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Bare-knuckle defense a hallmark of Dixon attorney

January 12, 2009|By Annie Linskey and Julie Bykowicz and , annie.linskey@baltsun.com and julie.bykowicz@baltsun.com

After graduating from Maryland's law school, he clerked for a judge, then became a federal prosecutor, eventually working as an assistant attorney general for Maryland.

But he made his mark when he switched to defense. That early career was marked by two significant public corruption cases. He represented a man in legal trouble who got a deal after offering up evidence on Spiro Agnew. The information contributed to a case that took down the country's 39th vice president

Later he represented Gov. Marvin Mandel, initially losing the case but ultimately persuading a U.S. District Court judge to overturn the conviction.

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More recently, he has focused on trying to get money back for investors or institutions that have gone through bankruptcy, a specialty he honed after representing Merry-Go-Round, a Baltimore clothing store that went bankrupt while following advice from accounting giant Ernst & Young.

The accounting firm settled for a near-record $185 million, netting Weiner's firm $71 million in fees.

He's a bit of a man-about-town; Weiner's name has appeared in The Sun's society pages, attending charity galas, participating in panel discussions and leading discussions on films.

But the fighter in him on display Friday is "about a millimeter below the surface," he said.

None of his three children became lawyers. His elder daughter teaches photography, his son works in city real estate and his youngest child, Deborah Weiner, anchors WBAL-TV's weekend news show.

He allows his three grandchildren to roam around the office, according to a profile in Maryland Super Lawyers (he was on the cover in 2007), he adores football and baseball games and reads voraciously.

Over time, he has acquired an interest in amateur photography and has taken courses at the Maryland Institute College of Art.

Friends include poet Maya Angelou and Eugene Cassidy, a Western District police officer who Weiner photographed over a period of years for a book they plan to publish together.

His life's work with the law is more passion than vocation.

"I would practice law for a hobby if I didn't do it as a profession," Weiner said.

BIG CASES

Gov. Marvin Mandel

Defended Mandel in federal court against accusations of accepting gifts and bribes from racetrack investors in return for his influence. Mandel was convicted of mail fraud and racketeering in 1977 and served 19 months in prison. President Ronald Reagan commuted his sentence, and a U.S. District Court judge overturned Mandel's conviction in 1987.

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