San Francisco Chronicle

A force in state for defense, prosecutio­n

- By Don Thompson

SACRAMENTO — Former California Attorney General John Van de Kamp, a public-defender-turned-politician who became Los Angeles County’s top prosecutor by defeating the man who sent Charles Manson to prison, has died after a brief illness. He was 81.

Philip Recht, his senior law partner and longtime friend, confirmed Wednesday that Mr. Van de Kamp died Tuesday at his home in Pasadena.

“He had just a storied and I think pretty unique career in law and law enforcemen­t,” recalled Recht, the partner in charge of Mayer Brown’s Los Angeles office where Mr. Van de Kamp worked the last five years. “I don’t know anybody who’s been the leader first on the defense side and then the prosecutio­n side.”

Mr. Van de Kamp was California’s attorney general from 1983 to 1991 and successful­ly pushed to pass the nation’s first restrictio­ns on assault weapons after a gunman killed five children at a Stockton school in 1989.

He ran unsuccessf­ully for governor in 1990, losing in the Democratic primary to then-San Francisco Mayor Dianne Feinstein. She was defeated by Republican Sen. Pete Wilson in the general election.

Mr. Van de Kamp had the distinctio­n of serving as the first Los Angelesbas­ed federal public defender from 1971 to 1975 and then as Los Angeles County’s top prosecutor from 1975 to 1982 during his long legal and political career. He also was the U.S. attorney in Los Angeles from 1966 to 1967.

He won the district attorney’s race in 1976 against Charles Manson prosecutor Vincent Bugliosi.

California’s current attorney general, Xavier Becerra, was among those who recalled Mr. Van de Kamp as a mentor.

“John Van de Kamp lived for the values of justice and opportunit­y that define the state of California,” Becerra said in a statement. “I will forever be grateful for the confidence he showed in me from my earliest days of public service under his leadership at the California Department of Justice.”

Mr. Van de Kamp, a Stanford Law School graduate, also served as president of the State Bar of California from 2004 to 2005, and more recently was the independen­t reform monitor for the city of Vernon (Los Angeles County) as part of reform efforts there. He was a past president of both the California Historical Society and the Planning and Conservati­on League, reflecting what Recht called an extraordin­ary range of interests.

As attorney general, he defended a voter-approved initiative designed to limit insurance rate increases while building a track record as a consumer advocate. He ran for governor in part by promising to drain the political “swamp” at the state Capitol.

A longtime death penalty opponent, Mr. Van de Kamp backed unsuccessf­ul ballot initiative­s in 2012 and 2016 that would have ended capital punishment in the state.

 ?? Rick Meyer / Associated Press 1977 ?? As top prosecutor in Los Angeles County, John Van de Kamp (left) promoted Johnnie Cochran, who later successful­ly defended O.J. Simpson.
Rick Meyer / Associated Press 1977 As top prosecutor in Los Angeles County, John Van de Kamp (left) promoted Johnnie Cochran, who later successful­ly defended O.J. Simpson.

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