Friends,
Last week, I sat down with Judge David S. Tatel, who recently retired from the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals. He wrote about his storied career as a civil rights lawyer and as a jurist in “Vision: A Memoir of Blindness and Justice.” The book also details his evolving understanding of disability, having become blind due to a degenerative retinal disease first diagnosed at age 15.
Judge Tatel is an excellent storyteller, and his passion and humor are clear throughout the book. But his insights about protecting the rule of law are especially essential now when civil rights and access to justice are under attack.
A few highlights from our conversation:
THE CRITICAL ROLE OF CIVIL SERVICE: As he explains in his memoir, Judge Tatel was deeply inspired by President Kennedy’s call to civil service and interned for two summers during college for the Bureau of Labor Statistics. In our conversation, he emphasized just how much that experience had shaped his career.
Judge Tatel was studying to be a physicist when he went to Washington. But his imagination was captured by his colleagues’ commitment to service and especially by the roles government lawyers and judges had in ensuring the 14th and 15th Amendments were enforced during the Civil Rights Movement. He decided to go to law school instead.
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