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Jesse William Curtis Jr.

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Jesse William Curtis Jr.

Birth
San Bernardino, San Bernardino County, California, USA
Death
5 Aug 2008 (aged 102)
Irvine, Orange County, California, USA
Burial
San Bernardino, San Bernardino County, California, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
From the Los Angeles Times:
Jesse W. Curtis, 102, a retired jurist who served nearly four decades
on the bench, including 28 years as a judge in the U.S. District Court
for Central California, died of natural causes Aug. 5 in Irvine.


Curtis was first appointed to the bench in 1953 by then-Gov. Earl
Warren to serve in the Superior Court in San Bernardino County. He
served there for nine years until President Kennedy elevated him in
1962 to the Central District Court, which has jurisdiction over seven
counties, including Los Angeles. During his federal career, among the
many cases he presided over was the first jury trial held in American
Samoa.


He retired from the bench in 1990 when he was 85. According to his
family, he stepped aside largely in protest of the "three strikes"
sentencing guidelines, which he believed were too rigid.


After his retirement, he served as a judicial arbitrator. He also
devoted himself to his lifelong passion as a yachtsman. At 85 he
restored a classic powerboat. Twice, he placed first at the opening
day festivities at the Newport Harbor Yacht Club.


The descendant of a pioneer family that arrived in California from
Iowa on the same wagon train as Wyatt Earp, Curtis was born Dec. 26,
1905, in San Bernardino. He graduated from San Bernardino High School
before attending the University of Redlands, where he played football
and ran track. He earned his law degree from Harvard in 1931 and
joined his father's law practice. He was in private practice for 22
years until becoming a judge.

Curtis, Jesse W., Jr. — of San Bernardino, San Bernardino County, Calif. Democrat. Alternate delegate to Democratic National Convention from California, 1944.

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From the Los Angeles Times:
Jesse W. Curtis, 102, a retired jurist who served nearly four decades
on the bench, including 28 years as a judge in the U.S. District Court
for Central California, died of natural causes Aug. 5 in Irvine.


Curtis was first appointed to the bench in 1953 by then-Gov. Earl
Warren to serve in the Superior Court in San Bernardino County. He
served there for nine years until President Kennedy elevated him in
1962 to the Central District Court, which has jurisdiction over seven
counties, including Los Angeles. During his federal career, among the
many cases he presided over was the first jury trial held in American
Samoa.


He retired from the bench in 1990 when he was 85. According to his
family, he stepped aside largely in protest of the "three strikes"
sentencing guidelines, which he believed were too rigid.


After his retirement, he served as a judicial arbitrator. He also
devoted himself to his lifelong passion as a yachtsman. At 85 he
restored a classic powerboat. Twice, he placed first at the opening
day festivities at the Newport Harbor Yacht Club.


The descendant of a pioneer family that arrived in California from
Iowa on the same wagon train as Wyatt Earp, Curtis was born Dec. 26,
1905, in San Bernardino. He graduated from San Bernardino High School
before attending the University of Redlands, where he played football
and ran track. He earned his law degree from Harvard in 1931 and
joined his father's law practice. He was in private practice for 22
years until becoming a judge.

Curtis, Jesse W., Jr. — of San Bernardino, San Bernardino County, Calif. Democrat. Alternate delegate to Democratic National Convention from California, 1944.

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