Current:Home > ContactCharles Fried, former US solicitor general and Harvard law professor, has died -Excel Money Vision
Charles Fried, former US solicitor general and Harvard law professor, has died
View
Date:2025-04-12 13:03:47
BOSTON (AP) — Charles Fried, a former U.S. solicitor general and conservative legal scholar who taught at Harvard Law School for decades, has died, the university said. He was 88.
Fried, who died Tuesday, joined the Harvard faculty in 1961 would go on to teach thousands of students in areas such as First Amendment and contract law.
He was President Ronald Reagan’s solicitor general from 1985 to 1989 and was an associate justice of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts from 1995 to 1999. Fried argued many important cases in state and federal courts, according to Harvard, including Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, in which the U.S. Supreme Court set standards for allowing scientific expert testimony in federal courts.
“Charles was a great lawyer, who brought the discipline of philosophy to bear on the hardest legal problems, while always keeping in view that law must do the important work of ordering our society and structuring the way we solve problems and make progress in a constitutional democracy,” Harvard Law School Dean John Manning said in a message to law school faculty, calling him an “extraordinary human who never stopped trying new things, charting new paths, and bringing along others with him.”
“Charles loved teaching students and did so with enthusiasm and generosity until just last semester,” he continued. “What made him such a great teacher — and scholar and colleague and public servant — was that he never tired of learning.”
Laurence Tribe, the Carl M. Loeb University Professor Emeritus at Harvard, said he would always “treasure the memory of our friendship.”
“Charles had a towering intellect, an open and inquiring mind, and a huge heart, the rarest and most wonderful mix of talents and dispositions,” Tribe wrote in an email. “As a colleague and friend for half a century, I can attest to how uniquely beloved he was by students and faculty alike. In each of his many legal and academic roles, he left behind a legacy that will inspire generations to come.”
Benjamin Pontz, president of the Harvard Federalist Society, paid tribute to Fried. The Federalist Society has no partisan affiliation and takes no position in election campaigns, but it is closely aligned with Republican priorities.
“To me, Charles Fried embodied the summum bonum of academic life. He was a polymath, and he was a patriot,” he wrote on the Federalist Society website. “I’ll remember his commitment to decorum, to debate, and to dessert ... I hope you’ll take some time to reflect on his commitment to the Harvard Federalist Society and to students at Harvard Law School, which he held to the very end.”
Though conservative, Fried was also remembered for his openness. Tribe recalled how Fried argued “as Solicitor General for the overruling of Roe v Wade — but then having written an opinion piece arguing the other way a couple years ago.”
Fried also voted for Hillary Clinton in 2016, calling Donald Trump “a mean and vindictive bully, striking out in the crudest ways” in an opinion piece before the election that was published in The Boston Globe. More recently, he defended former Harvard President Claudine Gay in a December opinion piece in The Harvard Crimson following her much-maligned congressional testimony about antisemitism on campus. Gay would later resign following the backlash over that testimony and allegations of plagiarism.
veryGood! (1)
Related
- Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
- U.N. Security Council approves resolution calling for urgent humanitarian pauses in Gaza and release of hostages
- Nevada to pay $340,000 in settlement over prison firefighting conditions
- North Carolina lottery expands online game offerings through ‘digital instants’
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Pennsylvania expands public records requirements over Penn State, Temple, Lincoln and Pitt
- 2 environmentalists who were targeted by a hacking network say the public is the real victim
- North Carolina lottery expands online game offerings through ‘digital instants’
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Which eye drops have been recalled? Full list of impacted products from multiple rounds of recalls.
Ranking
- Trump's 'stop
- Wisconsin’s annual gun deer season set to open this weekend
- Starbucks sued after California woman says 210-degree hot tea spilled on her in drive-thru
- Trial of ex-officer Brett Hankison in Breonna Taylor death ends with hung jury: What's next
- Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
- Tiger Woods cheers on son in first state golf championship: How Charlie earned his stripes
- Police rescue children, patients after armed gang surrounds hospital in Haiti
- What are breath-holding spells and why is my baby having them?
Recommendation
Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
Why is the F1 Las Vegas Grand Prix so late? That and all your burning questions, explained
Thousands of bodies lie buried in rubble in Gaza. Families dig to retrieve them, often by hand
Native American advocates seek clear plan for addressing missing and murdered cases
Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
The 'Friends' family is mourning one of its own on social media
Pastoralists have raised livestock in harsh climates for millennia. What can they teach us today?
Wait, there's going to be a 'Frozen 4' now? Disney CEO reveals second new sequel underway