All right then.
1) First and foremost, the man is a
BULLY, and I can't stand bullies. i once used the term "legal terrorism" to describe what he does. That's a very apt description. Like a terrorist, he uses threats to shut people up. One of the first examples of this I saw was in July 2002, when Nancy Grace hosted Larry King's show and had Marc Klaas and Wood on the program. They were talking about the spate of child kidnappings and murders at that time. When Wood tried to compare those with what happened to JB, Klaas and Grace did not go for it. They pointed out what most people already knew: that the difference between those cases and JB were day and night. Klaas went so far as to point out how the Rs and Wood use this legal terrorism against anyone who questions their version of what happened. What happened then was very revealing to me. Wood sat there with his trademark "don't-f***-with-me-punk" grin and said that no one should be intimidated by the facts, and if you don't know about the case, don't talk about it. The heated sibilance in his voice made his polite words poisonous with very thinly-veiled threats. I couldn't believe it.
This man, supposedly an advocate for his "victim" clients, had just threatened a genuine victim's advocate.
It wasn't the last time, no. In 2006, he had the audacity to threaten another victim's advocate, Boston sex crimes prosecutor Wendy Murphy. I know a lot of people don't like Wendy. She shoots from the hip sometimes, but she's always honest. She told her story in her book:
John Ramsey's lawyer, Lin Wood threatened to sue me for the opinions i had expressed about the Ramsey case earlier. What the public didn't know was that right before Wood wasted all his airtime on Larry King talking about me, he called me personally to threaten me over the phone. I knew ahead of time that Wood was a 


because his reputation preceded him. The call only confirmed that reputation. he sounded like he was making a well-rehearsed speech rather than expressing earnest concern about the rights of his clients. Nobody should be threatened with harm, financial or otherwise, for articulating an opinion about a matter of great public interest.
Pretty low. But it gets worse:
2) The man is unethical.
He BRAGS in open court about how much money he has made off of JB. Here's a direct quote:
1 MR. WOOD: Hey, I made more money
2 handling the Ramsey case than you've made in
3 your whole damn career practicing law, Darnay.
That pretty much says it all. He uses litigation of enrich his own personal finances. He brags about the champion racehorses and custom Jaguar automobiles he buys with the proceeds. For all of his high-falutin' rhetoric, he's what the Russians call a "thief in law."
Speaking of his high-falutin's rhetoric, his own words and actions reveal what he's all about. madeleine, you said, and I quote,
Yes, that is at the heart of the matter. He builds up the reps of his clients by sliming other people. Case in point when he represented the victim in the Kobe Bryant case. He knew damn well that it was a lie that his client had "had sex with three men in three days," but he never threatened anyone over saying THAT. The man has no principles.
3) He defended his father for killing his mother and bribed his children to deliver rehearsed speeches about how great he was. The man seems to have a pathological need to see guilty people go free just to satisfy his own psychlogical issues. He's the worst kind of lawyer there is: the kind who doesn't care about justice as long as he makes his money.
You called him a brilliant lawyer. But he's a rotten human being. He's brilliant because he has no compunctions about using dirty tactics. He makes a mockery of law and is a stain on the legal profession. I think he's a slimebag. And I hope that he has a good story when he stands tall before The Man, because he'll need it.