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From his 25th-floor office, Judge Saul A. Epton, a soft-spoken and slightly owlish man of 62, surveyed the wintry expanse of Lake Michigan and reflected on his new post in the circuit court of Cook County: "This is paradise. It's boring but it's paradise...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Law: There Goes the Judge | 1/8/1973 | See Source »

...German immigrant, Epton put himself through law school, specialized in insurance in his private practice, and finally, in 1959, became a judge. "Just about the time I went on the bench, my wife died. I wanted to forget my personal problems, so I asked for the most difficult assignment there was. The chief judge said, Take boys' court for 90 days, if you can stand it.' " Himself the father of one daughter, Epton administered a stern but understanding sort of justice to the 17-to 21-year-old youths who came before him. "There are two kinds...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Law: There Goes the Judge | 1/8/1973 | See Source »

...Epton made a point of meeting with young gang chieftains, explaining the law's point of view and answering their questions. He invited leaders to sit with him on the bench, and he would ask for their advice before sentencing a suspect. Sometimes he even took the "colleagues" to lunch for far-ranging discussion of the law. More than 5,000 boys shared the bench with Epton, learning, as the judge put it, that "there is no more mystery in boys' court than there is in the games they play. When they are offside in football, they have...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Law: There Goes the Judge | 1/8/1973 | See Source »

After ten years in boys' court, Epton asked for transfer to criminal court because "I had so much success communicating that I thought perhaps I could do the same thing there." When he made his move, he was guest of honor at a banquet given by the leaders of some two dozen juvenile gangs. "Judge, we thought you were a miserable guy," said one of the hosts, "but then we agreed that you were the same miserable guy to everybody-a miserable guy but fair." In addition to such tributes, the judge received a new gavel...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Law: There Goes the Judge | 1/8/1973 | See Source »

...King was sometimes ignored-or worse. He had difficulty in effectively organizing Chicago slum dwellers in 1966; militants in Harlem showered him with rotten eggs in 1965. Many radicals derided his pleas for nonviolence-though few were unmoved by his death, as was New York City's William Epton, who was convicted of conspiring to commit criminal anarchy for his part in the 1964 Harlem riots. "We don't mourn King," said Epton. "We saw him as an obstacle to the black liberation movement. We saw him as a fireman for Kennedy and Johnson...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: The Moderates' Predicament | 4/19/1968 | See Source »

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