Independent From the Ground Up

John Jones

Photo by Carl Socolow '77.

by Michelle Simmons

There鈥檚 something about geology and Judge John E. Jones III 鈥77, P鈥11.

Jones was born and raised in Schuylkill County, deep in Pennsylvania鈥檚 anthracite-coal country. His grandfather William, born in 1895 to Welsh immigrants, was one of the thousands of breaker boys working 10 hours a day, six days a week sifting and sorting slate and other impurities along the conveyor belts and chutes that spit out tons of coal each day. With only an eighth-grade education, William eventually completed correspondence courses in civil engineering and bought stakes in the mines he had worked in as a child.

鈥淗e was a totally self-made man, who believed in education,鈥 Jones says.

At the time, no one could imagine the trajectory his family would take, that about a century later William鈥檚 grandson would be appointed as a federal judge to the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania.

And no one could further imagine that Jones would decide two cases, nearly 10 years apart, on two of the three issues that arguably form the bedrock of social conservatism in the United States: evolution in 2005 and same-sex marriage this past May.

The first lawyer in his family, Jones majored in political science at Dickinson, earned his J.D. from the Dickinson School of Law and clerked for Guy A. Bowe 鈥40, president judge of Schuylkill County and an important mentor. He then moved to private practice鈥攕till in his home town of Pottsville鈥攚hile becoming a mover and shaker in Pennsylvania GOP circles. In 1995 he was named to chair the Pennsylvania Liquor Board, where he served for seven years, until his appointment in 2002 by President George W. Bush to the federal bench.

From the beginning of his tenure, Jones showed a propensity for independent thought, along with a clear, concise prose style. A few cases nibbled at the edges of the culture wars, such as Bair v. Shippensburg University, in which he struck down provisions of the university鈥檚 speech code; but in 2005, he drew Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District, the first federal legal challenge to the teaching of intelligent design. The trial triggered massive, 24/7 media coverage.

In a widely lauded鈥攁nd reviled鈥139-page decision, Jones took the Dover School Board members to task not only for their 鈥渂reathtaking inanity鈥 in pursuing a creationist agenda in the classroom but also for outright lying during earlier depositions. 鈥淭he students, parents, and teachers of the Dover Area School District deserved better than to be dragged into this legal maelstrom, with its resulting utter waste of monetary and personal resources,鈥 he wrote.

This focus on the personal, individual consequences of the cases over which he presides would become a hallmark for Jones. 鈥淚 tell my clerks, every one of them, when they come on board, these are not just files,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hese are not screenshots on a computer. These are people. And trite though that may be, 22 years of practicing law taught me that every case has a face.鈥

Jones himself was catapulted into a maelstrom of another sort. 鈥淲e got bags of mail鈥擨 mean, bags,鈥 he recalls. 鈥淲e were pouring them out on the table, and that went on for days.鈥 Some of the mail contained threats against him and his family serious enough to warrant round-the-clock U.S. Marshal protection, and he became a favorite punching bag for conservative commentators, who wasted no time in condemning him for his 鈥渏udicial activism.鈥

鈥淲hat was repeatedly misapprehended about the Dover case was that it had to do with the origin of man,鈥 Jones explains in Blindfolds Off: Judges on How They Decide. 鈥淲hat was on trial鈥攖he somewhat seminal question in the case鈥攚as this concept known as intelligent design. ... It dovetailed extensively with creationism and was really the successor to the concept of creation science, which had been rejected in prior court decisions.鈥

Dover endowed Jones with a celebrity status rare among the judiciary. In 2006 he was named by Time magazine to its 100 Most Influential People in the World list. In a New Yorker article about the case, the writer described him as having 鈥渢he rugged charm of a 1940s movie star; he sounded and looked like a cross between Robert Mitchum and William Holden.鈥 There was speculation that Tom Hanks would play Jones in a film about the trial.

鈥淭he experience had some surreal aspects to it,鈥 he deadpans.

Jones has used that status to his advantage and has become a different sort of activist鈥攐ne for the concept and practice of 鈥渏udicial independence鈥濃攁nd he speaks as much as his heavy schedule allows in its defense (including an upcoming Dec. 2 visit to Dickinson for a panel discussion hosted by the ).

鈥淲e don鈥檛 rule to please the person who appointed us,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e rule according to the Constitution and the Bill of Rights and the law that we are applying in any particular case. A lot of people say, 鈥榃ho is this one judge to decide this case?鈥 Well, federal judges are appointed by the U.S. president and confirmed by the U.S. Senate. So, in the popular sense we may be unelected officials, but we don鈥檛 just fall out of the sky and onto the bench. We are a product of the process, and we are a member of a co-equal branch of government.鈥

This summer, Jones had another opportunity to educate the public about the importance of judiciary independence, when he drew the high-profile case Whitewood v. Wolf, in which he struck down Pennsylvania鈥檚 ban on same-sex marriage. His decision, appearing among a rapid succession of similar verdicts in other states, heralded a shifting-of-the-ground-beneath-your-feet kind of change in the culture wars.

This time, in a much briefer opinion (only 39 pages), Jones laid out the long history of systemic discrimination against LGBT individuals, such as the criminalization of homosexuality, the bans against hiring LGBT individuals or denying them housing and the prevalence of hate crimes. The case did not go to trial, as both sides agreed on the facts: 鈥淭he lawyers concluded that the harms were evident,鈥 says Jones, 鈥渆ven though they disagreed on the legal result.鈥 In essence, the defendant (the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania) was arguing that government-sanctioned discrimination was perfectly constitutional.

Jones drew from another civil-rights battle to undergird his decision. 鈥淚n the 60 years since Brown [v. Board of Education] was decided, 鈥榮eparate鈥 has thankfully faded into history, and only 鈥榚qual鈥 remains,鈥 he wrote. 鈥淪imilarly, in future generations the label same-sex marriage will be abandoned, to be replaced simply by marriage. We are a better people than what these laws represent, and it is time to discard them into the ash heap of history.鈥

In the following days, he again was both hailed and pilloried in the national media (with social media platforms such as Twitter and Facebook amplifying every comment), and his staff got the requisite cranky calls, but he notes that this case didn鈥檛 get the same 鈥渧isceral reaction鈥 as Dover had. 鈥淢aybe on this issue the public is a little more enlightened,鈥 he muses.

Meanwhile, Jones continues to manage his mountainous case load (鈥渟everal hundred civil cases that are active and probably about 100 criminal cases on the docket鈥) and teaches a course in criminal law at the Pennsylvania State University Dickinson School of Law. He still commutes every day between his Pottsville home (often stopping first at a local donut shop for his morning coffee) and Harrisburg, where his chambers are located.

And while many of his neighbors might disagree with his views鈥攕ome of them vehemently鈥攈e鈥檚 still a hometown favorite. 鈥淧eople are so wonderful and respectful,鈥 he says, 鈥渘ot because I鈥檓 so great, but because I鈥檓 their guy. My wife always says, 鈥楾hey can argue about stuff, but if John did it, it鈥檚 OK.鈥 鈥

His chambers, which overlook the State Capitol Building, feature an assortment of awards and honors he鈥檚 received over the years, including the Geological Society of America鈥檚 President鈥檚 Medal, which sits next to an award commemorating his service to a local fire company. Nearby hangs a pair of boxing gloves signed by Muhammad Ali (a gift from legendary trainer Angelo Dundee), and on his desk rests a gavel, carved from anthracite.

鈥淲e are called, as federal judges, the last great generalists,鈥 Jones says. 鈥淥n any given day, my docket can involve myriad differences, scientific points, engineering. So the tools you get and the intellectual curiosity that鈥檚 developed as a liberal-arts student鈥攁ll of that comes to bear when you have to pivot from one case to another. Nothing prepared me better than the liberal-arts education I received at Dickinson. Obviously, you need the legal education, but the intellectual curiosity is a parallel tool in what I do, day after day.鈥

In 2009, when Jones received the Geological Society medal on the bicentennial of Charles Darwin鈥檚 birth, among the 1,000-plus audience members was Noel Potter, professor emeritus of geology. 鈥淲hen I sat in Noel Potter鈥檚 geology class some 36 years ago, neither Professor Potter nor I could have imagined this day would come,鈥 Jones told the assembly of scientists. 鈥淎nd for those of you who think there鈥檚 some guy sitting in the last row of your classroom and he鈥檚 not paying attention. ... I鈥檓 here to tell you that maybe he was paying attention, and maybe he was actually learning something.鈥

Read more from the fall 2014 issue of Dickinson Magazine.

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Published November 5, 2014