DECEMBER 26, 2012 Judge Robert Bork's Lasting Legacy by Paul Larkin, Senior Legal Fellow The world saw Judge Robert H. Bork (Mar. 1, 1927—Dec. 19, 2012), the public figure. He was in the public eye as a solicitor general, a circuit judge, and (most famously) as a nominee to the Supreme Court. Those who knew him as a Yale Law School professor, an author, and a legal commentator would have had a deep appreciation of the man as a keen intellect with an ever-inquisitive mind. But I was luckier than even those people were, for I had the profound good fortune to clerk for Judge Bork when he sat on the appellate court. Most people think that appellate judges spend their time ruminating about esoteric legal issues in a case, without giving much thought to how their rulings will affect the individuals involved. That may be true of some judges, but it wasn’t true of Judge Bork. I remember a contract case that I worked on as a law clerk. It raised pretty much every legal issue that we had covered in the course on contracts that every first year law student takes. Indeed, the case read like a final exam on contract law. It was, in sum, the kind of case least likely to garner any public interest at all. Yet Judge Bork approached it as though it raised issues of tremendous public import. I remember discussing the case with Judge Bork. The night before the parties presented their oral arguments in court, Judge Bork walked into my office to discuss it. He asked not just about what my research had found, but also for my opinion on the case—not something every judge is interested in hearing from a mere clerk. I told him that I was 90 percent certain that one of the parties was right on every issue. “Ninety percent is not good enough,” he responded. He went on to explain that he wanted to be certain about what to do in the case, and that he wanted to get it right because what he did affected people. Judge Bork never viewed cases as just an opportunity for him to issue pronouncements about the law. He believed that his job was to decide each particular case—and to decide it correctly. Opinions were just a way to explain why a judge cast a vote one way or another. My entire clerkship with Judge Bork was an experience that I’ve come to treasure more and more as it fades further and further into the past. Others who clerked for him feel the same way. Judge Bork always listened respectfully to our ideas and recommendations. He engaged us in debate as though we were faculty colleagues—and always with the goal of finding the right answer to any and every legal issue. Having had the privilege of knowing Judge Bork as a person, his death resonates deeply. And it hurts. The legal and conservative communities may have lost a standard bearer today. But a small group of us also lost a person whom the public never had the opportunity to know. And we will miss him more than the public—not knowing him—can possibly imagine. Leave your thoughts and remembrances about Judge Bork when you join the discussion on our blog >>  | |  | | | |  | Wheaton College v. HHS A Case of Conscience Last week, the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals issued an order rebuking the Obama Administration in a lawsuit filed by Wheaton College and Belmont Abbey College. The two universities had challenged the Department of Health and Human Services’ (HHS) anti-conscience mandate requiring them to fund health care plans for their employees that provide abortion-inducing drugs, contraception, and sterilization — or else pay substantial penalties. Read the rest of the story >> | | | | | |  | The Center for Legal and Judicial Studies at The Heritage Foundation Founded in 1973, The Heritage Foundation is the nation’s most broadly supported public policy organization. Heritage created the Center for Legal and Judicial Studies in 2001 to educate government officials, the media and the public about the Constitution, legal principles and how they affect public policy. | | The Heritage Foundation | 214 Massachusetts Ave NE, Washington, DC 20002 | 202.546.4400 | heritage.org
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