Harry Pregerson (born October 13, 1923) serves as
a
judge on the
United
States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. He was appointed
to the Ninth Circuit in 1979 by President
Jimmy Carter. Previous to this he was appointed
to the
United States District Court for the Central District of
California in 1967 by President
Lyndon Johnson.
He is a
graduate of University of California, Los
Angeles
(1947) and the University of
California, Berkeley
Boalt Hall
School of Law (1950). Judge Pregerson was also a U.S.
Marine Corps First Lieutenant in
World War
II, during which he was severely wounded in the
Battle of Okinawa.
Judicial philosophy
Pregerson's judicial philosophy is frequently characterized as
liberal. The conservative commentator
Hugh Hewitt has criticized him for
"
judicial activism" and "rules
with his heart instead of his head". He ardently opposes the
three strikes law, even though the
Supreme Court has affirmed its constitutionality.
Involvement in California recall election
Pregerson was part of a unanimous three-judge panel that ordered
the postponement of
2003 California recall
based on the interpretation of
equal protection clause of the
Fourteenth
Amendment, because in the recall six counties would use the
antiquated
punch cards voting system.
However, the decision was subsequently overturned by the
en
banc court of Ninth Circuit. Eventually, the recall was
successful in removing
Gray Davis from
governorship and
Arnold
Schwarzenegger became the new governor of California.
Federalism
Judge Pregerson is a supporter of
federalism and favors restraints on the power of
federal government. He wrote the majority decision in the Ninth
Circuit panel on
Gonzales
v. Raich,
holding that the
Interstate
Commerce Clause forbade the federal government to interfere
with state laws that permitted the use of
medical marijuana. However, the ruling was
later overturned by the
Supreme Court,
which held that it is within Congressional power to regulate
intrastate activities that are seen to influence interstate
commerce, including using homegrown marijuana for medical
purposes.
It should be noted that Pregerson's first ruling on
Raich
was based on federalism rather than his opinion on the merit of
medical marijuana. In 2007 after
Raich was decided by the
Supreme Court, Angel Raich sued Alberto Gonzales again for
substantive due process violation,
because the Controlled Substance Law deprived her fundamental right
to life. Pregerson ruled against Raich this time, arguing it is
still untimely to call using medical marijuana a "fundamental
right" that is "implicit within the concept of ordered liberty" as
only a minority of states legalized medical marijuana.
In the case
United States v. Reynard, the circuit
court upheld the
DNA Analysis
Backlog Elimination Act of 2000. Pregerson wrote a dissent,
arguing that the act was an unconstitutional exercise of federal
power.
Civil procedure
In 2007, Pregerson authored the panel majority decision that
affirmed the
class action certification
in
Dukes v.
Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., a
case involving female employees suing Wal-Mart
Corporation
for gender
discrimination. He wrote that although the class action
suit had a massive class, "mere size does not render the case
unmanageable". The decision did not address the employees' claim,
but only affirmed its class action status. Wal-Mart said it will
seek an appeal.
Honors
Pregerson accepting the honor from Department of Veterans
Affairs
In 2002, the
California
Legislature officially named the giant
interchange between
Interstate 110 and
Interstate 105 the "Judge Harry
Pregerson Interchange" in honor of the fact that Pregerson is the
longest serving judge in the history of the Ninth Circuit.
Furthermore, as a district judge, he supervised the settlement of
the federal lawsuit against the Century Freeway, which enabled the
interchange to be built. Judge Pregerson's name is now on signs at
the interchange.
In 1992, the UCLA Alumni Association awarded Pregerson "
Community Service Award" for his efforts
helping homeless families to house in
Salvation Army shelters.
As a World War II
veteran himself, Pregerson
is an enthusiastic advocate for veterans' interests and has worked
on behalf of the homeless veterans. In 2001 the
Department of Veterans
Affairs honored him and the then-Acting Secretary
Hershel Gober presented Pregerson with a token
of appreciation with the VA seal.
Judge Pregerson's wife, Bernardine, teaches microbiology at a
community college.
See also
References
- The Law's Conscience Hugh Hewitt
- Judge Bucks Third-Strike Rules The Recorder
- Ninth Circuit Panel Orders Recall Vote Postponed
Until March Metropolitan News
- Ninth Circuit gives green light to October 7
election San Francisco Chronicle
- Medical pot wins a legal victory: U.S. appeals
court ruling is likely to face a challenge San
Francisco Chronicle
- Court opinion
- United States v. Reynard Ninth Circuit
- Wal-Mart to appeal discrimination suit status
CNN
- ACR 142 Assembly Concurrent Resolution
- Recipient Biography UCLA Alumni
Association
- Judge Honored by VA for Work With Homeless Vets
The Third Branch
External links
[[Category:University of California, Berkeley School of Law
alumni]]