrible all the other times I was there," he said, "this time, I just sort of felt … You could almost smell us in there, like you're really there with the person you love."

The murder has made Horowitz the subject of the sort of case he'd dissect as a legal analyst on television. "I think we have to find the right person, not just any person, so I am not going to comment on police work," he told reporters.

Still, Blackstone said, Horowitz has returned to the broadcasts on which he frequently appeared.

On MSNBC's "Abrams Report," Horowitz said: "This is turning into, and it's going to be, a media event. This is my life, and me and Pamela chose to make me a media person but we didn't choose for Pamela to be murdered."

It's created a curious situation, Blackstone said — the legal analyst being analyzed.

Blackstone asked legal analyst Robert Talbot what Horowitz would say about a murder victim's husband who goes on television at this point in an investigation.

"I would say," Talbot responded, "that Daniel would say, 'Just don't do it. No matter how innocent you are, you don't want to say anything that might be misconstrued down the road.' "

And for the defense attorney who has had killers as clients, there is another question. Horowitz himself repeated, and answered it, on the "Abrams Report."

"Could I stand next to someone who I knew committed a murder like this?" he said. "I don't know. Right now, I guess I'd have to say it would be a pretty hard thing to do."

Horowitz told Court TV's Nancy Grace in an interview that he's satisfied with the way the media have treated him.

"The only thing I want from the media," he said, "is what they've done, which is they put on her picture. They put on our friends who talk about how beautiful she was. And that's it. OK. They've done what I need them to do. What they do with me doesn't matter."


As for speculation that one of the clients accused of violent crimes who Horowitz defended may have been involved in Vitale's murder, Horowitz told Grace, "This has nothing to do with my clients. In fact, I've had people calling from the prisons, getting their counselors to give me calls. My clients love me. It's not them."

Horowitz says investigators haven't asked him to take a lie detector test, but he'd be willing to. Nothing else matters, he says, but solving this case.

That doesn't surprise Grace who, in addition to her Court TV duties, is an anchor on "CNN Headline News," and a friend of Horowitz.

"They were so loving," Grace told Tracy Smith on The Early Show Thursday. "In fact, when I would talk to (Vitale) alone, everything would be about, 'Did you hear what Daniel said in court? Did you see what he did? Did you hear this case Daniel got? Did you see him on TV the other night?' When she would look at him, it was as if she had gotten the prize. … And I think the feeling was mutual."

In the interview Grace did with Horowitz on Court TV, he broke down after telling her, "I had so much time with Pamela. So, I just looked at her face, and it was beautiful."

Grace told Smith she doubts Horowitz is the murderer.

"The husband or spouse is always the number one suspect," he said. "And then police move outward. He has cooperated fully with them. He has verified his alibi, where he was throughout the afternoon, the various stops he made before he came home. I think he's cooperating fully, even to the extent of volunteering to take a polygraph. I just don't see it."

Grace accompanied Horowitz to the temporary home Wednesday, and tells Smith, "Police are really, surprisingly, playing this very, very close to the vest. However, I can tell you from what I saw (Wednesday), Pamela Vitale was bludgeoned to death right at the front door. I don't mean a few steps into the entranceway. Right as you step in the front door. … (almost as if she was opening the front door to greet someone), or trying to push it shut."

Horowitz, says Grace, is "emotionally fatigued. He is totally drained. When we were in the trailer home in which they were residing until the dream home was built, he did not want to spend very much time there. I think it was really too painful for him to look at."

He is so emotionally drained, Grace says, "He doesn't seem to have any interest in going back to his law practice right now."

That surprises her.

"I thought that he would, because there's something about criminal law, either on my side as the prosecution or their side as the defense, that gets in your blood," she said. "It's really hard to turn your back on it. It's a way of life."

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