Retired St. Louis Judge Returns To Court For The Forgotten Poor-tantan

The St. Louis courthouse had a sound Judge Bennett could still recognize with his eyes closed.

Not the grand sound people imagined when they talked about justice, not gavels cracking like thunder or lawyers making speeches that changed the world.

It was the smaller sound of paper being handled by nervous hands.

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It was the squeak of rubber soles on tile after rain.

It was the tired cough of someone who had taken two buses before sunrise because missing court meant losing more than a morning.

At ninety years old, Bennett moved through that sound with a cane in one hand and a folded newspaper under the other arm.

He no longer wore a robe.

He no longer had a courtroom.

His name was not printed on the docket anymore, and no clerk stood when he entered.

Still, every Thursday morning, he came through the public entrance, nodded at the guard, emptied his pockets slowly into the tray, and walked toward the civil courtrooms like a man returning to a place that still owed him answers.

People noticed him, but not all at once.

Older attorneys looked twice.

A clerk would pause with a stack of files and say, “Morning, Judge,” before remembering he was not supposed to be called that in the active sense anymore.

Bennett would smile, not correcting them, not enjoying it either.

Titles were easy to keep.

Peace was not.

He had spent forty years on the bench, and for most of those years he believed the work was honest.

He believed in calendars, procedures, sworn statements, deadlines, and the hard discipline of treating every person the same.

He believed that keeping his face still was a kind of fairness.

He believed that if one side came with a lawyer and the other came alone, the law still had a way of balancing the room.

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