ROBERT BLAKE CASE Defense implicates Brando's son in slaying



A hearing dealt with a reported phone conversation by the younger Brando.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Robert Blake's defense has singled out Marlon Brando's son, Christian, in the slaying of Blake's wife, calling the younger Brando a fugitive from justice.
"We think there's a compelling case -- far stronger -- that [Brando] did it, than that Mr. Blake did it," Blake's attorney, Thomas Mesereau Jr., said Tuesday.
During a court hearing, Mesereau said Brando fled and had a warrant out for his arrest. Outside the courtroom, he said Brando was wanted on a probation violation in Washington state.
Blake, 70, is charged with shooting his wife, Bonny Lee Bakley, 44, to death as she sat in a car outside Vitello's Italian restaurant in Studio City where the two had just had dinner in 2001.
The former star of TV's "Baretta" told authorities he left Bakley alone in the car to retrieve a gun he carried for protection and had accidentally left behind in the restaurant. He said he returned to find her mortally wounded.
Conversation
Much of Tuesday's hearing revolved around a phone conversation Brando reportedly had in which a female acquaintance of his said she overheard him say Bakley deserved to have a bullet put through her head.
Another hearing was set for Thursday. Jury selection is expected to enter its final phase Feb. 17.
The judge said Tuesday she would not allow testimony by the acquaintance, Diane Mattson, because the witness had a "credibility issue" with the court. But Superior Court Judge Darlene Schempp said she would allow Blake's defense attorney to question a former stuntman about whether he ever fielded such a call from Brando.
Efforts to locate Brando or a representative for comment were unsuccessful.
Los Angeles attorney Robert Shapiro, who represented Brando in the 1990 killing of his sister's lover, was out of the country. Brando pleaded guilty to voluntary manslaughter in that case.
After his release from prison in 1996, he received permission to move to New Hampshire and later had several Washington state addresses. A call left with the answering service for Seattle attorney John Henry Brown, who represented Brando there, was not immediately returned.