Hugh O'Connor

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For the Canadian filmmaker see Hugh O'Connor (filmmaker). Not to be confused with Hugo Oconór.

Hugh O'Connor
Born (1962-04-07)April 7, 1962
Rome, Italy
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Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Occupation Actor
Spouse(s) Angela Clayton (m. 28 March 1992-his death)
Parent(s) Carroll O'Connor
Nancy Fields

Hugh Edward Ralph O'Connor (April 7, 1962 – March 28, 1995) was an American actor and the son of actor Carroll O'Connor. He is perhaps best known for his portrayal of Det./Lt. Lonnie Jamison on the television police drama, In the Heat of the Night, which originally aired from 1988-1994. O'Connor committed suicide in 1995.

Biography

Hugh O'Connor was born in Rome, Italy. When he was six days old, he was adopted by Carroll O'Connor and his wife Nancy. Carroll was in Rome filming Cleopatra. He was named after Carroll O'Connor's brother, who died in a motorcycle accident in 1961. When he was 16, Hugh was diagnosed with Hodgkin's lymphoma. He survived the cancer with chemotherapy and two surgeries but became addicted to drugs. He had been taking prescription drugs for the pain and marijuana for nausea but later became dependent on harder drugs. Despite numerous stays at rehabilitation clinics, he never conquered his addiction and remained in recovery.

Marriage

He was married to Angela Clayton, a wardrobe assistant on In the Heat of the Night, on March 28, 1992, and their son Sean Carroll O'Connor was born in 1993.

Legal issues

Six months before Hugh's death, Angela told Carroll O'Connor that a man named Harry Thomas Perzigian had been furnishing the younger O'Connor with drugs. Carroll had retained a private detective to investigate. About a week before Hugh's death his father brought the evidence to the Los Angeles Police, asking them to arrest Perzigian. Several hours after Hugh's death, his father publicly named Perzigian as the man who caused Hugh O'Connor's death. Perzigian was arrested the next day for drug possession and furnishing cocaine after a search of his apartment turned up cocaine and drug paraphernalia. In January 1996, he was sentenced to a year in jail, a $1,000 fine, 200 hours of community service, and three years of probation.

Perzigian later sued Carroll O'Connor for slander for calling him a "sleazeball" and saying "he was a partner in murder, not an accessory, a partner in murder" in an interview with Diane Sawyer on ABC's Primetime Live. After a highly publicized civil trial, Carroll O'Connor was found not liable. He dedicated much of the rest of his life to speaking out on drug awareness.

Death

On March 28, 1995, the third anniversary of his marriage, O'Connor called his father to tell him he was going to end his life. He told his father he believed he could not beat the drugs and could not face another drug rehabilitation program. Carroll called the police, who arrived at Hugh's Pacific Palisades, California home just as he shot himself in the head.[1] The police later determined he had cocaine in his blood.

Hugh O'Connor's remains were cremated and were originally buried at the Church of St. Susanna in Rome, Italy. Later, his remains were moved to the mausoleum of the Pontifical North American College in Campo Verano, Rome, Italy. Today, he has a cenotaph at the Church of St. Susanna and at his father's gravesite in Los Angeles.

The Hugh O'Connor Memorial Law

After Hugh's death, his father successfully lobbied to get the state of California to pass legislation that allows family members of an addicted person or anyone injured by a drug dealer's actions, including employers, to sue for reimbursement for medical treatment and rehabilitation costs. The law, known as the Drug Dealer Civil Liability Act in California, went into effect in 1997. It is essentially the Model Drug Dealer Liability Act authored in 1992 by then Hawaii U.S. Attorney Daniel Bent. It had been passed in several states before it was passed with Carroll O'Connor's support and has now been passed in seventeen states. The California Narcotics Officer's Association was instrumental in working with Carroll O'Connor to get it passed in California.

Several cases under the Act are pending in California and at least one other state. Successful cases have been brought under the Model Drug Dealer Liability Act in Michigan, Utah, and Illinois. A Web site devoted to the Model Drug Dealer Liability Act can be found at ModelDDLA.com.

Filmography

References

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External links