Judge Grice

Judge Grice

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caption = Judge Grice in his chief judge's uniform (painted by Carlos Ezquerra)
character_name = Judge Grice
publisher = Rebellion
debut = "2000 AD" prog 706 (1990)
creators = John Wagner and Steve Dillon
alter_ego =
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Judge Grice was a fictional character in the "Judge Dredd" comic strip in "2000 AD". Created in 1990 by John Wagner and Steve Dillon, Grice later had his own spin-off series, "Purgatory" (1993) by Mark Millar and Carlos Ezquerra. Originally a minor supporting character and one of Dredd's colleagues, he later became a notable villain, at first with (in his opinion) good intentions, but later he descended into psychosis and became truly evil. He seized control of Mega-City One and proclaimed himself chief judge.

Character history

Democracy Referendum

Grice was a distinguished street judge in Mega-City One, holding the rank of Senior Judge. Originally loyal to the law, he ended up breaking it to serve what he perceived to be the greater good. In 2112 Judge Dredd persuaded Chief Judge McGruder to permit the citizens to vote (in 2113) in a referendum about whether the Judges should continue to rule the city, or whether democratic government should be restored. This controversial scheme was unpopular with many judges, and Grice assumed that the result was a foregone conclusion: that the people would vote to remove the Judges from power. Firmly believing that this would result in total chaos, Grice formed a conspiracy with half a dozen other judges to prevent the referendum from happening. They planned to assassinate Dredd, reasoning that since Dredd was almost the only judge who believed that the Judges could win the vote, then without him all support for the referendum would disappear and McGruder would cancel the project.

Dredd survived the attempts on his life, personally killing two of the conspirators and quickly rounding up the others. In a rare lapse of regard for the law, Dredd actually assaulted Grice after taking him into his custody, since he believed that the people would vote to keep the Judges in office because of their reputation for integrity, but that once the people heard about Grice's crime that myth would be dispelled and the Judges would consequently lose the vote. Grice attempted to defend himself but was beaten to a pulp, a humiliation he would never forget. He was summarily sentenced to twenty years of hard labour on the penal colony on Titan. His captivity on Titan was recounted in his own series, "Purgatory".

Own series: "Purgatory"

Conditions on Titan were extremely harsh, and prisoners were frequently tortured and brutalized by the guards. After enduring two years of his sentence, Grice escaped from his cell and led a mass breakout, killing the governor and many guards, and stealing a dozen or so spaceships. He also stole a biological weapon, the "Meat Virus," which had been discovered on Titan and which was being examined by biological weapon scientists. Hundreds of violent prisoners escaped with him. "Purgatory" ended at this point, but the storyline was immediately taken up where it left off in "Judge Dredd: Inferno" by Grant Morrison and Carlos Ezquerra.

"Judge Dredd:" Inferno

Grice attacked Mega-City One, first by crashing his stolen ships into major buildings and then by unleashing the deadly Meat Virus on the population. Normally his rebels would have been quickly exterminated by the Judges, but they were weakened by the symptoms of the virus, and were forced to retreat to the Cursed Earth outside the city while the rebels wreaked havoc and killed indiscriminately. Chief Judge McGruder was captured and tortured almost to death, and Dredd himself nearly perished in an unsuccessful rescue attempt.

Grice assumed the office of chief judge, and began passing insane laws which he capriciously changed from day to day. Even one of his own followers began to question his sanity, and eventually turned on him. Anticipating this, Grice had the traitor killed, but even his loyal comrades were not safe from Grice's wrath: he also publicly executed one of his most dedicated men with a chainsaw, one of the judges from his original conspiracy to prevent the referendum two years earlier.

However, Grice's men were heavily outnumbered by the Judges, and once the Judges had regrouped from their initial setbacks Dredd led them back on the offensive. Storming the city, they made quick work of the escaped prisoners. Grice had a mental breakdown and began destroying the interior of the Grand Hall of Justice with a flamethrower and shooting his own men. Dredd confronted him personally. Even on this second occasion Grice almost got the better of him, but Dredd repeatedly ran him over with his lawmaster bike, until he was totally crushed.

Quotes

*"This is a girl's gun. This gun isn't big enough for the chief judge! I want the biggest gun we've got."
*"We have to look at the horror. We have to look at it until it becomes a friend."

Bibliography

*"Judge Dredd: Nightmares" (2000 AD progs 702-706) by John Wagner and Steve Dillon (character first appeared in prog 706)
*"Judge Dredd: The Devil You Know" (progs 750-753) by John Wagner and Jeff Anderson
*"Purgatory" (progs 834-841) by Mark Millar and Calros Ezquerra
*"Judge Dredd: Inferno" (progs 842-853) by Grant Morrison and Carlos Ezquerra
*"Janus, Psi Division: A New Star" (progs 980-984) by Grant Morrison and Paul Johnson (cameo in 983; character deceased)


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