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Senior judge on U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals, former law school professor

Joseph T. Sneed III, 1920 - 2008

February 15, 2008|Jocelyn Y. Stewart, Times Staff Writer

Judge Joseph T. Sneed III, who served for nearly 35 years on the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals after a long career in academia, died Saturday in San Francisco. He was 87.

Sneed died in his sleep, said his daughter Carly Fiorina, former chief executive of Hewlett-Packard Co. The cause of death was not given.


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In 1994, Sneed was part of a panel that selected Kenneth Starr as the independent counsel charged with investigating President Clinton's actions in the Whitewater real estate venture.

On the nation's largest and busiest appellate court, Sneed ruled on a wide range of cases, many that made headlines.

In 2001, the court ruled that the sentence given to a San Bernardino man, Leandro Andrade, under California's three-strikes law violated the constitutional ban on cruel and unusual punishment. Andrade was sentenced to 50 years for shoplifting videotapes. Sneed dissented, arguing that the ruling contradicted the will of the public who voted for the law.

"A rational basis exists for the state of California to conclude that the interests of society are best served by [Andrade's] incarceration for a minimum of 50 years," Sneed said, according to a 2001 San Francisco Chronicle article.

In 2003, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the three-strikes law.

Sneed viewed himself as a fairly conservative voice on a court that had grown increasingly liberal over the years. In his rulings, Sneed said he sought a fair remedy, one that "harmonizes all the notes sounded in the interpretive symphony. Some notes in the symphony, however, should be played very softly, if at all. Those are the notes that sound in distributive justice," he wrote, according to the Washington Post.

Born July 21, 1920, in Calvert, Texas, Sneed was the son of a cotton farmer and cattle rancher. After earning a bachelor's degree at Southwestern University in 1941, he served in the Army Air Forces during World War II. In 1944, he married Madelon Juergens.

After his discharge from the Army, Sneed earned a law degree at the University of Texas at Austin in 1947 and taught at the school until 1957. The following year, Sneed earned a doctorate in law at Harvard Law School. In the years that followed, Sneed taught law at Cornell University for five years and at Stanford University for nine years, and served as a dean and professor of law at Duke University School of Law from 1971 until 1973.

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