[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 60 (Wednesday, April 25, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2722-S2723]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REMEMBERING ROBERT SATTER
Mr. BLUMENTHAL. Mr. President, today I wish to pay tribute to the
extraordinary life and immeasurable legacy of long-time Connecticut
legislator and Superior Court judge, the Honorable Robert Satter, who
passed away on January 16, 2012, Martin Luther King, Jr. Day. The
symbolic meaning of this coincidence resonated with many who admired
Judge Satter for his crusading work on behalf of civil rights and equal
opportunity.
After serving in the Navy during World War II, Bob dedicated himself
wholeheartedly to the law, first as a well-known attorney in Hartford
where he took on controversial death penalty cases. In 1959, Bob won a
seat in the Connecticut Legislature, attributing his successful
campaign to the path previously blazed by Democratic Governor Abraham
Rubicoff. He served in the Connecticut Legislature until 1961 and then
again from 1963 to 1966 where he is known for fighting for society's
most marginalized. As a State legislator, he penned Connecticut's first
civil rights bill that targeted discrimination in housing sales.
Starting in 1966, Bob served as general counsel to the Democratic
legislative majority, and was nominated to the bench in 1975 as a
Connecticut State judge. Although officially retiring at the age of 70,
Bob served as a senior judge and trial referee--only vacating this role
when he was too ill to continue serving.
As an attorney, legislator, Superior Court Judge and then as a senior
judge, Bob continually challenged himself, presiding in many difficult
and controversial cases and always working to make laws to serve the
people of Connecticut.
He constantly made the time to give back to future generations of
lawyers, teaching courses such as Constitutional Law at Trinity
College, Liberties of an American at the University of Hartford,
Administrative Law at the University of Connecticut's Graduate School
of Political Science, and the Development of Social Policy at Yale
University. Bob is a legend at the University of Connecticut Law
School, where he taught a Legislative Process course for 27 years.
Bob achieved national renown, but was also well known personally
throughout his local community, participating in informal groups,
including book, poker, and writing clubs. In his last column for the
Connecticut Law Tribune, ``The Last Word on a Long, Rich Life,'' Bob
wrote of his appreciation for practicing law in Hartford as opposed to
New York City where he started out his legal career. In the greater
Hartford area, Bob wrote, ``I found time to participate in the
community.'' He created the Hartford Community Renewal Team, which was
Hartford's first agency dedicated exclusively to combatting poverty,
and in his last published newspaper column, he wrote that he ``would
drop any legal matter to come to its assistance.''
This humanity is clearly evident in Bob's essays and books--true
gifts to future generations. When he turned 90, he wrote in the
Hartford Courant: ``Internally, I am a bunch of memories of people I've
known, events I've experienced, books I've read and poems I can still
recite. More and more I live in that interior space, recalling the
past. When I die, that presence and circuitry will vanish.''
Respectfully, my own view is that his memories will endure through the
family and friends that adore him, his legal accomplishments will
withstand time, and his ``presence and circuitry'' will be ever
vibrant.
[[Page S2723]]
Although he served Connecticut for more than 5 decades, Bob's
contributions were immeasurable. Connecticut has lost a great mind,
teacher, and integral part of its political and progressive
infrastructure. Connecticut and the Nation will never forget this great
man. He lives on through his words and his tremendous acts of vision
and courage as well as his passion for life, the law, and the State of
Connecticut.
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