She was hailed as an “unstoppable force for justice,” but crusading LA attorney Gigi Gordon couldn’t stop the multiple sclerosis and pain that eventually overcame her. And another great lawyer has gone.

She was hailed as an "unstoppable force for justice," but crusading LA attorney Gigi Gordon couldn't stop the multiple sclerosis and pain that eventually overcame her. And another great lawyer has gone.

Gigi Gordon, a crusading criminal defense lawyer who battled corrupt police and overzealous prosecutors to free dozens of prisoners who had been wrongfully convicted, committed suicide after struggling with multiple sclerosis and depression. She was 54.

Gordon, who had been sinking deeper into despair over the last year as her debilitating illness eroded her intellect and medication failed to alleviate her pain, overdosed on pills and died Jan. 18 at a Brentwood park, her friends said.

Known for her fierce determination to fix what she saw as the flagrant ills of the criminal justice system, Gordon is credited with bringing attention to the misuse of jailhouse informants that led to many wrongful convictions.

Partly in response to her advocacy, legislative reforms to prevent jailhouse informants from being rewarded for false testimony began about a decade ago and were tightened last year.

“She changed the way criminal law was practiced in this county,” said her ex-husband, Andrew M. Stein, who also is a criminal defense lawyer. “People don’t realize how many people she set free.”

Gordon worked quietly in the background to challenge the convictions of those set up by corrupt investigators during the Los Angeles Police Department’s Rampart Division scandal in the late 1990s and the widespread misuse of jailhouse informants during the 1980s and ’90s, Stein said.

“And it was never about her — it was always about the clients,” he said, describing Gordon as a “stealth warrior” for the rights of the poor and powerless.

The couple married in 1998 and divorced a decade later but remained close, jointly caring for their beloved dogs, Ali and Maya, Stein said.

Gordon was found dead in the back seat of her car at a park where the couple had regularly walked their dogs.

Gordon had a “brilliant mind” and read and wrote voraciously, and her inability to maintain those pursuits plunged her into depression, Stein said.

“She read at the speed of light — 20 books a month,” he said. “She was aware her mind was failing her. It was very difficult.”

In 2000, Gordon founded the Post-Conviction Assistance Center in Santa Monica and used it as command center as she tried to free victims of corruption and prosecutorial excess.

“The criminal justice system is nowhere near as perfect as the average person thinks it is,” Gordon said at a hearing in 2004 after DNA evidence exonerated a client, David Allen Jones, who had spent a decade in prison for three murders he didn’t commit.

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