Albuquerque Journal

SHE ‘BLAZED AN HISTORIC TRAIL’

First woman on the Supreme Court spent much of her youth in NM, Ariz.

- BY MARK SHERMAN

WASHINGTON — Retired Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, an unwavering voice of moderate conservati­sm and the first woman to serve on the nation’s highest court, died Friday. She was 93.

O’Connor died in Phoenix, of complicati­ons related to advanced dementia and a respirator­y illness, the Supreme Court said in a news release.

Chief Justice John Roberts mourned her death. “A daughter of the American Southwest, Sandra Day O’Connor blazed an historic trail as our Nation’s first female Justice,” he said in a statement issued by the court. “She met that challenge with undaunted determinat­ion, indisputab­le ability, and engaging candor.”

In 2018, she announced that she had been diagnosed with “the beginning stages of dementia, probably Alzheimer’s disease.” Her husband, John O’Connor, died of complicati­ons of Alzheimer’s in 2009.

O’Connor’s nomination in 1981 by President Ronald Reagan and subsequent confirmati­on by the Senate ended 191 years of male exclusivit­y on the high court, and she wasted little time building a reputation as a hard worker who wielded considerab­le political clout on the nine-member court.

Born in El Paso, O’Connor grew up on the Lazy B ranch, which spanned the New Mexico-Arizona border south of the Gila River. She learned early to ride horses, round up cattle and drive trucks and tractors. She fixed windmills and repaired fences.

She spent about as much of her youth in New Mexico as she did in Arizona.

“We did everything in Lordsburg,” O’Connor told Harry Moskos of the Journal during a

telephone interview in February 2006, just after she retired from the Supreme Court. “Shopping at a wonderful Chinese grocery store, banking, picking up the mail.”

She told Moskos that she, her brother and her sister used to visit Lordsburg’s Hidalgo Hotel, sit on a big leather sofa in the lobby and watch people.

“It was so sad when the Hidalgo was torn down,” she said.

O’Connor’s parents were married in Las Cruces, but O’Connor grew up in a ranch house about a mile west of the New Mexico border.

In the 2006 Journal interview, she said that during the Christmas season, her family drove to Silver City to pick out a tree.

O’Connor went to school mostly in El Paso. At the start of the school year, her parents would drive her to Lordsburg, where she would board a train to the Texas city and live with her grandmothe­r while attending school.

She told Moskos she did go to eighth grade in Lordsburg, but returned to El Paso for high school.

O’Connor received both her undergradu­ate degree and law degree from Stanford, but she also worked as a secretary/receptioni­st at a Lordsburg law office before completing the law degree.

Moskos finished his interview with O’Connor by asking her what he considered the New Mexico state question. “Red or green?” “Green,” she said. On the bench, O’Connor’s influence could best be seen, and her legal thinking most closely scrutinize­d, in the court’s rulings on abortion, perhaps the most contentiou­s and divisive issue the justices faced. She balked at letting states outlaw most abortions, refusing in 1989 to join four other justices who were ready to reverse the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade decision that said women have a constituti­onal right to abortion.

Then, in 1992, she helped forge and lead a five-justice majority that reaffirmed the core holding of the 1973 ruling. “Some of us as individual­s find abortion offensive to our most basic principles of morality, but that can’t control our decision,” O’Connor said in court, reading a summary of the decision in Planned Parenthood v. Casey. “Our obligation is to define the liberty of all, not to mandate our own moral code.”

Thirty years after that decision, a more conservati­ve court did overturn Roe and Casey, and the opinion was written by the man who took her high court seat, Justice Samuel Alito. He joined the court upon O’Connor’s retirement in 2006, chosen by President George W. Bush.

In 2000, O’Connor was part of the 5-4 majority that effectivel­y resolved the disputed 2000 presidenti­al election in favor of Bush, over Democrat Al Gore.

‘Forging a new path’

Bush was among many prominent Americans offering condolence­s Friday. “It was fitting that Sandra became the first female appointed to our highest court, because she was a pioneer who lived by the code of the west,” Bush said in a statement. “She was determined and honest, modest and considerat­e, dependable and self-reliant. She was also fun and funny, with a wonderful sense of humor.”

Former President Barack Obama, who awarded O’Connor the Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom in 2009, praised her for “forging a new path and building a bridge behind her for all young women to follow.”

O’Connor was regarded with great fondness by many of her colleagues. When she retired, Justice Clarence Thomas, a consistent conservati­ve, called her “an outstandin­g colleague, civil in dissent and gracious when in the majority.”

Thomas and Roberts are the only two members of the current court to have served with O’Connor. But all the justices weighed in Friday with remembranc­es of her.

The newest justice, Ketanji Brown Jackson, said O’Connor “helped pave the road on which other jurists, including me, now walk.” Justice Elena Kagan said O’Connor judged with wisdom and “a will to promote balance and mutual respect in this too-often divided country.”

O’Connor could, nonetheles­s, express her views tartly. In one of her final actions as a justice, a dissent to a 5-4 ruling to allow local government­s to condemn and seize personal property to allow private developers to build shopping plazas, office buildings and other facilities, she warned that the majority had unwisely ceded yet more power to the powerful. “The specter of condemnati­on hangs over all property,” O’Connor wrote. “Nothing is to prevent the state from replacing ... any home with a shopping mall, or any farm with a factory.”

O’Connor, whom commentato­rs had once called the nation’s most powerful woman, remained the court’s only woman until 1993, when, much to O’Connor’s delight and relief, President Bill Clinton nominated Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. The current court includes a record four women.

The enormity of the reaction to O’Connor’s appointmen­t had surprised her. She received more than 60,000 letters in her first year, more than any one member in the court’s history. “I had no idea when I was appointed how much it would mean to many people around the country,” she once said. “It affected them in a very personal way. People saw it as a signal that there are virtually unlimited opportunit­ies for women. It’s important to parents for their daughters, and to daughters for themselves.”

At times, the constant publicity was almost unbearable. “I had never expected or aspired to be a Supreme Court justice,” she said. “My first year on the court made me long at times for obscurity.”

Following her retirement, O’Connor expressed regret that a woman had not been chosen to replace her. O’Connor remained active in the government even after she retired from the court. She sat as a judge on several federal appeals courts, advocated for judicial independen­ce and served on the Iraq Study Group. She also was appointed to the honorary post of chancellor at the College of William and Mary in Virginia.

O’Connor cited her husband’s struggle with Alzheimer’s disease as her primary reason for leaving the court. After moving into an assisted living center, John O’Connor struck up a romance with a fellow Alzheimer’s patient, a relationsh­ip experts say is not uncommon among people with dementia. The retired justice was relieved that he was comfortabl­e and happy at the center, according to her son, Scott.

Court rulings

On the bench, O’Connor generally favored states in disputes with the federal government. She often sided with police when they faced claims of violating people’s rights. In 1985, she wrote for the court as it ruled that the confession of a criminal suspect first warned about his rights may be used as trial evidence, even if police violated the suspect’s rights in obtaining an earlier confession.

A 1991 decision written by O’Connor said police do not violate the Constituti­on’s ban against unreasonab­le searches and seizures when they board buses and randomly ask passengers to consent to being searched. In a 1994 decision, O’Connor said police officers need not stop questionin­g and seek clarificat­ion when a criminal suspect makes what might have been an ambiguous request for legal help.

O’Connor wrote for the court in 1992, when it said prison guards violate inmates’ rights by using unnecessar­y physical force even if no serious injuries result, and in 1993, when it ruled that employers may be guilty of illegal sexual harassment even in the absence of any psychologi­cal harm.

In 2004, O’Connor wrote the majority opinion that went against the Bush administra­tion in ruling that an American citizen seized on the Afghanista­n battlefiel­d can challenge his detention in U.S. courts. “We have long since made clear that a state of war is not a blank check for the President when it comes to the rights of the Nation’s citizens,” O’Connor wrote.

O’Connor once described herself and her eight fellow justices as nine firefighte­rs: “When (someone) lights a fire, we invariably are asked to attend to the blaze. We may arrive at the scene a few years later.”

Retirement

O’Connor announced her retirement in a one-sentence written statement. She cited her age, then 75, and said she “needs to spend time” with her family. Her official resignatio­n letter to Bush was similarly succinct. “It has been a great privilege indeed to have served as a member of the court for 24 terms,” the justice wrote. “I will leave it with enormous respect for the integrity of the court and its role under our constituti­onal structure.”

“For an old ranching girl, you turned out pretty good,” Bush told her in a private call not long after receiving her letter, an aide said. Then, in the Rose Garden outside the Oval Office, he praised her as “a discerning and conscienti­ous judge and a public servant of complete integrity.”

O’Connor was 51 when she joined the court to replace the retired Potter Stewart. A virtual unknown on the national scene until her appointmen­t, she had served as an Arizona state judge and before that as a member of her state’s Legislatur­e.

The woman who climbed higher in the legal profession than had any other woman did not begin her career auspicious­ly. As a top-ranked graduate of Stanford’s prestigiou­s law school, class of 1952, O’Connor discovered that most large law firms did not hire women.

One Los Angeles firm offered her a job as a secretary. Perhaps it was that early experience that shaped O’Connor’s profession­al tenacity. While workweeks typically stretched to 60 hours or more, she found time to play tennis and golf. Before her husband developed Alzheimer’s, they danced expertly and made frequent appearance­s on the Washington party circuit.

O’Connor’s survivors include her three sons, Scott, Brian and Jay, six grandchild­ren and a brother.

In late 1988, O’Connor was diagnosed as having breast cancer, and she underwent a mastectomy. She missed just two weeks of work. That same year, she had her appendix removed.

O’Connor was embarrasse­d in 1989 after conservati­ve Republican­s in Arizona used a letter she had sent to support their claim that the United States is a “Christian nation.” The 1988 letter, which prompted some harsh criticism of O’Connor by legal scholars, cited three Supreme Court rulings in which the nation’s Christian heritage was discussed.

O’Connor said she regretted the letter’s use in a political debate. “It was not my intention to express a personal view on the subject of the inquiry,” she said.

Funeral plans were not immediatel­y available.

 ?? HARRY CABLUCK/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor is shown before administer­ing the oath of office to members of the Texas Supreme Court, Jan. 6, 2003, in Austin, Texas. O’Connor, who joined the Supreme Court in 1981 as the nation’s first female justice, has died at age 93.
HARRY CABLUCK/ASSOCIATED PRESS U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor is shown before administer­ing the oath of office to members of the Texas Supreme Court, Jan. 6, 2003, in Austin, Texas. O’Connor, who joined the Supreme Court in 1981 as the nation’s first female justice, has died at age 93.
 ?? RON EDMONDS/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Supreme Court Associate Justice Sandra Day O’Connor poses with Chief Justice Warren Burger after her swearing in at the Supreme Court in Washington, Sept. 25, 1981.
RON EDMONDS/ASSOCIATED PRESS Supreme Court Associate Justice Sandra Day O’Connor poses with Chief Justice Warren Burger after her swearing in at the Supreme Court in Washington, Sept. 25, 1981.

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