Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Judge who freed ‘Hurricane’ Carter dies

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SAN DIEGO — H. Lee Sarokin, the federal judge who freed boxer Rubin “Hurricane” Carter and in a landmark case famously said tobacco companies engaged in a “vast” conspiracy to conceal the dangers of smoking, has died in California, news outlets reported Friday. He was 94.

Sarokin died Tuesday in La Jolla, a seaside community in San Diego where he and his wife, Margie Sarokin, lived in retirement, The San Diego Union-Tribune reported.

Haddon Lee Sarokin was a New Jersey-born graduate of Dartmouth College and Harvard Law School. He was nominated to a federal judgeship by former President Jimmy Carter and served on the district court in New Jersey from 1979-94 and the appeals court from 1994-96.

In 1985, Sarokin threw out the conviction­s of Carter and John Artis, two Black men who were wrongfully convicted of killing three white men. Sarokin ruled that their prosecutio­n was based “upon an appeal to racism rather than reason, concealmen­t rather than disclosure.”

The ruling stood after the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear an appeal.

Carter’s innocence had been championed by celebritie­s and was the basis of a 1975 song by Bob Dylan.

Sarokin told the Union-Tribune in 2014 that Carter called him every year on Nov. 7, the anniversar­y of the ruling.

In 1988, Sarokin presided over a landmark liability case against tobacco companies. His pretrial rulings opened the way for corporate records to be submitted as evidence. When lawyers for the companies asked Sarokin to dismiss the case in their favor, he refused, saying evidence showed that the tobacco industry engaged in a conspiracy “vast in its scope, devious in its purpose and devastatin­g in its results.”

The case resulted in a jury awarding $400,000 to the estate of Rose Cipollone, who had died after decades of smoking.

An appeals court overturned the verdict and removed Sarokin from a similar case, saying some of his comments suggested bias against the tobacco makers, which he denied. However, documents in the case helped pave the way for a wave of similar lawsuits brought by state attorneys general in 1998.

Sarokin issued some 2,500 rulings over his career, among them deciding that a homeless man couldn’t be barred from a public library because of his smell.

“He was never afraid to say what he thought,” his wife said.

In retirement, Sarokin was a regular contributo­r to Huff-Post and wrote a dozen plays with themes of social justice and civil rights that were staged by the regional North Coast Repertory Theater.

In addition to his wife, Sarokin is survived by five children and 11 grandchild­ren.

 ?? (AP/John Duricka) ?? U.S. District Judge H. Lee Sarokin prepares to testify on Capitol Hill in Washington in August 1994 before the Senate Judiciary Committee, which was to hold hearings on his nomination to the U.S. Court of Appeals.
(AP/John Duricka) U.S. District Judge H. Lee Sarokin prepares to testify on Capitol Hill in Washington in August 1994 before the Senate Judiciary Committee, which was to hold hearings on his nomination to the U.S. Court of Appeals.

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