Knowledge (XXG)

Paul C. Gartzke

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court seats. With a close second-place finish in the nonpartisan primary, Gartzke advanced to an April general election against Howard H. Boyle, a Dodge County court commissioner who had previously run for state supreme court and United States Senate. In the election, Boyle stressed ideology and strictly interpreting the statutes and constitution. Gartzke, on the other hand, made a non-ideological argument for his candidacy, focused on the importance of competent legal experience and prioritizing the establishment of the good functioning of the new appeals court system. In the end, Gartzke prevailed with a slim majority. Gartzke would be re-elected without opposition in 1984 and 1990. Shortly after his election, the Wisconsin Supreme Court selected Gartzke as presiding judge for District IV, a position he held through his entire judicial career.
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asking for the conviction to be vacated. The case was before Judge Gartzke, who decided to dismiss the appeal and let the conviction stand. Despite similarities to a previous appeal where the appellant died of a heart attack, Judge Gartzke ruled that by choosing to commit suicide, Judge McDonald chose to forfeit his appeal and thus was not entitled to a posthumous review of his conviction.
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In 1977, Gartzke was elected president of the Dane County Bar Association. That same year, Wisconsin voters approved a series of referendums restructuring the state judiciary and creating a new Court of Appeals. A few months later, Gartzke announced he would run for one of the newly created appeals
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to review allegations of misconduct by Milwaukee County Circuit Judge Christ T. Seraphim. Judge Seraphim had long been a controversial figure in Milwaukee county and charges of misconduct had accumulated over his 20-year judicial career; the investigation was one of the first tests of new judicial
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In 1985, Lafayette County Circuit Judge Daniel McDonald was convicted in the murder of Darlington attorney James Klein. Judge McDonald was in the process of appealing his conviction when, in 1986, he committed suicide by drug overdose. McDonald's lawyers, however, continued to pursue the appeal
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to provide legal guidance in their attempt to thwart the annexation of several parts of their town to the city of Madison. The city of Madison already owned a large piece of the town's land and planned to use their voting power with that land to approve the annexation of a large and tax-rich
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industrial section of the town. Gartzke came to also represent the neighboring town of Fitchburg, which was also impacted by the annexation plan. Together the two towns attempted a plan to incorporate as a village to block the annexation. The dispute wound up before the
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and constructed the Bayview Townhouses and community center in Madison's historic Greenbush Neighborhood. Bayview remains a flourishing community with approximately 300 residents living in subsidized housing. He also served on the
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for a chemistry work-training program. They met while traveling from Europe to the United States. Judge Gartzke and his wife had one son and two daughters. At the time of his death, Judge Gartzke had five grandchildren.
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Outside of his legal and judicial career, Judge Gartzke was president and one of the founders of the Bayview Foundation, a nonprofit organization in Madison created to provide affordable housing in the city. They secured
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in 1960, which ultimately ruled in favor of the city of Madison, allowing the annexation. Although unsuccessful in their resistance, the situation and its resolution led to the eventual incorporation of the city of
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conduct review procedures. Ultimately, the panel recommended Seraphim should be removed or suspended for several violations of the code of judicial ethics, including
410:. He became a partner in the law firm in 1955, which was later known as Bieberstein, Cooper, Bruemmer, Gartzke & Hanson. In 1958, he was hired by the town of 1318: 1333: 1323: 1383: 1398: 1388: 1378: 395: 242: 1338: 1358: 1353: 334:(October 6, 1927 – September 25, 2009) was an American lawyer and judge. He served 18 years as presiding judge of the 359: 371: 1313: 492: 457:. The Supreme Court agreed with the panel's recommendation and suspended Seraphim from judicial service for three years. 497: 874: 1328: 1281: 1256: 367: 335: 306: 85: 38: 474:
Judge Gartzke married Waltraud Emilie Dorothea "Emy" Denker in August 1952. At the time of their wedding, Emy, a
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in 1952. He would return to school much later in life, earning his master's degree in judicial process from the
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He retired in 1996, but continued to serve for several years as a reserve judge.
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in 1945. Immediately after graduation, Gartzke enlisted for service in the
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Shortly after his law school graduation, Gartzke joined a law practice in
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Early in his judicial career, in 1979, Judge Gartzke was selected by the
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Theobald, H. Rupert; Robbins, Patricia V., eds. (1979).
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Theobald, H. Rupert; Robbins, Patricia V., eds. (1977).
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20th century American judge, Wisconsin Court of Appeals.
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Wisconsin Court of Appeals, District IV Election, 1978
897:"High Court Decision Ends Dispute Over Town's Area" 315: 281: 263: 258: 211: 203: 177: 161: 138: 133: 117: 105: 83: 71: 59: 35: 21: 936:. The state of Wisconsin 1977 Blue Book (Report). 1171:"Conviction of judge who killed self will stand" 1290:August 1, 1978 – July 31, 1996 1265:August 1, 1978 – July 31, 1996 386:in economics. He continued his education at 8: 1344:United States Navy personnel of World War II 1364:University of Virginia School of Law alumni 1033:"Boyle and Gartzke offer contrasting views" 1239: 1099:"Gartzke picked to head new appeals court" 790: 788: 786: 784: 512: 509:Wisconsin Appeals Court (1978, 1984, 1990) 18: 1394:Shorewood High School (Wisconsin) alumni 1349:University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee alumni 1066: 1064: 338:in the Madison-based District IV court. 1079:: State of Wisconsin. pp. 883, 887 996:"Personalities key for appellate races" 895:Williams, Stanley (November 30, 1960). 780: 101:August 1, 1978 â€“ July 31, 1996 55:August 1, 1978 â€“ July 31, 1996 940:: State of Wisconsin. pp. 863–869 934:"Elections: Constitutional Amendments" 830: 828: 826: 824: 822: 820: 818: 816: 539:Nonpartisan Primary, February 21, 1978 518: 7: 396:University of Virginia School of Law 243:University of Virginia School of Law 1319:Politicians from Madison, Wisconsin 960:"Gartzke to run for appeals judge" 453:and the appearance of accepting a 14: 1334:Military personnel from Milwaukee 1324:Wisconsin Court of Appeals judges 1135:"Seraphim decision set by July 1" 1031:Mayo, Virginia (April 3, 1978). 859: 719: 689: 643: 623: 603: 573: 543: 372:Milwaukee State Teachers College 301: 289: 268: 1384:Lawyers from Madison, Wisconsin 685:General Election, April 4, 1978 193: 183:Waltraud Emilie Dorothea Denker 1008:. January 19, 1978. p. 34 493:Federal Housing Administration 424:to block further annexations. 1: 1399:United States Navy reservists 1389:20th-century American lawyers 972:. January 4, 1978. p. 30 844:. October 18, 2009. p. 8 1379:20th-century American judges 1183:. March 27, 1987. p. 28 1111:. April 26, 1978. p. 13 498:Wisconsin Historical Society 478:student, was working at the 1415: 1339:United States Navy sailors 1282:Wisconsin Court of Appeals 1257:Wisconsin Court of Appeals 368:United States Navy Reserve 336:Wisconsin Court of Appeals 86:Wisconsin Court of Appeals 39:Wisconsin Court of Appeals 1359:Harvard Law School alumni 1354:University of Iowa alumni 1292: 1277: 1267: 1252: 1247: 1242: 1147:. May 10, 1980. p. 3 755: 740: 683: 666: 537: 530: 527: 524: 521: 370:until 1949. He attended 325: 129: 94: 48: 31: 1235:Bayview Foundation, Inc. 470:Personal life and family 390:, where he received his 342:Early life and education 1280:Presiding Judge of the 1211:Bayview Foundation, Inc 1176:Wisconsin State Journal 965:Wisconsin State Journal 902:Wisconsin State Journal 841:Wisconsin State Journal 446:Wisconsin Supreme Court 417:Wisconsin Supreme Court 36:Presiding Judge of the 1314:Lawyers from Milwaukee 1271:Patience D. Roggensack 836:"Paul Coulter Gartzke" 800:Wisconsin Court System 321:1947–1949 (USNR) 124:Patience D. Roggensack 480:Ray-O-Vac Corporation 461:Judge McDonald appeal 360:Shorewood High School 358:, and graduated from 319:1945–1947 (USN) 316:Years of service 877:. Beal Funeral Homes 728:Howard H. Boyle Jr. 555:Howard H. Boyle Jr. 356:Shorewood, Wisconsin 332:Paul Coulter Gartzke 112:Position established 66:Position established 515: 500:Board of Curators. 440:Seraphim suspension 1181:Madison, Wisconsin 1145:Madison, Wisconsin 1109:Madison, Wisconsin 1077:Madison, Wisconsin 1043:Madison, Wisconsin 1006:Madison, Wisconsin 970:Madison, Wisconsin 938:Madison, Wisconsin 907:Madison, Wisconsin 612:Gerald W. Jaeckle 513: 491:funding under the 408:Madison, Wisconsin 388:Harvard Law School 380:University of Iowa 364:United States Navy 297:United States Navy 231:Harvard Law School 219:University of Iowa 172:Madison, Wisconsin 165:September 25, 2009 1329:Wisconsin lawyers 1302: 1301: 1296:Charles P. Dykman 1293:Succeeded by 1268:Succeeded by 1140:The Capital Times 1104:The Capital Times 1038:The Capital Times 1001:The Capital Times 875:"Paul C. Gartzke" 796:"Paul C. Gartzke" 772: 771: 504:Electoral history 451:sexual harassment 384:bachelor's degree 374:, then graduated 329: 328: 307:U.S. Navy Reserve 78:Charles P. Dykman 1406: 1287: 1284: 1262: 1259: 1240: 1222: 1221: 1219: 1217: 1203: 1197: 1196: 1190: 1188: 1167: 1161: 1160: 1154: 1152: 1131: 1125: 1124: 1118: 1116: 1095: 1089: 1088: 1086: 1084: 1068: 1059: 1058: 1052: 1050: 1028: 1022: 1021: 1015: 1013: 992: 986: 985: 979: 977: 956: 950: 949: 947: 945: 929: 923: 922: 916: 914: 892: 886: 885: 883: 882: 871: 865: 864: 863: 857: 851: 849: 832: 811: 810: 808: 806: 792: 701:Paul C. Gartzke 585:Paul C. Gartzke 533: 516: 305: 295: 293: 292: 274: 272: 271: 259:Military service 251: 239: 227: 197: 195: 168: 148: 146: 134:Personal details 120: 108: 99: 90: 74: 62: 53: 44: 41: 19: 1414: 1413: 1409: 1408: 1407: 1405: 1404: 1403: 1304: 1303: 1298: 1289: 1285: 1279: 1273: 1264: 1260: 1254: 1231: 1226: 1225: 1215: 1213: 1205: 1204: 1200: 1186: 1184: 1169: 1168: 1164: 1150: 1148: 1133: 1132: 1128: 1114: 1112: 1097: 1096: 1092: 1082: 1080: 1070: 1069: 1062: 1048: 1046: 1030: 1029: 1025: 1011: 1009: 994: 993: 989: 975: 973: 958: 957: 953: 943: 941: 931: 930: 926: 912: 910: 894: 893: 889: 880: 878: 873: 872: 868: 858: 847: 845: 834: 833: 814: 804: 802: 794: 793: 782: 777: 511: 506: 472: 463: 442: 430: 428:Judicial career 404: 344: 320: 311: 290: 288: 269: 267: 254: 245: 233: 221: 207:Ann, Dan, Alice 199: 196: 1952) 191: 187: 184: 170: 166: 150: 149:October 6, 1927 144: 142: 118: 106: 100: 95: 88: 72: 60: 54: 49: 42: 37: 27: 26:Paul C. Gartzke 24: 17: 12: 11: 5: 1412: 1410: 1402: 1401: 1396: 1391: 1386: 1381: 1376: 1371: 1366: 1361: 1356: 1351: 1346: 1341: 1336: 1331: 1326: 1321: 1316: 1306: 1305: 1300: 1299: 1294: 1291: 1275: 1274: 1269: 1266: 1251: 1245: 1244: 1243:Legal offices 1238: 1237: 1230: 1229:External links 1227: 1224: 1223: 1198: 1193:Newspapers.com 1162: 1157:Newspapers.com 1126: 1121:Newspapers.com 1090: 1060: 1055:Newspapers.com 1023: 1018:Newspapers.com 987: 982:Newspapers.com 951: 924: 919:Newspapers.com 887: 866: 854:Newspapers.com 812: 779: 778: 776: 773: 770: 769: 767: 762: 757: 753: 752: 750: 747: 744: 738: 737: 735: 732: 729: 726: 721: 718: 717: 713: 708: 703: 698: 691: 688: 687: 681: 680: 678: 673: 668: 664: 663: 661: 658: 655: 650: 645: 642: 641: 639: 636: 633: 632:Edmund A. 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Retrieved 1210: 1201: 1191:– via 1187:September 6, 1185:. Retrieved 1174: 1165: 1155:– via 1151:September 6, 1149:. Retrieved 1138: 1129: 1119:– via 1115:September 5, 1113:. Retrieved 1102: 1093: 1083:September 5, 1081:. Retrieved 1053:– via 1049:September 5, 1047:. Retrieved 1036: 1026: 1016:– via 1012:September 5, 1010:. Retrieved 999: 990: 980:– via 976:September 5, 974:. Retrieved 963: 954: 944:September 5, 942:. Retrieved 927: 917:– via 913:September 4, 911:. Retrieved 909:. p. 17 900: 890: 879:. Retrieved 869: 852:– via 846:. Retrieved 839: 805:September 5, 803:. Retrieved 799: 764: 759: 756:Total votes 741: 715: 710: 705: 700: 693: 684: 675: 670: 667:Total votes 653:Edward Nager 599: 594: 589: 584: 577: 569: 564: 559: 554: 547: 538: 485: 473: 464: 443: 435: 431: 405: 402:Legal career 392:Juris Doctor 345: 331: 330: 167:(2009-09-25) 119:Succeeded by 111: 96: 73:Succeeded by 65: 50: 1374:2009 deaths 1369:1927 births 1286:District IV 1261:District IV 1073:"Elections" 1045:. p. 3 724:Nonpartisan 695:Nonpartisan 648:Nonpartisan 628:Nonpartisan 608:Nonpartisan 579:Nonpartisan 549:Nonpartisan 107:Preceded by 89:District IV 61:Preceded by 43:District IV 1308:Categories 1249:New court 1207:"Timeline" 881:2011-11-26 775:References 522:Candidate 264:Allegiance 145:1927-10-06 742:Plurality 489:Section 8 422:Fitchburg 398:in 1992. 378:from the 352:Wisconsin 348:Milwaukee 212:Education 156:Wisconsin 152:Milwaukee 97:In office 51:In office 760:192,175 346:Born in 204:Children 765:100.0% 734:49.60% 731:95,310 711:50.40% 706:96,865 676:100.0% 671:59,912 660:14.80% 638:15.53% 618:17.81% 615:10,668 595:25.50% 590:15,275 565:26.38% 560:15,803 412:Madison 198:​ 190:​ 186:​ 848:May 2, 749:0.81% 746:1,555 657:8,864 635:9,302 525:Votes 519:Party 476:German 294:  273:  178:Spouse 455:bribe 192:( 188: 1218:2020 1189:2020 1153:2020 1117:2020 1085:2020 1051:2020 1014:2020 978:2020 946:2020 915:2020 850:2019 807:2020 248:M.S. 236:J.D. 224:B.S. 162:Died 139:Born 1310:: 1209:. 1179:. 1173:. 1143:. 1137:. 1107:. 1101:. 1063:^ 1041:. 1035:. 1004:. 998:. 968:. 962:. 905:. 899:. 838:. 815:^ 798:. 783:^ 532:±% 528:% 350:, 194:m. 154:, 1220:. 1195:. 1159:. 1123:. 1087:. 1057:. 1020:. 984:. 948:. 921:. 884:. 856:. 809:. 250:) 246:( 238:) 234:( 226:) 222:( 147:) 143:(

Index

Wisconsin Court of Appeals
Charles P. Dykman
Wisconsin Court of Appeals
Patience D. Roggensack
Milwaukee
Wisconsin
Madison, Wisconsin
University of Iowa
B.S.
Harvard Law School
J.D.
University of Virginia School of Law
M.S.
United States
United States Navy

U.S. Navy Reserve
Wisconsin Court of Appeals
Milwaukee
Wisconsin
Shorewood, Wisconsin
Shorewood High School
United States Navy
United States Navy Reserve
Milwaukee State Teachers College
Phi Beta Kappa
University of Iowa
bachelor's degree
Harvard Law School
Juris Doctor

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