Welcome to our Online Gallery of original Courtroom Art.

Shown below are select pieces from our inventory. Keep in mind that the artist created several pieces at each trial, and that there are others to choose from.

Be sure to enlarge each piece to see a closeup view of the quality and detail.Enjoy...
David Berkowitz - "Son of Sam"

Martha Stewart
2004

Martha Stewart, the domestic diva, was found guily in her obstruction of justice trial.

The Stewart verdict signals a stunning fall from grace for one of themost successful women in American business history.

 
$9,500
David Berkowitz - "Son of Sam"

David Berkowitz - "Son of Sam"
trial date 1977

The greatest manhunt in New York City's history

The "Son Of Sam" was a paranoid loner who nursed his hatred for women into a deadly shooting spree.

David Richard Berkowitz was born out of wedlock in Brooklyn on June 1, 1953. His mother, a 25 year old divorcee, gave him up for adoption shortly after his birth. According to psychiatrists who examined him many years later, the trauma of this rejection fostered in Berkowitz the violent, bizarre behavior that would one day characterize his actions as the so-called "Son of Sam" Killer.

 
$9,500
Don King - The Boxing Promoter

Don King - The Boxing Promoter
trial date 1984

He controlled the lives of many top fighters. There were several trials where he was charged with altering his fighters contracts. He was ultimately acquitted of falsification of documents and tax fraud.

 
$5,500
Mark David Chapman - The Man Who Killed John Lennon

Mark David Chapman - The Man Who Killed John Lennon
trial date 1980

Lower profile criminals might have been released by now, but Chapman remains in solitary confinement in a 6 by 10 foot cell.

There he continues to try to understand the act that his mind and body committed on Dec. 8, 1980.

 
$9,500
Carmine "The Snake" Persico

Carmine "The Snake" Persico
trial date 1986

Boss of the Colombo crime family. He was charged with racketeering and ordering murders by his soldiers. Because of wire tap evidence, and turncoats who broke the code of silence, he is now serving a 100 year prison term in a federal penitentiary.

 
$5,000
John Gotti

John Gotti
trial date 1987

Boss of the Gambino crime family, he was charged with murder and racketeering. When Sammy "The Bull" Gravano, his former capo, took the witness stand, he confessed to 19 cold-blooded murders. 10 of these, he said, were at the behest of John Gotti. Gotti was convicted and received a life sentence.

 
$9,500
Jean Harris Collection

Jean Harris Collection of 7 drawings:
trial date 1981

1: Summations
2: Waiting for Verdict
3. Charge to Jury
4. People vs Jean Harris The Movie
5. Jean Harris on the Stand
6. Jean Harris on the Stand 2
7. Collapse at Hearing the Verdict

Harris was convicted in 1981 of killing Dr. Herman Tarnower, with whom she shared a 12-year relationship, author of "The Scarsdale Diet". She was paroled in 1993 and continues working on behalf of the Children of Bedford Fund, a foundation she started that provides educational opportunities for inmates' children. She also is an ardent supporter of the nation's handful of prison nurseries and believes they benefit both the mother and the child. A 1945 magna cum laude graduate of Smith College, Harris had several teaching jobs and was the headmistress of the Madeira School in Virginia at the time of her arrest for murder. She is the author of five books including "They Always Call Us Ladies" and "Marking Time", both published by Macmillan, and keeps a busy national lecture schedule, speaking on justice and female inmates.

 
$18,500
Bernard Goetz - The Subway Vigilante

Bernard Goetz - The Subway Vigilante
trial date 1987

Bernard Goetz, in 1984, shot four black youths on a New York subway train. The incident was shocking in that Goetz, the would-be victim, turned around the situation in which he felt trapped, and made the four young men the victims of his "self-defense".

 
$4,000
Rubin Hurricane Carter

Rubin Hurricane Carter
trial date 1976

A trial without justice. Rubin "Hurricane" Carter was the number one contender for the World Middleweight title, until he was falsely accused and convicted of murder. He spent 20 years in prison for a crime he didn't commit. Lies put the Hurricane into prison, Habeas Corpus got him out.

 
$8,500
Imelda Marcos

Imelda Marcos
trial date 1990

With her husband Ferdinand, she was accused of raiding the treasury of the Philippines and hiding the money. During the U.S. Federal hearing she was charged with tax evasion.

 
$4,500
Robert Chambers

Robert Chambers
trial date 1986

In the "preppie murder case," Robert Chambers pleads guilty to first-degree manslaughter in the death of 18 year old Jennifer Levin.

Chambers strangled Levin to death when they were having sex in Central Park in August 1986. His lawyer said the death was accidental and that their rough sex went too far. After a lengthy trial and right before a jury verdict was rendered, he pled out. He received a sentence of 5 to 15 years in prison and is still behind bars.

 
$5,000
Jack Henry Abbott

Jack Henry Abbott
trial date 1982

While serving time as a convicted felon he wrote a book "In the Belly of the Beast", about prison life. It gained a great deal of critical acclaim, as well as the admiration of Norman Mailer, who worked to gain his parole. Shortly after his release he killed a waiter. He was convicted of murder, and sentenced to life imprisonment.

 
$4,500
 
Amy Fischer

Amy Fischer
trial date 1992

The Long Island teenager who, while having an affair with Joey Buttafuco, went to his home and succeeded in shooting his wife in the face. She nearly killed her. Amy was convicted, and sentenced to prison. She was released in 1999.

 
$7,500
Woody Allen/Mia Farrow Custody Trial

Woody Allen/Mia Farrow Custody Trial
trial date 1993

Allegations of sexual misconduct with his step-daughter, led to the judges awarding custody of their children to Mia Farrow, but he was granted visitation rights for his biological son.

 
$6,500
Louima Trial

Louima Trial
trial date 1997

Mr. Louima, a Haitian immigrant, was sodomized with a broomstick in the bathroom of a Brooklyn, NY police station by police officer Justin Volpe. Volpe is now serving a 30-year prison sentence. His partner Charles Schwarz's conviction was overturned by the 2nd court of appeals in 2002, and he was freed pending a new trial. Two other police officers in this case also face charges of obstruction of justice.

 
$4,000
Leona Helmsley "Queen of the Mean"

Leona Helmsley "Queen of the Mean"
trial date 1987

It was alleged that she paid for personal expenses with Helmsley Hotel money. During the trial testimony was heard that she "cooked the books" with her accountant. She was convicted of tax evasion.

 
$4,000
Sean "Puff Daddy" Combs

Sean Combs aka "Puff Daddy"
trial date 2001

A Manhattan Grand Jury handed down separate indictments against "Puff Daddy" Combs. The first concerns a shooting at a NY club and the second was an alleged bribery scheme.

 
$6,000
Jacqueline "Jackie O" Onassis

Jacqueline "Jackie O" Onassis
trial date 1982

It is important to realize that twenty-eight years ago, the federal trial court in Manhattan protected Jackie Onasis and her children from the so-called "first" American paparazzo. Even with First Amendment protections in this country, the news media has been warned to "back off" when aggressive photography seems to go too far.

 
$6,000
Sheik Rahman - World Trade Center Bombing

Sheik Rahman - World Trade Center Bombing
trial date 1994

Amid tight security, a federal judge handed down stiff sentences to blind Egyptian cleric Sheik Omar Abdel-Rahman and his co-conspirators who were convicted of masterminding the February 26, 1993 World Trade Center bombing that killed six people and injured more than 1,000.

He was also responsible for the plot to bomb the United Nations, FBI offices, and other New York landmarks.

 
$4,000
Katherine Ann Quinlan

Katherine Ann Quinlan
trial date 1975

As it was then, and is still today, one of American medicine's most emotionally and ethically charged debates; the terminally ill patient's right to die. The issue had been brought to the fore in the late 1970s as a result of several high-profile cases, most notably that of Karen Ann Quinlan, in which families had sought the court's sanction to withhold or remove medical treatment from dying loved ones.

 
$9,500
John Hinckley

John Hinckley
trial date 1982

The verdict of "not guilty" for reason of insanity in the 1982 trial of John Hinckley, Jr. for his attempted assassination of President Ronald Reagan stunned and outraged many Americans. Public pressure from the Hinckley verdict spurred Congress and most states into enacting major reforms of laws governing the use of the insanity defense.

 
$7,500