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‘People’s Court’ judge Joseph Wapner dies at 97 -reports

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Reuters) - Joseph Wapner, the former real-life judge who presided over “The People’s Court” on reality television with a Solomonic presence that made him one of the best-known legal figures in the United States, died yesterday at the age of 97, news reports said.

Wapner’s son, Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Fred Wapner, told CNN his father died at his home in Los Angeles of natural causes. A grandson, Gabriel Wapner, confirmed the death to the Washington Post, which said Wapner had suffered several strokes in recent years.

From 1981 through 1993, Wapner served as an arbitrator on “The People’s Court,” resolving disputes that were usually trivial, with both parties in the litigation agreeing to abide by his ruling.

Wapner handled two cases on each half-hour show, ruling with a commanding demeanor and basing decisions on his three decades as a lawyer and judge. He was stiff but sometimes showed a dry wit.

The show made Wapner an unlikely judicial superstar and pop culture touchstone and its catchphras­e - “Don’t take the law into your own hands: you take ‘em to court, the People’s Court” - worked its way into daily conversati­ons.

Wapner was spoofed on comedy shows, suggested for a seat on the U.S. Supreme Court and became a key element of Dustin Hoffman’s Academy Award-winning portrayal of an autistic savant in the 1988 movie “Rain Man.”

Hoffman’s character was obsessed with watching “The People’s Court,” reciting the show’s introducti­on and counting down the minutes until Wapner was on the air. In a 1989 survey by the Washington Post, 54 percent of respondent­s were familiar with Wapner, but only 9 percent could identify William Rehnquist as U.S. chief justice.

“The People’s Court” was the brainchild of two game-show mavens and they asked Wapner if he would be interested in coming out of retirement to preside.

The show fared well as a syndicated series, airing on more than 160 U.S. television stations in the 1980s and in 20 foreign countries.

The show’s staff looked through pending small-claims cases to find people willing to resolve their disputes on the show rather than in a real court. Many cases were ordinary - overdue rent, damage to a car or a broken oral contract - but others were unique. That is how a stripper ended up before Wapner complainin­g that attendees at a bachelor’s party refused to pay because they thought she was unattracti­ve.

The show’s producers paid any damages or costs that Wapner might levy.

Wapner was dropped from the show in 1993 and a new version of “The People’s Court” made its debut in 1997 with Ed Koch, the former New York mayor, on the bench. He was replaced two years later by Jerry Sheindlin, the husband of Judy Sheindlin, star of the similar “Judge Judy” show. Wapner found Sheindlin’s acerbic

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