Sam Houston Clinton
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Sam Houston Clinton (1923 – 2004) was a former Texas Court of Criminal Appeals Judge, who as a lawyer represented both atheist leader Madalyn Murray O'Hair and Jack Ruby, the man who shot and killed alleged presidential assassin, Lee Harvey Oswald.
Clinton, was born in Waco, Texas, the son of a cotton broker. He graduated from Baylor University and served in World War II as a naval aviator. He graduated from Baylor University Law School in 1948. He was an aide to congressman Bob Poage of Texas from 1949 to 1950 and an attorney for the National Labor Relations Board in 1951. He also worked at the FBI's fingerprint dept. As a lawyer in Austin, Texas from 1959 to 1979, he was general counsel to the Texas AFL-CIO and the Texas Civil Liberties Union. Mr. Clinton was able to get the guilty verdict against Jack Ruby, the Dallas nightclub owner who killed Oswald on national television, reversed on appeal, based on procedural errors. Ruby, meanwhile, had died of cancer while in prison. In addition to representing O'Hair, Mr. Clinton won a lawsuit to desegregate women's dormitories at the University of Texas at Austin in the late 1960s.
Mr. Clinton was elected to the Texas state court of criminal appeals in 1978. Clinton served three consecutive six-year terms on the state's highest criminal court. His 1,094 opinions were the second-most ever written by a judge on the court. He retired in 1996.
On October 5, 2004, Judge Clinton died, at the age of 81, of Alzheimer's disease at a retirement home in Austin, Texas.