[Congressional Record Volume 164, Number 200 (Wednesday, December 19, 2018)]
[Senate]
[Pages S7905-S7906]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REMEMBERING JOHN JOSEPH CASSIDY
Mr. HATCH. Mr. President, what can you say about a dear friend who
has passed away? That he was brilliant? And supremely accomplished?
That he loved family and church? And the law? And people from all walks
of life?
To say these things does not nearly capture the full measure of the
man, the much-beloved lawyer John Cassidy, a wonderful and humble
person who rose to the top of his field, who advised Washington
dignitaries from Presidents on down, indeed so many in this body; a man
who was friends to celebrities, business leaders, and politicians
[[Page S7906]]
alike, to busboys, cabbies, and store clerks as well; a man who lived
life to the fullest and yet always had a kind word for whomever he
encountered in the wide, wide world he so loved to explore.
We lost our friend John Cassidy on October 21. While some might be
tempted to say at 88 years John lived a long life--his incredible
vigor, his youthful enthusiasm, his passion for life, his ready smile,
and the twinkle in his eye--all underscore how the world was robbed by
the sudden death of John Cassidy.
And so I wish to pay tribute to John Joseph Cassidy, a writer and
painter, a gardener and chef, a legal scholar and mentor to decades of
young students, and most of all, a devout family man whose definition
of ``family'' embraced so many beyond his cherished wife Cynthia, his
daughters Susan Ross Cassidy of Newton, MA, Carrie Elizabeth Goertz of
Anchorage, AK, and Alice Madeline Meyre of Richmond, VA, and his six
grandchildren John, Ned, Jennifer, Kate, Margaret, and Thomson.
I was proud to be part of that large extended family, and I mourn his
loss.
Cassidy--how he invariably identified himself on the phone--was a
native Washingtonian, a rarity here in the Nation's Capital. John
graduated from Georgetown University and then its law center and
maintained a lifelong allegiance to both institutions, including
service on the university's board of directors and the law center's
board of visitors. That type of unfailing allegiance is vintage John
Cassidy, as I came to learn over the decades of our close friendship.
Even as a young lawyer, Cassidy became active in civic affairs,
serving as vice chairman of Montgomery County's Law Enforcement and
Criminal Justice Commission and as chair of the town council of Chevy
Chase Section 4. He served in the Army's JAG Corps where, in his
typically self-deprecating style, he described his several years in
Iceland as time honing his salmon-fishing technique with visiting
senior officers.
Upon his return to the United States in the early 1960s, John served
as executive assistant to the board of monitors appointed by the court
to oversee the Teamsters as part of a Department of Justice settlement
with the union concerning charges for corruption. He became a trial
attorney in the Justice Department and a trusted aide to Attorneys
General Robert Kennedy and Nicholas Katzenbach.
To be with Cassidy was to be with history. I remember once, when I
walked him out of the Russell Building by my office in SR-135, he
looked out at the Upper Senate Park extending down to where the
Teamsters building stood. John gazed over and said, ``Hoffa used to
call that the `Trail of Tears' as he came up to testify in the
Senate.'' With that, he was off to Constitution Avenue to flag a cab
back to his office.
That was what life with Cassidy was like, and I will miss that so
much about him.
Indeed, conversations with Cassidy were not ripped from a ``Law &
Order'' marathon, a rapid-fire back and forth of case citations.
Conversations with Cassidy were a meandering path, filled with history,
commentary, a few recipes, jokes, and, yes, gardening tips.
Conversations with Cassidy were an experience to be savored and long
remembered.
In 1965, Cassidy left Justice, forming the Miller, Cassidy, Larroca &
Lewin law firm with several of his former colleagues. Bill France, Sr.,
the founder of NASCAR, a major target of Hoffa's efforts, became one of
the firm's anchor clients, a relationship that lasted for decades.
Miller, Cassidy, Larroca & Lewin became a go-to law firm for public
officials and business leaders under investigation for criminal
offenses, a cadre that multiplied during the Watergate prosecutions and
under the Independent Counsel Act that followed.
Miller Cassidy went on to represent a President, two former Attorneys
General, numerous Senators and Representatives, six judges, and dozens
of high-ranking executive branch officials.
When former partner Jamie Gorelick was nominated to be Deputy
Attorney General in 1994, the Wall Street Journal said of the firm in
an editorial that ``among Beltway bigwigs, its phone number is posted
right next to 911.''
For a small law firm, a remarkable number of the firm's alumni were
confirmed by the Senate to positions in the judicial and executive
branches. They include a Deputy Attorney General, a Solicitor General,
two Assistant Secretaries of the Treasury for Terrorist Financing,
General Counsels of the CIA and Defense Department, three Federal
appellate judges, and three U.S. District judges. No fewer than a dozen
alumni became deans or professors at prominent law schools. Nearly all
were mentored during their careers by John Cassidy.
In 2001, John called to tell me that he and most of the other lawyers
from Miller Cassidy were joining the Washington, DC, office of Baker
Botts, where he continued to practice until the brief illness that
preceded his death. Throughout his career at Miller Cassidy and Baker
Botts, John was renowned for how passionately he fought to protect the
interests of his clients, many of whom remained friends for decades
after their legal matters were resolved.
Former Secretary of Treasury and later Secretary of State James
Baker, a senior partner at Baker Botts, said to me about John Cassidy,
``John Cassidy was a great lawyer, but he was also, I think more
importantly, a great friend. He had all the tools one would look for in
an advocate and an advisor, and he knew how to work both the judicial
process and the negotiating table to the benefit of his clients. But
John also really cared about your response when he asked 'How are you
doing?' He was truly a genuine person, and it seems we are missing too
many of his kind of people these days . . . and not only in the legal
profession.''
There are so many fond memories I have of life with Cassidy. Indeed,
my relationship with him started over a legal matter, but we quickly
became friends, and that was true for so many of my colleagues who
sought John's capable legal advice to save us from demise.
I remember how John would interrupt tense negotiations with a quick
quip or story that changed the room's dynamic and helped bring
resolution to the matter at hand. I remember how he would bring to
restaurants his famous jams from his carefully tended Berry Farm in
Potomac. At Ristorante Tosca, he was often seen bringing his homemade
caramels or preserves into the kitchen, insisting the chef and staff
partake of his food long before he ever ordered his meal.
I remember Cassidy's love of golf led him to significant charitable
work with the Tiger Woods Foundation. John and I were equally skilled
as golfers, and that is not a compliment to him or me. While even on
our very best days neither of us could threaten to break par, playing
golf with John was an experience that ran counter to the title, but
fully in the spirit, of Tom Boswell's wryly named book, ``A Good Walk
Spoiled.''
Spending time with John was always a treasure.
I remember John's vibrant pastel drawings; he often drew inspiration
from his magnificent garden at the Berry Farm--garden with berries and
flowers, herbs, and Mr. Stripey tomato plants ten feet high. Such was
his bounty.
I rue that I will never be able to pour over his draft memoirs,
surely to be one of the most interesting tomes in recent history.
Once, I asked Cassidy when he was planning on retiring. He wasn't
sure. Cindy tells me, at 65, he decided to delay the decision 5 years--
at 70, another 5 years--at 75, another 5 years. I have no doubt, at 90,
he would have given the same reply.
In a tribute to Cassidy, his nephew, Jim, said, ``John Cassidy was a
friend of motorsports, a friend of NASCAR and a friend to just about
whoever made his acquaintance. And he was so much more.''
That sums it up. John Cassidy was a friend to this body, a friend to
our institution, and a friend to me. His passing is a loss to his
family, his many friends and colleagues, and most of all, this country
that he loved so much. I will miss him.
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