CAMERON E. THOM
District Attorney
1854-1857; 1869-1873; 1877-1879
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Cameron E. Thom
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An immigrant from the South, Thom serves as
L.A.'s District Attorney, returns to the South to fight for the
Confederacy, then comes back for two terms as chief prosecutor.
Cameron Thom came to California from Virginia as a
Forty-Niner. He moved to Los Angeles in 1854. One of his first cases
as a defense attorney was a controversial murder charge against Dave
Brown, a well-known gambler. Brown had killed a man in a livery
stable on Main Street. In the heyday of the vigilantes, a crowd
gathered and decided to string up Brown and be done with him. Los
Angeles Mayor Stephen Foster -- not the songwriter of "Camptown
Races," though they were alive at the same time -- convinced the
would-be lynchers to give the courts a chance to act. Foster vowed
that if justice wasn't expediently done, he would resign his office
and lead a lynch mob himself. Brown was sentenced to death. But Thom
and two colleagues, the high-priced defense lawyers of their day,
were able to get a stay from the state Supreme Court. Foster, true
to his word, resigned, led another lynch mob and Thom's client was
hanged. Foster was re-elected as mayor two weeks later.
Thom was a California senator from 1859 to 1860. He
returned to the South during the Civil War, fighting as a major in
the Confederate army. Then he came back to Los Angeles and served
two more terms as District Attorney. He was mayor of Los Angeles
from 1882 to 1884 and also helped to found the city of Glendale.
Reprinted from FOR THE PEOPLE --
Inside the Los Angeles County District Attorney's Office 1850-2000
by Michael Parrish. ISBN 1-883318-15-7