Arlo Smith
Arlo Smith (born October 9, 1927) served as the District Attorney of San Francisco, California from 1980 to 1996. He was the Democratic candidate for attorney general of California in 1990, but lost to Dan Lungren.
Smith was born in Minnesota and grew up in San Bernardino, California. He received his bachelor's degree and law degree from the University of California, Berkeley. Following a 26-year career as a state prosecutor, he was elected San Francisco's district attorney in 1979; he defeated four major opponents in that election, including incumbent Joseph Freitas, whose reputation was damaged by his office's failure to secure murder convictions for Dan White for the Moscone–Milk assassinations.
Smith won three more terms in 1983, 1987, and 1991 without opposition, but in 1995, he was defeated for re-election, finishing third amid challenges from Terence Hallinan and Bill Fazio, the latter of whom was a prosecutor in Smith's office, and whom Smith fired after learning of his intention to run against him. Fazio ran a tough on crime campaign, while Hallinan took more liberal positions. Though Hallinan tied Fazio to Smith as an attack, Smith endorsed the ultimately victorious Hallinan in the subsequent runoff.