"I don't think a judge should be too much involved in outside activities"
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A judge who is "too much involved" outside the courtroom isn’t just busy; he’s vulnerable. Harold H. Greene’s line reads like modest advice, but it’s really a theory of power in a role that depends on public belief as much as legal authority. The judiciary has no army and no purse. What it has is legitimacy, and legitimacy is easier to lose than to win. So the sentence lands as a preemptive boundary: the judge must not only avoid impropriety, but avoid the optics of impropriety - the cocktail circuits, boards, panels, and civic causes that blur the line between citizen and arbiter.
The phrasing is tellingly cautious. Greene doesn’t declare that judges should have no outside life; he warns against being "too much involved", a deliberately elastic standard that acknowledges reality while insisting on restraint. It’s the language of someone who’s seen how quickly "community engagement" can become a pipeline for influence, or at least the suspicion of it. In an era when high-profile cases increasingly intersected with politics, corporate power, and media attention, the safest posture was distance.
The subtext is less about personal purity than institutional insulation. Outside activities create relationships, and relationships create expectations. Even if a judge remains scrupulously fair, the perception that he might not be can corrode every ruling he writes. Greene’s intent is essentially administrative: protect the court by limiting the judge’s exposure to social debts, ideological branding, and the slow creep of being treated like an important person rather than a neutral one.
The phrasing is tellingly cautious. Greene doesn’t declare that judges should have no outside life; he warns against being "too much involved", a deliberately elastic standard that acknowledges reality while insisting on restraint. It’s the language of someone who’s seen how quickly "community engagement" can become a pipeline for influence, or at least the suspicion of it. In an era when high-profile cases increasingly intersected with politics, corporate power, and media attention, the safest posture was distance.
The subtext is less about personal purity than institutional insulation. Outside activities create relationships, and relationships create expectations. Even if a judge remains scrupulously fair, the perception that he might not be can corrode every ruling he writes. Greene’s intent is essentially administrative: protect the court by limiting the judge’s exposure to social debts, ideological branding, and the slow creep of being treated like an important person rather than a neutral one.
Quote Details
| Topic | Justice |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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