Bobby Lee Cook (February 12, 1927 – February 19, 2021)[1] was an American defense attorney from
Summerville, Georgia, in
Chattooga County.[2][3] He had practiced law since the late 1940s, and is known for combining a sharp legal mind with a folksy demeanor. He had represented a wide variety of clients, from rural Southerners to international businessmen and corporations. He was reputed to have been the inspiration for the television series Matlock main character
Ben Matlock, which starred
Andy Griffith as a Georgia attorney.[4][5]
Cook had been a defense attorney for over 65 years. He recalled a time of racial prejudice when African Americans were "required to sit in the balcony of old courtrooms". He described it as "a most unusual, extraordinary time. It was a time when no women sat on juries, and certainly no blacks".[6]
Cook was estimated to have won 80% of his murder trials and has "estimated his annual net income at $1 million".[1]
Death
Bobby Lee Cook died on February 19, 2021, aged 94.[7]
Significant cases
Represented
Wayne Williams, who appealed against his 1982 conviction for the murder of two black youths in what was known as the
Atlanta Child Murders.
1986—Defended Tennessee banker
C.H. Butcher Jr., who faced 25 counts of fraud. Butcher was acquitted on all counts.[8]
1988—Represented former
Auburn UniversityAll-American football star
Bobby Hoppe, who was charged with murder in a 1957 shooting. Jurors deadlocked 10-2 for acquittal. The case was never retried.
1989—Defended
Jim Williams during the first trial (of four) for the 1981 shooting death of
Danny Hansford. The case was the inspiration for the book Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil by
John Berendt, published in 1994. Williams was convicted of the murder and sentenced to life in prison, although appealed, posting a $200,000 bond. Cook later received, anonymously, a copy of the police report showing the arresting officer contradicted himself, and the verdict was overturned. A new trial was ordered.
Notable quotes
"If you can
railroad a bad man to prison, you can railroad a good man."[2]