[Congressional Record Volume 150, Number 110 (Wednesday, September 15, 2004)]
[Senate]
[Pages S9264-S9265]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                 TRIBUTE TO JUDGE REYNALDO GUERRA GARZA

  Mr. CORNYN. Mr. President, I rise today to pay tribute to Judge 
Reynaldo Guerra Garza, who passed away yesterday in Brownsville, TX, at 
the age of 89. Judge Garza was the first Mexican American to serve as a 
Federal district court judge and a Federal appellate judge. Today, I 
join my fellow Texans in mourning this loss, along with his wife of 65 
years, Bertha Garza, and his five children. By any measure of Reynaldo 
Garza's stature in the community, he was a mountain of a man.
  Reynaldo Garza was born in 1915 in Brownsville, TX, a first-
generation American whose parents had fled civil unrest in Mexico. It 
was during the Depression when he decided to become a lawyer, so he 
worked as a laborer for the WPA to save money for tuition at the 
University of Texas.
  He excelled in his studies at the University of Texas and developed a 
great many political friendships, including a longstanding friendship 
with then-congressional candidate Lyndon Baines Johnson. In 1939, he 
graduated from the University of Texas Law School and opened his own 
law office in Brownsville, TX. A solo firm was financially risky for 
such a green young lawyer, but Reynaldo Garza strongly believed he 
should practice law in his community, among his family and his friends.
  Reynaldo Garza served for 4 years as a gunnery sergeant in World War 
II and returned to Brownsville with a growing reputation as a civic 
leader and a brilliant lawyer. He was invited to join the largest firm 
in town as a partner, where he practiced commercial and insurance law 
for more than a decade.
  When a Federal judicial vacancy came up in 1961, President John F. 
Kennedy nominated Reynaldo Garza to fill the seat with broad support 
from the Texas leadership. After being confirmed, Judge Garza plowed 
through a heavy 2-year backlog of cases in exceptional time. As his 
profile grew, Judge Garza became a symbol for many young, hard-working 
Hispanics to pursue their goals of leadership within the legal, 
business, and social community, blazing a trail for others to follow.
  Those in Brownsville, TX, who saw Judge Garza as a model to follow 
included a junior high school student named Juliet Garcia, who became 
the first Mexican-American woman president of a university, and a young 
attorney, Federico Pena, who was to become U.S. Transportation 
Secretary.
  Garza wrote:

       I've always said I hope I got the appointment because I was 
     qualified, not because I was Mexican American. But I knew I 
     had to do a good job or else my actions would reflect not 
     only my ability, but also that of other Mexican Americans.

  It was in December of 1976 when President-elect Jimmy Carter called

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Judge Garza personally to ask him to join his Cabinet as Attorney 
General. But Judge Garza thought it was a prank call, so he simply hung 
up the phone. Eventually, after being convinced this was indeed the 
real thing, a request from the President-elect, Judge Garza gracefully 
declined the offer because he wanted to stay close to home and stay 
close to his community.
  But it was in 1978, when President Carter called again, and this time 
offering him a nomination to serve on the Fifth Circuit Court of 
Appeals--after having been confirmed by the Senate--he became the first 
Mexican-American Federal appellate court judge. At every step of the 
way, Reynaldo Garza blazed a trail for others.
  U.S. Ambassador to Mexico Tony Garza, who practiced law in 
Brownsville from 1983 until 1988, told the Associated Press today that 
everybody who knew Judge Garza had a story to tell. He said:

       I remember him telling me when I was a lawyer, ``Don't ever 
     forget you'll have a lot of clients, if you're lucky, but 
     hopefully your clients will only have one attorney.''

  The Ambassador said:

       I will never forget that advice.

  Judge Garza retired from active service in 1982, but he continued to 
serve on the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals with a reduced workload. 
His last court sitting was in 2001, and he continued working as a 
circuit court judge until the time of his death. He never lost that 
dedication or belief in the importance of hard work and perseverance.
  Let me share with you one additional story. This one is from the 
Brownsville Herald of today. It was reported:

       Garza touched many [lives] in the legal community, both 
     professionally and personally.
       Undeterred by his illness, he officiated the swearing in of 
     U.S. District Judge Ricardo H. Hinojosa in McAllen as 
     chairman of the federal sentencing commission. The ceremony 
     was performed in [Judge] Garza's hospital room in Brownsville 
     on Aug. 3, Hinojosa said.
       [Judge] Hinojosa met [Judge] Garza when he was on the bench 
     at the federal courthouse in Brownsville. Their two 
     courtrooms were located on the same floor.
       ``Judge Garza was a great mentor and immediately made me 
     feel at home . . . he was always ready to provide advice and 
     counsel,'' [Judge] Hinojosa said.
       Hinojosa said he has admired Garza since he was a boy. He 
     remembers attending naturalization ceremonies in Starr 
     County, which [Judge] Garza presided over.
       ``I remember sitting there and not realizing that someday I 
     would be working on the same floor as he did,'' Hinojosa 
     said. ``He's an example of anything that is possible in this 
     great county.''
       ``The rest of us have come along after him because he 
     opened doors for us. He opened doors that remain open for the 
     rest of us.''

  Mr. President, today, I offer this salute to the memory of Judge 
Reynaldo Garza.
  I remember when I served on the State judiciary, we were at Southern 
Methodist University School of Law trying to help young law students 
become effective advocates on a moot court panel. He and I served on 
the same panel. I remember his great humor, his great intelligence, and 
his incisive questioning.
  It may seem as if Judge Garza is gone from us now, but he is still 
here as long as we bear his memory in our hearts, as long as we honor 
what he gave to us during his time here on Earth, and as long as his 
example inspires a child to dream of greater things.
  May God bless Reynaldo Garza. And may God bless his family.
  Mr. President, I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Missouri.

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