NOTED DEFENSE LAWYER ALAN J. GOLDSTEIN DIES
By Bart Barnes
Washington Post Staff Writer
Column: OBITUARIES
Saturday, August 3, 1991
; Page B03
Alan J. Goldstein, 48, a criminal defense lawyer in Montgomery and Prince
George's counties whose cases ranged from counts of driving while intoxicated
to some of the most highly publicized cases of the last decade, died of lung
cancer Aug. 1 at George Washington University Hospital.
Mr. Goldstein was known in the legal community for a flamboyant and witty
courtroom demeanor and a sharp legal mind that won the respect of prosecutors.
"He makes the state's attorneys jump through the hoops on DWI cases," a Prince
George's public defender once said.
He had a self-deprecating style that included the wearing of Mickey Mouse
monograms on his shirts and joking about his height ("too short"), his weight
("too heavy") and his hair ("too little"), and he managed to get away with
trial shenanigans that ordinarily would have triggered a stern judicial
reprimand.
Once, he won permission from a presiding judge to pose a final question to
a witness, a clothing store manager who had been robbed. He asked: "Do you
have anything in size 42 short?"
Last May, Mr. Goldstein represented Gerald W. Eiland, one of two defendants
accused in the shooting death of James S. "Jay" Bias III. Bias was the younger
brother of Len Bias, the University of Maryland basketball star who died of a
cocaine overdose in 1986. Eiland was convicted of second-degree murder and
sentenced to 30 years in prison. The case is on appeal.
His other clients included Prince George's police Cpl. Steven Kerpleman,
who faced three misdemeanor charges after the 1989 death of Gregory Habib
during an arrest by county police, and Erica Mendell Daye, who was charged
with decapitating her 5-year-old son in 1986. The charges against Kerpleman
were dropped, and Daye was sentenced to 20 years in prison after pleading
guilty.
But his legal specialty was cases of driving while intoxicated. He almost
always went to trial, and he won acquittals most of the time.
A resident of Brookeville, Mr. Goldstein was born in Washington. He
graduated from Northwood High School in Montgomery County and from the
University of Virginia and its law school.
He spent his professional life practicing law in Montgomery and Prince
George's counties. Most recently, he was in partnership with Leonard Stamm in
Greenbelt. Earlier, he had been a partner in the Greenbelt firm of Horowitz,
Oneglia, Goldstein, Foran & Parker.
He was an adjunct professor at Georgetown University Law Center and had
conducted seminars on criminal defense and on cases of driving while
intoxicated. In 1989, Mr. Goldstein won the James R. White Memorial Award as
Outstanding Criminal Defense Lawyer from the Maryland Criminal Defense
Attorneys Association.
Mr. Goldstein was separated from his wife, Lois Goldstein.
Survivors include his mother, Sarah Goldstein of Silver Spring, and a
brother, Marc Goldstein of Gaithersburg.
Articles appear as they were originally printed in The Washington
Post and may not include subsequent corrections.
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