As the district attorney in Los Angeles in 1994, Gil Garcetti captured national attention when his office decided not to pursue the death penalty while prosecuting O.J. Simpson.
When Simpson was acquitted in 1995, people began writing Garcetti's "political obituaries," The New York Times noted. But he redeemed himself the next year when his office secured a conviction of Lyle and Erik Menendez, who killed their parents.
These days, Garcetti has pursued a different career: photography. Last year, CNN reported that he had completed eight books of photographic essays and become an opponent of the death penalty.
"My focus is on photography and other things not related to the criminal-justice system or even to the law. I made that career decision when I left, after the voters told me to leave," he told CNN.
Garcetti does keep some crime drama in his life, though. He has served as a consultant for the TV show "The Closer" and, more recently, "Major Crimes."