March 10, 2010 7:23 AM

Guilty Plea in Letterman Extortion Case

(CBS/AP)  Last updated 6:50 p.m. Eastern

A television producer admitted Tuesday to trying to shake down David Letterman in a case that bared the late-night icon's affairs with staffers, avoiding a long prison sentence by pleading guilty in exchange for six months in jail and community service.

Robert "Joe" Halderman, 52, entered the plea in a Manhattan court to attempted grand larceny after being accused of demanding $2 million to keep quiet about the late-night comic's workplace love life.

Halderman, a former producer for CBS' "48 Hours Mystery," had mined information from reading his then-girlfriend's diary entries about her relationship with Letterman, her boss, authorities said.

The Manhattan district attorney's office said the debt-strapped Halderman threatened to ruin Letterman's reputation, disguising his demands as a deal for a thinly veiled screenplay about the comedian.

Read Halderman's Plea Agreement

"In September of 2009, I attempted to extort $2 million from David Letterman by threatening to disclose personal and private information about him, whether true or false," Halderman said in court, reading a prepared statement at first so quickly that Manhattan state Supreme Court Justice Charles Solomon asked him to slow down.

Halderman acknowledged delivering the threat to Letterman's driver, in the form of a screenplay outline, or "treatment."

"This so-called treatment was just a thinly veiled threat to ruin Mr. Letterman if he did not pay me a lot of money," Halderman said, dressed in a gray suit. He subsequently met with Letterman's lawyer, who eventually gave him a phony $2 million check.

"I knew throughout this time that I was not engaged in a legitimate business transaction with Mr. Letterman and that what I was doing was against New York law," Halderman said, adding that he realized he had violated the privacy of Letterman and his family.

"I feel great remorse for what I have done," Halderman said, apologizing to Letterman, the comic's family, and his own former girlfriend, Stephanie Birkett.

Outside court, Halderman repeated his apologies, declined any interviews and said no more. He remains free on bail until his sentencing, set for May 4. In addition to the jail sentence, he agreed to 1,000 hours of community service; he would have faced up to 15 years in prison if convicted at a trial.

Halderman's passport will be retained but he can petition the court to travel for work and to see his family in Colorado, CBS News has learned.

In a statement taped for Tuesday's "Late Show" broadcast, Letterman thanked Manhattan prosecutors for pursuing the case:

"I need to talk to you about a segment of my life here that began six months ago. I found myself in some legal trouble, and pretty quickly, it was turned over to the District Attorney's office here in Manhattan. Now, I'd never been involved in anything like this in my life, and I was concerned and full of anxiety and nervous and worried. And the people in the District Attorney's office said, 'This will be handled professionally, this will be handled skillfully, and appropriately.' Well, the matter was resolved today, and they were exactly right - it was handled professionally, skillfully and appropriately. And by way of demonstrating my thanks to the men and women who worked on this, I would like to mention their names now: District Attorney of Manhattan Cyrus Vance, the former District Attorney Robert M. Morgenthau, the Special Prosecutions Bureau in the D.A.'s office and, of course, the New York City Police Department. Thank you all for your help."

Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus R. Vance Jr. noted that Letterman had come to authorities knowing the case could push his private life into public view.

"Mr. Letterman is a public figure, but like all New Yorkers, he has a right to a certain degree of privacy in his public life," said Vance, who took over the case from predecessor Robert Morgenthau in January.

Halderman's lawyer, who had raised free-speech and other issues in his attempt to portray the producer's behavior as a business deal, said Halderman ultimately decided he needed to end the case.

"We had a novel defense here involving complicated legal issues. I was very excited about the defense," said the lawyer, Gerald Shargel. "But there would be a long road ahead of us, and considering the risks and the rewards and the need for Joe to put this behind him and get on with his life, those needs were paramount."

CBS Radio News Legal Analyst Andrew Cohen told CBS Radio News that a plea deal is probably best for Halderman.

"I'm not surprised at all; I would have been shocked in fact had the case had gone to trial," Cohen said. "The costs of litigation were simply too much here for the defense, and the theory - the so-called Tiger Woods theory for defense to extortion - was unlikely to fly."

Cohen added that a deal was not unusual in this case.

"When you hear court officials talking about this being a serious sentence, it is for an attempted extortion like this, but clearly the defense felt it was a good deal and they might likely get more time if they were to go to trial," Cohen said.

Letterman married longtime girlfriend Regina Lasko last year. They began dating in 1986 and have a 6-year-old son.

"This has been a difficult situation for the people involved and we respect the outcome of the legal process," CBS said in a statement.

More on David Letterman and Joe Halderman:

Judge Won't Toss Letterman Case
Letterman Jokes Tiger Woods Is Asking for Advice
Lawyer: Halderman Wouldn't Cop Plea
Letterman Extortion Suspect: Drop the Case

© 2010 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment See all 27 Comments
by stychokiller March 10, 2010 12:51 AM EST
Yo, Jay Leno -- pay me $5 Million, or I tell your wife about your love affairs with automobiles!
Reply to this comment
by bankersvox March 9, 2010 7:07 PM EST
Dem. Eric Masa was told to vote for the HealthCare Bill, or the unions would withdraw all $$ from his re election. Isn't that a form of blackmail too ?
CBS - what is the update on harrasment charges ? for your boy ?
Reply to this comment
by consh8theusa March 9, 2010 7:41 PM EST
He now admits to groping his staff and interns, he is a slimeball that cons have latched on to and will regret in quick order, hell, Glenn Beck even apologized to his audience for having him on, now that about as low as you can get when a creep like Beck regrets giving him airtime.
by AliveAndWellNow123 March 9, 2010 7:00 PM EST
Exactly - and do you notice that the Media has not reported it this way... interesting. And now Letterman is the Hero!! For admitting to being a cheater and humiliating his wife! What's wrong with this picture? Maybe His Community Service will be to contribute some of his $$ to Victims of Sexual Harrassment in the Workplace... there should be plenty of $$ for the donation if he has actually avoided a divorce settlement! :)
Reply to this comment
by consh8theusa March 9, 2010 7:44 PM EST
Letterman is a hero for NOT allowing this sleaze to blackmail him, but instead went to the police and confessed his transgressions on TV immediately. By the way moron, Letterman was NOT married when he had the affairs.
by tomrobla March 9, 2010 4:56 PM EST
Letterman is a mean cranky old guy. Halderman just picked to wrong guy to shake down. It was pathetic to see how Halderman's lawyer continued to try to blackmail Letterman to back down. In the end, Letterman won and Halderman lost. What are the chances that Halderman gets his job back with CBS? How about Halderman producing a CBS crime story about how he tried to shake down Letterman?
Reply to this comment
by bobnjersey March 9, 2010 6:18 PM EST
[Letterman is a mean cranky old guy.]

who has a successful late night comedy show running over 25 years? let me guess ... you don't think he's funny either, right?
by workerdroid March 9, 2010 4:52 PM EST
Christ, there is just no shortage of slime balls, is there?
Reply to this comment
by wheresmycountry March 9, 2010 4:22 PM EST
Letterman has too much class to pay off a rat. Enjoy your 6 months in jail for being a rat. Jail inmates just LOVE rats!!!
Reply to this comment
by unibarbie March 9, 2010 4:10 PM EST
Dammit, I had a screenplay ready for Tiger Woods.
Reply to this comment
by lyndar2 March 9, 2010 3:36 PM EST
Letterman has made big money laughing at people who have made bad decisions. The whole time he has been doing it himself with a holier than thou attitude. I have lost all respect for him and I hope his wife takes him for as much as she can plus Harry!
Reply to this comment
by jester_sch March 9, 2010 3:54 PM EST
Spoken like a true american fem gold digger
by bobnjersey March 9, 2010 6:23 PM EST
[I have lost all respect for him and I hope his wife takes him for as much as she can plus Harry! ]

let me guess ... you're a christian, right?
by newuser2010 March 9, 2010 3:00 PM EST
slnfdfnlska
Reply to this comment
by leeanna59 March 9, 2010 2:51 PM EST
I never was an avid Letterman fan. However, I despise blackmailers and extortionists; and my opinion of Letterman went way up when he had the courage to face the public and confess his choices. All persons who are in the position of thinking they have to pay off blackmailers and extortionists should put a halt to it and follow Letterman's confession example.
Reply to this comment
by pragmatist1 March 9, 2010 3:34 PM EST
...OK, but did you have any contempt for Letterman and what he did...admitting to it in a dismissive entitled tone...isn't what Letterman did to these gullible females a form of blackmail and extortion?
by erasmus111 March 9, 2010 3:58 PM EST
by pragmatist1 March 9, 2010 3:34 PM EST
...isn't what Letterman did to these gullible females a form of blackmail and extortion?


Gullible females? What makes you think they were gullible? You think they are stupid and didn't know what they were doing? I would say that they were out for what they could get, as well.

And why on earth would you think of it as blackmail? I don't recall any of the women coming forward saying that they were pressured into having sex with him in order to keep there jobs.
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