3 Cases Every New York Court Reporter Would Have Loved To Transcribe

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If New York court reporters can be sure about one thing, it is that their job will be different every single day. When they get the call from their court reporting service, there's no telling whether or not they will be transcribing a run-of-the-mill estate planning hearing, or a newsworthy murder trial that will capture headlines around the world.

Here are three famous cases from the courtrooms of New York that any court reporter worth their salt would have done anything to transcribe.

Famous New York Court Cases

1. The John Gotti Trial. Testimony against the "Teflon Don" must have made for some very interesting transcribing. After years earning that nickname by dodging guilty convictions one after the other, Gotti was finally brought down by the sound of his own voice, and the testimony of his chief henchman, Sammy "The Bull" Gravano is 1992. After 13 hours of deliberation, the court reporter on this headline-making case heard the "guilty" charge on multiple counts of murder, extortion and other crimes against his fellow New Yorkers.

2. Susan B. Anthony and the right to vote. OK, the 1872 Rochester court room that held this trial was probably lacking in terms of modern amenities, but what court reporter could resist taking part in such a historic event? In this case, the world's most famous suffragette was put on trial for voting. What was the problem? Well this was the 1870's and women could not legally vote in this country. But when New York lawmakers put Anthony on trial in an attempt to make an example out of her, the strategy backfired - and she became a world-wide cause célèbre. Anthony would use this momentum to bring attention to her cause and eventually lead the way in getting the women the right to vote in U.S. elections.

3. The Helmsley Tax Evasion Case. Leona Helmsley may have been the "Queen of Mean", but she and her hotel baron husband definitely met their match in 1988 when United States District Attorney Rudy Giuliani brought them up on federal charges of Tax Evasion and Extortion over a construction job gone wrong (the company did the work, the Helmsleys refused to pay). Leona would go on to serve 18 months in a Federal prison, but for the court reporters who got to hear first-hand about the decadent lifestyle the woman enjoyed - all the while treating her poorly paid employees like animals - got a memory that should last a lifetime.


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