Michael Boudin, ‘an appellate judge's judge,' who wrote key DOMA ruling, dies at 85
Yet he and the other two judges did just that when they ruled that the law's denial of federal benefits to legally married same-sex couples was unconstitutional. Many legal observers — from conservatives and liberals to activists who supported or opposed LGBTQ rights — saw that DOMA ruling as a significant signpost along the road toward the
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'He was extraordinarily brilliant and history will count him as one of the most significant judges of his era,' said
Respected in the federal judiciary and beyond, Mr. Boudin 'was an appellate judge's judge,' said
Mr. Boudin 'was a sound, intelligent, and thoughtful judge,' said
They had been friends since college, when Mr. Boudin was president of the Harvard Law Review and Breyer served under him as articles editor. Even in that realm, Mr. Boudin's intellect and expansive reading habits were notable, Breyer recalled.
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'I tend to think he read every great book written in English,' Breyer said.
Before becoming a federal judge, Mr. Boudin served in the Reagan administration as a deputy assistant US attorney general in the Justice Department's antitrust division.
President George H.W. Bush nominated him in 1990 to serve as a US District Court judge in the District of Columbia. Mr. Boudin was never entirely comfortable in that job, and
Mr. Boudin announced plans to leave that judicial appointment and move to Cambridge, and then
Though he returned to Boston after serving in one Republican president's administration and being nominated by another to two judgeships, Mr. Boudin's family background was distant from GOP politics.
'He was for me a perfect parent — wise and devoted and considerate and charming — and I told him so,' Mr. Boudin said at a memorial service after Leonard died in 1989.
Mr. Boudin's only sibling, his younger sister, Kathy Boudin, was part of the militant Weather Underground. She served 22 years in prison for her role as an unarmed decoy in the 1981 robbery of a Brink's armored truck, during which other robbers shot and killed two police officers and a security guard.
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The narrative of a conservative attorney-turned-judge from a liberal family proved irresistible to many reporters who wrote about Mr. Boudin over the years. But his friends said he was careful to rarely grant interviews and to never let his own political beliefs become part of the public conversation.
'This was a judge's judge, a really powerful mind, always looking for the right answer,' said
'You wouldn't be able to characterize him as conservative or liberal,' Levi said. 'He didn't fit into any of these labels because he such a seeker of the truth.'
Mr. Boudin's 'decisions were always guided by the law and constitutional requirements, and not at all by political points of view,' Lynch said.
Born in Manhattan, N.Y., on Nov. 29, 1939, Michael Boudin was the only son of Leonard Boudin and
Mr. Boudin received a bachelor's degree from Harvard College in 1961 and graduated from Harvard Law School in 1964.
He clerked for
Friendly was an especially important mentor, whose lessons Mr. Boudin revisited in 'Judge Henry Friendly and the Craft of Judging,' a 2010 University of Pennsylvania Law Review essay.
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For example, Mr. Boudin wrote, Friendly knew 'that an appeal might well have a life after the judgment was handed down.'
Many judges assign clerks to write early drafts of decisions, or parts of them. Like Friendly, Mr. Boudin was known for writing his own first drafts and opinions.
He wrote in the essay that in complex cases, 'the choices spread out like a maze of tracks in a great railroad terminal. As the forks appear, the seasoned judge who is close to the case is more likely than the clerk to understand the realistic options and select the best route to an outcome.'
'There were times you almost felt superfluous because he was so good,' said David Friedman, who clerked for Mr. Boudin and is now
'In terms of the law,' Friedman said, 'it felt like he already knew all there was to know.'
Away from the bench, Mr. Boudin was known for his competitive approach to even a casual game of tennis and for his love of his cats. The last three were Julia, Chloe, and Nougat.
Over the years, he would bring his cats into his judge's chambers. Once during a meal with colleagues, the swirl of topics turned to the projected end of the universe, when all life would vanish.
'The problem,' Mr. Boudin deadpanned with sincerity, 'is that then there would be no cats.'
A memorial gathering will be planned for Mr. Boudin. In addition to his wife, and her three daughters from before they married, he leaves a nephew,
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'What a profoundly impactful and brilliant and respected jurist he was,' Chesa said.
To his friends among other jurists, Mr. Boudin's devotion to the law seemed matched by his unending desire to keep learning by reading book after book.
'One passion was as an appellate judge, but the other was trying to understand this complex world in which we find ourselves, the human condition, how we make sense of it all,' Marshall said. 'He had a broad inquiring mind. That, to me, was Michael.'
Bryan Marquard can be reached at

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