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Judge Terry Crone works from home

THE PUBLIC SERVANTS: Terry Crone 鈥74

Leaders the World Needs

is a regular feature of 花季传媒 Magazine, which is published three times a year.

Terry Crone 鈥74 especially enjoyed courtroom work over the nine-plus years he practiced law in South Bend, so the trend 鈥渢hat lawyers were going to be spending less and less time in the courtroom鈥 worried him.

鈥淲hen the judge called and said, 鈥楧o you want to come over here and work with me and possibly position yourself to move up into my position?鈥 I thought, well, that鈥檇 be a wonderful opportunity,鈥 he said. 鈥淪o I was very lucky. I鈥檝e been lucky all my life.鈥

Lucky enough to be the first person in his family to attend college. Lucky enough that, after Crone received a disappointing financial aid package from the University of Notre Dame, which he hoped to attend, a friend鈥檚 father suggested he look at 花季传媒, which not only provided robust financial aid but also 鈥渁 wonderful liberal arts education. It taught me to think critically. It gave me opportunities to do things.鈥 He was a conference-champion sprinter for two years and qualified for the NCAA Division II finals in the 220, but 鈥淚 got in a fist fight and broke my hand.鈥

Judge Terry Crone readingLucky enough to learn life lessons 鈥 perhaps because he was on 鈥渁 first-name basis鈥 with 花季传媒 security, the Putnam County sheriff and the dean of students and did things 鈥測ou wouldn鈥檛 necessarily want your kids to know about鈥 鈥 that 鈥測oung people do things that should not destroy their entire life forever.鈥

Lucky enough to have a father who was the political director for the United Auto Workers for north-central Indiana, a connection that positioned the son, upon graduation from 花季传媒 and during law school at Notre Dame, to work for U.S. Sen. Birch Bayh and meet contemporary political stars, including President Jimmy Carter, former Vice President Hubert Humphrey and U.S. Sen. Ted Kennedy.

Lucky enough to get that judge鈥檚 invitation, and wise enough to accept it and work two years as magistrate until the judge retired. Lucky enough to have then-Gov. Evan Bayh 鈥 Birch鈥檚 son 鈥 appoint him to the St. Joseph circuit court bench. He completed the retired judge鈥檚 term and was elected three times to retain the seat.

鈥淚鈥檝e always believed that the efficacy or integrity of the court system is dependent on people trusting the system,鈥 Crone said. And so, as a circuit judge, he appointed the first African American man and the first woman to the judicial nominating commission. His third appointment, the first African-American woman, had doubts about her credentials.

鈥淚 said, Gladys, if nothing else, these people who come in as applicants have to look an African American in the eye and try to seek their approval so that, later on, when some African-American individual is standing in front of them, maybe they have a little more understanding of what it feels like to be in a reverse situation as far as power,鈥 he said. 鈥

He also initiated the county鈥檚 Spanish-speaking program for public defenders. 鈥淚t鈥檚 important that when people come to court they see people whom they can relate to and have faith and trust in the system,鈥 he said.

Crone also was lucky enough to be dear friends with Joe Kernan, whom he met 40 years ago when they both worked for South Bend city government. In the brief time that Kernan was Indiana governor 鈥 16 months between Gov. Frank O鈥橞annon鈥檚 death and the inauguration of Gov. Mitch Daniels, who defeated Kernan in 2004 鈥 an opening occurred on the Indiana Court of Appeals, and Kernan appointed him. Crone was retained by the voters in 2006 and 2016; the latter vote will take him to the mandatory retirement age, 75.

鈥淚 enjoy the work because of the intellectual stimulation and I enjoyed being in a position where I could make decisions that I felt were helpful to people, whether it be on a micro basis or on a more systemic basis,鈥 he said. 鈥淛ustice is not just a result; it鈥檚 also a process. You need to have a just result, but you also need to have a just process. It works better when people believe that that is the case 鈥 that the process is fair, as well as the just result.鈥

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