I know about defense lawyers working pro bono to pay back for their services. One of my first jobs was with a very well known legal firm in D.C. involved in legal cases that I'd read about in my college text books.
In my experience, the pro bono cases the firm I worked for chose were low profile, and most often, the defendants were
very low income and in very
obvious need of good legal advice. Very often, the cases were rather 'simple'...i.e., they were cases with moral merit that would NOT monopolize the firm's time (they were, after all, working for paying clients...clients who were paying a LOT...at the same time).
There was much speculation on the Web when TH retained Houze that he was taking her on as a client pro bono because of the publicity. Local peeps with knowledge of him indicated that, beyond the fact he didn't need the publicity, there was nothing in his history to indicate that he'd take on a case simply because it was high profile. After much debate over his history, speculation turned to
how TH was paying him, because with his history in regards to pro bono cases, he was getting paid. Add to that my experience...the attorneys I worked for would not represent TH pro bono...too high profile a case, too much time needed to defend, etc.
Rather, the attorney that my BF from college worked for would have taken the case pro bono. He was an ambulance chaser of the highest order and desperately
craved media attention. From what I've since read about Houze, he does not need that kind of attention, nor has he ever shown a a pattern of seeking it out. I *could* be wrong. But my opinion about his working pro bono was made with *some* experience in the legal field and with local opinions about TH's lawyer

.