Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

REYNOSO DIES AT 90

- By Maria L. La Ganga

Cruz Reynoso, California’s first Latino Supreme Court justice, was a longtime fighter for civil rights.

Cruz Reynoso, a son of migrant workers who labored in the fields as a child and went on to become the first Latino state Supreme Court justice in California history, has died.

Reynoso passed away May 7 at an elder care facility in Oroville, according to his son, Len ReidReynos­o. The cause of death was unknown. Reynoso was 90.

In a legal career that spanned more than half a century and took him from his first job in El Centro to Sacramento, the soft-spoken family man helped shape and protect the first statewide, federally funded legal aid program in the country and guided young, minority students toward the law.

As an early director of California Rural Legal Assistance, Reynoso shepherded the organizati­on’s efforts to ensure farmworker­s’ access to sanitation facilities in the fields and to ban the use of the carcinogen­ic pesticide DDT.

“Many of the suits CRLA brought during his time fundamenta­lly changed the law of this country,” Robert Gnaizda, who worked with Reynoso at CRLA and cofounded the Greenlinin­g Institute, said in an interview he gave to The Times before his death in 2020. “If you want to talk about Latino heroes — and there are a number — I’d say Cruz is at the top of the list.”

But Reynoso, the son of Mexican immigrants, was probably best known for his career’s briefest chapter — his controvers­ial entry to and exit from the California

La Habra’s postmaster wasn’t as happy. When Reynoso went to thank her for what he assumed was her help in the matter, she blew him off.

It set a precedent for how Reynoso, who died Friday at 90, lived his profession­al life. At every step, the powersthat-be tried to cancel this son of Mexican immigrants.

Then-California Gov. Ronald Reagan repeatedly vetoed federal funds for the California Rural Legal Assistance while Reynoso headed the office and even signed off on an investigat­ion that accused the nonprofit of trying to foment murders and prison riots (the investigat­ion went nowhere). Former appellate Justice George E. Paras labeled Reynoso “a profession­al Mexican rather than a lawyer” and his 1982 nomination for a seat on the California Supreme Court a “disgrace” because Reynoso dared hear out Latinos and minorities in a system that for too long just rubberstam­ped decisions against them.

Gov. George Deukmejian took the baton from Paras and heartily supported the movement that ultimately unseated Reynoso in 1986 along with Chief Justice Rose Bird and fellow justice Joseph Grodin for allegedly being too liberal. And President George W. Bush replaced Reynoso on the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights just a week after the group released a report that claimed Dubya’s civil rights policies “further divide an already deeply torn nation.”

Even in death, Reynoso’s opponents are trying to beat him. Most California­ns, if they’ve ever heard of him, just remember Reynoso’s historic defeat, the only time voters ever rejected sitting California Supreme Court justices. It’s a narrative long tossed around by California’s political class. But his legacy will outlive the haters by decades.

He came out the better every time someone tried to knock him down. He continued his battles to open doors for those who followed in his wake, and inspired Latinos on the sidelines. During his lifetime, the powers-that-be in California turned from conservati­ves and liberals alike who favored the gentry to trueblue progressiv­es devoted to uplifting the same underserve­d communitie­s for whom Reynoso alway advocated.

Reynoso quietly became one of the most influentia­lyet-unknown Latinos this state has produced. That’s why the outpouring of universal respect in the wake of his death is unlike any I think we’ll ever see with another state Latino leader.

“He was always my example of holding strong to your values,” tweeted Assemblywo­man Lorena Gonzalez (D–San Diego), a former Reynoso student when she attended UCLA, adding that he was a “hero.”

“Those who knew him recall how this towering figure of Latino civil rights was unfailingl­y humble and gracious, even towards his opponents,” wrote the United Farm Workers in a press release.

Monterey County Supervisor Luis Alejo, a UC Davis student of Reynoso, remembered how his generation saw Reynoso as “mythical.”

“At a different time than today, he was taking on people like Reagan and Deukmejian and was still able to come out on top and be seen as a model,” said Alejo, who became a Reynoso family friend. “And he never asked for the limelight, or awards or anything. He just always felt his work was unfinished.”

The fights for Reynoso started when he was young. In elementary school, his classmates called him “profe” — the Mexican Spanish nickname for a professor — as an insult. As a high schooler, he helped desegregat­e school dances for junior high students in La Habra.

As a young man, Reynoso became an assistant Scoutmaste­r to help start a Boy Scouts troop in his hometown — probably the first in Orange County comprised mostly of Latinos.

“[Latinos] sort of understood, generally, that it was our role in society to be the workers and not to be the profession­als, not to be the folk who ran things,” Reynoso said of those days. “I never accepted that”

One summer, he and his family went to pick grapes in the Central Valley. During a break, Reynoso asked the field foreman how long the season would last because he wanted to return to school.

The foreman laughed and told him Reynoso was the first Mexican he ever knew who valued education.

“It made me so mad,” Reynoso told an oral historian, “that I told myself that someday I’d go look him up, and I’d have my college degree in my left hand, and I’d hook him in the nose with my right hand.”

He never did — he didn’t have to. Reynoso instead channeled his anger into becoming a lawyer, a profession he chose in high school because “I had an urge to do something about the injustices that I saw around me.”

In many ways, his biggest loss — the 1986 electoral loss — became his biggest victory. That allowed him to travel the state and tell his story to basically any group that invited him right up until a couple of years ago.

“Cruz would never say no, and never asked for an honorarium — not even for gas,” Alejo said. “Even in his later years, when he could’ve easily slowed down, he’d go wherever he could to inspire. He always took that seriously.”

That’s how I was able to see Reynoso once. In 2009, he was the keynote speaker at a banquet for the Orange County chapter of the League of United Latin American Citizens. I barely knew anything about him other than his judicial defeat.

His speech was so understate­d that I really can’t quote anything from it. But I do remember how long people stayed afterward to shake hands with him, like few other speakers I’ve ever seen.

Everyone wanted their moment with the barrio boy who won.

 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i AP ??
Rich Pedroncell­i AP
 ?? Pablo Martinez Monsivais AP ?? STATE’S FIRST LATINO JUSTICE Cruz Reynoso receives the Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom from President Clinton in 2000.
Pablo Martinez Monsivais AP STATE’S FIRST LATINO JUSTICE Cruz Reynoso receives the Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom from President Clinton in 2000.

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