Pat Harris is a United States Senate Candidate, criminal defense and civil rights attorney, and author. In July 2017, Harris entered the race to represent California in the United States Senate in 2018. The seat is currently held by Senator Dianne Feinstein, who announced her intentions to run for re-election on October 9, 2017.
Upon graduating from law school, Pat turned down a number of lucrative law firm offers to take a job in the Davidson CountyPublic Defender's Office for two years before joining Geragos & Geragos in 1996 as a criminal defense lawyer. Harris was a lawyer with Geragos and Geragos based in Los Angeles, California for 15 years. In 2012, he set up his own practice, The Law Offices of Pat Harris, which specialized in criminal defense and civil rights cases. In addition to successfully representing a number of high-profile clients, Harris has won over $20 million for his clients in wrongful death and police misconduct cases. From 1996 through 1998, Harris was co-counsel to Whitewater defendant Susan McDougal in two separate cases. The first one was in Los Angeles, California, and the second in Little Rock, Arkansas. She was found not guilty in both cases. The verdict in the second case was often cited as the beginning of the downfall for Whitewater prosecutor Kenneth Starr. In 2010, Harris successfully sued the Glendale Police Department for falsely arresting his client, Edmond Ovasapyan, for murder. The jury awarded Ovasapyan over $2 million. Ovasapyan had been kept in Mens Central Jail in Downtown Los Angeles, on a wing reserved for defendants accused of murder, for over nine months. When DNA conclusively proved he was not the murderer, he was still not immediately released. In 2013, Harris represented Will Lynch who was accused of beating a priest who he said molested him and his brother 40 years earlier. Lynch pleaded not guilty to felony assault charges against Father Jerold Lindner at the Los Gatos Sacred Heart Jesuit Center in May 2010. A two week trial was held in the San Jose courthouse, in which Lynch admitted that he had assaulted the priest who had molested him. Despite the admission, Lynch was acquitted of the charges.
2018 U.S. Senate Race
Harris announced his candidacy for the U.S. Senate from California in 2017. He ran as a Democrat.
Books
Harris co-authored Susan McDougal's autobiography, Susan McDougal: The Woman Who Wouldn't Talk and Mistrial: An Inside Look at How the Criminal Justice System Works... and Sometimes Doesn't with Mark Geragos.
Personal life
Harris resides in Los Angeles, California with his wife Carol Welsman, a world-class jazz vocalist and pianist and their two dogs Boomer and Lucy.