- Adrian G. Duplantier
Infobox Judge | name=Adrian Guy Duplantier, Sr.
office=United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Louisiana
term_start=May 31 ,1978
term_end=August 15 ,2007
preceded=R. Blake West
succeeded=Pending
office2=Louisiana State Senate from Orleans Parish (later District 4)
party=Democratic Party
term_start2=1960
term_end2=1974
preceded2= 8 at-large members from Orleans Parish
succeeded2= Sidney J. Barthelemy
office3=Judge of the New Orleans Civil District Court
term_start3=1974
term_end3=1978|
date of birth= 1929
date of death=August 15 ,2007
place of birth=New Orleans, Louisiana
religion=Roman Catholic
occupation=Attorney , legislator,judge
spouse=Sally Thomas DuplantierAdrian Guy Duplantier, Sr. (
March 5 ,1929 -August 15 ,2007 ), served fromMay 31 ,1978 , until his death as ajudge of theUnited States District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana. He was also a former four-term Democratic member of the Louisiana State Senate, having representedOrleans Parish .Duplantier (pronounced DEW PLAHN SHAY) graduated in 1945 from the
Roman Catholic -JesuitHigh School in his nativeNew Orleans . He then attended Loyola University School of Law, from which he graduated "cum laude" in 1949. He was editor-in-chief of the "Loyola Law Review" from 1948-1949. He was appointed to the federal bench byU.S. President Jimmy Carter . In 1988, Judge Duplantier earned amaster of laws degree from theUniversity of Virginia Law School in Charlottesville.Duplantier was in private practice from 1950-1974. He was first assistant district attorney for Orleans Parish from 1954-1956. In 1960, he was cited by the
Junior Chamber of Commerce as the "Outstanding Young Man in the Greater New Orleans Area". That same year, Duplantier, who was pro-civil-rights, entered the state Senate at the time of the return ofsegregationist James Houston "Jimmie" Davis to the Louisianagovernorship . Two years later, he ran unsuccessfully formayor of New Orleans. He was endorsed by the retiring deLesseps Story "Chep" Morrison, Sr., who had also been Davis' principal opponent in the 1959-1960 election cycle. Duplantier was defeated in the primary byVictor H. Schiro , the lastsegregationist to have been mayor of the "Crescent City". Schiro then handily won thegeneral election over the RepublicanElliot Ross Buckley , an attorney and acousin ofnewspaper columnist William F. Buckley, Jr. Duplantier was re-elected to the Senate in 1964, 1968, and 1972, having served under the two terms of
Governor John McKeithen , another Morrison rival, and the first two years ofEdwin Washington Edwards ' first term. He resigned from the Senate in 1974 to become a judge of the Civil District Court in New Orleans, where he served until his appointment to the federal bench four years later. He served on the court until his death, having assumed senior status in 1994.On
August 8 ,1991 Duplantier struck down an anti-abortion law passed by the Louisiana legislature over theveto of then Republican Governor Charles E. "Buddy" Roemer, III. The judge said that the statute conflicted with the 1973United States Supreme Court opinion, "Roe v. Wade", and he was legally bound to strike it down though such action was not his personal preference.In 1996, Duplantier was appointed by then
Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist to serve as chairman of the Advisory Committee onBankruptcy Rules.Duplantier was a member of the
Knights of Columbus , a Catholic men's organization, and was an active parishioner of Saint Francis Cabrini and St. Pius X churches in New Orleans. He was also afisherman and agardener . He was a part-time professor at Loyola Law School. He was active in the alumni associations of Jesuit High School and Loyola University as well as Catholic Charities, the Association of Retarded Citizens and the Boys Hope / Girls Hope (BHGH) organization and was a co-founder of the New Orleans branch of BHGH. Jesuit High School inducted Judge Duplantier into its Hall of Honors.Duplantier was a member of the board of directors of the Louisiana chapter of the French-American
Chamber of Commerce , and in 2002, he was the first non-French citizen to be inducted into the honorary "Compagnons de Beaujolais." Other memberships included the American, Louisiana, and New Orleans bar associations, the Louisiana State Law Institute and the Louisiana Bar Foundation. Duplantier died ofpancreatic cancer . He was married for fifty-six years to the former Sally Thomas, who survived him. His children include Adrian G. "Casey" Duplantier, Jr., and wife Kay ofWilliamsburg, Virginia , David L. Duplantier and wife Melanie of Madisonville, Thomas R. Duplantier and wife Susan of Lafayette, Jeanne Marie Duplantier and partner Leigh and Louise Marie Cragin and husband Tim, both couples of New Orleans, and John "Sandy" Duplantier and wife Suzie of Mandeville. Duplantier had two sisters, Yvonne Pugh of San Antonio, TX, and Audrey Cerise of New Orleans; and six brothers, Warren Duplantier of Houston and the late F. Robert, Crozet, Leon, Earl and L. Robert Duplantier. He had fifteen grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. David, Thomas, and John Duplantier, like their father, are Loyola Law School alumni. So is a grandson, Joshua Duplantier.Services were held on
August 18 at Jesuit High School in the chapel of North American Martyrs.Entombment was in Lake LawnMausoleum in New Orleans.He is remembered through the Judge Adrian G. Duplantier Memorial Fund, Loyola University School of Law, 7214 St. Charles Ave., Box 909, New Orleans, LA 70118. Prior to his death, Judge Duplantier was honored with an award from the Federal Judges Association created to acknowledge his accomplishments. The award will henceforth be known as "the Adrian."
References
*http://www.legacy.com/theadvocate/DeathNotices.asp?Page=Lifestory&PersonId=92767404
*http://query.nytimes.com/search/query?ppds=per&v1=DUPLANTIER%2C+ADRIAN+G&sort=newest
*http://www.loyno.edu/newsandcalendars/release.php?id=1338
*http://www.jesuitnola.org/alumni/Hall_of_Honors_Master_Page.htm
*http://ssdi.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/ssdi.cgi
*http://law.loyno.edu/news-duplantier-nov2007.html
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.