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Robert William Bergstrom

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Robert William Bergstrom

Birth
Death
3 Jun 2006 (aged 87)
Burial
Manitowoc, Manitowoc County, Wisconsin, USA Add to Map
Plot
W2-170-3
Memorial ID
View Source
CHICAGO TRIBUNE OBITUARY:
"Robert W. Bergstrom, age 87, beloved husband of Betty; loving father of Mark William, Philip Alan, Bryan Howard, Chery Lothian (John), and Jeffrey Alan; proud grandfather of Timothy, Katherine and Robert; devoted brother of Richard (Patricia) and the late Carl (Beverly); and many nieces and nephews. Member Naval Order of the United States, Union League Club of Chicago, Illinois State Bar Association, Chicago Bar Association, American Judicature Society and many other organizations. Memorial Services will be held on Thursday, June 8, 2006 at 3 p.m. at the Fourth Presbyterian Church, 126 East Chestnut Street, Chicago, IL. Interment private. In lieu of flowers, memorial gifts may be sent to the Union League Club Boys and Girls Clubs, 65 West Jackson Blvd., Chicago 60604 or to Project Light, Fourth Presbyterian Church, 126 East Chestnut St., Chicago 60611.
Published in the Chicago Tribune from 6/6/2006 - 6/7/2006."


RELATED INFORMATION FROM THE NEWBERRY LIBRARY, CHICAGO WEBSITE:
"Robert Bergstrom was born in Chicago in 1918. In 1940, he was admitted to the Illinois bar and began his practice in Chicago, specializing in representing entertainment corporations. In 1959, Bergstrom took a case representing Twentieth CenturyCompulsion.-Fox Film Corporation, Darryl F. Zanuck Productions, and fifty-seven motion picture theaters that had exhibited the film The film was based on the book of the same name by Meyer Levin, which was a fictionalized account of the famed "Crime of the Century", the 1924 kidnap/murder case of Leopold and Loeb. Nathan F. Leopold Jr., the surviving partner of the criminal duo, brought suit for an accounting for profits (approximately $2,900,000) for the use of Leopold's crime and trial. After several trials and appeals, the decision was finally made in favor for the defendants (Meyer Levin et al.), in 1970.

Amongst many other awards and distinctions, Bergstrom has a Preeminent Bar Rating from Martindale-Hubbell, and a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in thanks for his work with the motion picture industry. On November 28, 2003, Arizona Governor Janet Napolitano declared it Robert W. Bergstrom Day in Arizona."

"Case files, exhibits, and testimony regarding People of the State of Illinois vs. Nathan F. Leopold, Jr. and Richard Loeb (1924), and several civil suits of Nathan F. Leopold, Jr. vs. Levin, et al.

Leopold and Loeb were University of Chicago students, sons of wealthy and prominent Chicago families. In the first case, Leopold and Loeb (then 19) kidnapped and murdered 15-year old Bobby Franks; the case commanded national and international attention. After their detection and indictment, their parents retained famed lawyer Clarence Darrow to defend them. During the trial, Darrow delivered a long and impassioned speech against capital punishment, and the two young men were sentenced to life imprisonment for murder, in addition to 99 years for kidnapping for ransom. The complete transcript of these proceedings, including Darrow's speech and the psychiatric evaluations of both Leopold and Loeb, is available in this collection on microfilm and on paper. Photostatic copies of related legal documents follow, as do copies of Chicago newspapers from 1924 and 1927 (when Leopold and Loeb were accused of a second murder).

When Meyer Levin published his fictionalized account of the murder and trial in 1959, Leopold sued Levin, the book publishers, and the movie industry and theatres that produced and showed the movie version. (Loeb had been killed in prison in 1936 by another inmate). The latter series of case files cover the progression of suits heard in the Circuit Court of Cook County, in U.S. District Court, and Supreme Court of Illinois from 1959 to 1970. Bergstrom took Leopold's complete deposition in November, 1960, and the transcript for that deposition is in the Illinois Supreme Court's Record on Appeal, Vol. II-A. Exhibits to the case include correspondence, publicity for the book and movie, contracts, screenplays, and books. The exhibits are in paper and microfilm format; the exhibits on microfilm are more extensive and include more correspondence between those involved in producing the motion picture Compulsion.

After the legal files there are some miscellaneous files of research material and other items that might have been used as exhibits in the suits. These include newsclippings, the screenplay adaptation of Compulsion, and two articles written by Leopold on crime and imprisonment.";
CHICAGO TRIBUNE OBITUARY:
"Robert W. Bergstrom, age 87, beloved husband of Betty; loving father of Mark William, Philip Alan, Bryan Howard, Chery Lothian (John), and Jeffrey Alan; proud grandfather of Timothy, Katherine and Robert; devoted brother of Richard (Patricia) and the late Carl (Beverly); and many nieces and nephews. Member Naval Order of the United States, Union League Club of Chicago, Illinois State Bar Association, Chicago Bar Association, American Judicature Society and many other organizations. Memorial Services will be held on Thursday, June 8, 2006 at 3 p.m. at the Fourth Presbyterian Church, 126 East Chestnut Street, Chicago, IL. Interment private. In lieu of flowers, memorial gifts may be sent to the Union League Club Boys and Girls Clubs, 65 West Jackson Blvd., Chicago 60604 or to Project Light, Fourth Presbyterian Church, 126 East Chestnut St., Chicago 60611.
Published in the Chicago Tribune from 6/6/2006 - 6/7/2006."


RELATED INFORMATION FROM THE NEWBERRY LIBRARY, CHICAGO WEBSITE:
"Robert Bergstrom was born in Chicago in 1918. In 1940, he was admitted to the Illinois bar and began his practice in Chicago, specializing in representing entertainment corporations. In 1959, Bergstrom took a case representing Twentieth CenturyCompulsion.-Fox Film Corporation, Darryl F. Zanuck Productions, and fifty-seven motion picture theaters that had exhibited the film The film was based on the book of the same name by Meyer Levin, which was a fictionalized account of the famed "Crime of the Century", the 1924 kidnap/murder case of Leopold and Loeb. Nathan F. Leopold Jr., the surviving partner of the criminal duo, brought suit for an accounting for profits (approximately $2,900,000) for the use of Leopold's crime and trial. After several trials and appeals, the decision was finally made in favor for the defendants (Meyer Levin et al.), in 1970.

Amongst many other awards and distinctions, Bergstrom has a Preeminent Bar Rating from Martindale-Hubbell, and a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in thanks for his work with the motion picture industry. On November 28, 2003, Arizona Governor Janet Napolitano declared it Robert W. Bergstrom Day in Arizona."

"Case files, exhibits, and testimony regarding People of the State of Illinois vs. Nathan F. Leopold, Jr. and Richard Loeb (1924), and several civil suits of Nathan F. Leopold, Jr. vs. Levin, et al.

Leopold and Loeb were University of Chicago students, sons of wealthy and prominent Chicago families. In the first case, Leopold and Loeb (then 19) kidnapped and murdered 15-year old Bobby Franks; the case commanded national and international attention. After their detection and indictment, their parents retained famed lawyer Clarence Darrow to defend them. During the trial, Darrow delivered a long and impassioned speech against capital punishment, and the two young men were sentenced to life imprisonment for murder, in addition to 99 years for kidnapping for ransom. The complete transcript of these proceedings, including Darrow's speech and the psychiatric evaluations of both Leopold and Loeb, is available in this collection on microfilm and on paper. Photostatic copies of related legal documents follow, as do copies of Chicago newspapers from 1924 and 1927 (when Leopold and Loeb were accused of a second murder).

When Meyer Levin published his fictionalized account of the murder and trial in 1959, Leopold sued Levin, the book publishers, and the movie industry and theatres that produced and showed the movie version. (Loeb had been killed in prison in 1936 by another inmate). The latter series of case files cover the progression of suits heard in the Circuit Court of Cook County, in U.S. District Court, and Supreme Court of Illinois from 1959 to 1970. Bergstrom took Leopold's complete deposition in November, 1960, and the transcript for that deposition is in the Illinois Supreme Court's Record on Appeal, Vol. II-A. Exhibits to the case include correspondence, publicity for the book and movie, contracts, screenplays, and books. The exhibits are in paper and microfilm format; the exhibits on microfilm are more extensive and include more correspondence between those involved in producing the motion picture Compulsion.

After the legal files there are some miscellaneous files of research material and other items that might have been used as exhibits in the suits. These include newsclippings, the screenplay adaptation of Compulsion, and two articles written by Leopold on crime and imprisonment.";

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