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Whitney North Seymour Jr.

Whitney North Seymour Jr. (July 7, 1923 – June 29, 2019), known to friends as Mike Seymour,[1][2] was an American politician and attorney from New York City. Born to a prominent family, Seymour graduated from Princeton University and Yale Law School and served in the United States Army during World War II. He served in the New York State Senate from 1966 to 1968 and as U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York from 1970 to 1973.

Mike Seymour
United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York
In office
January 16, 1970 – June 4, 1973
PresidentRichard Nixon
Preceded byRobert Morgenthau
Succeeded byPaul J. Curran
Member of the New York State Senate
In office
1966–1968
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Constituency
Personal details
Born
Whitney North Seymour Jr.

(1923-07-07)July 7, 1923
Huntington, West Virginia, U.S.
DiedJune 29, 2019(2019-06-29) (aged 95)
Torrington, Connecticut, U.S.
Political partyRepublican
Spouse
Catryna Ten Eyck
(m. 1951; died 2017)
Children2
RelativesWhitney North Seymour (father)
Thaddeus Seymour (brother)
Education
Military service
Branch/serviceUnited States Army
Years of service1943–1945
RankCaptain
Battles/warsWorld War II

As U.S. Attorney, Seymour prosecuted a number of high-profile organized crime and corruption cases. A moderate Republican, Seymour unsuccessfully sought a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives in 1968, and unsuccessfully sought the Republican nomination for U.S. Senate in 1982. Seymour was an attorney for many years with the law firm of Simpson Thacher & Bartlett, but left in the early 1980s to form a smaller law firm. In 1986, he was appointed as independent counsel to investigate former Reagan White House official Michael Deaver, and successfully secured a perjury conviction the next year.

Seymour co-founded the Natural Resources Defense Council, an environmentalist group, in 1970. As a civic leader in New York, he served on a number of boards, and played an important role in the Municipal Art Society's push for passage of the city's 1965 Landmarks Law. Seymour wrote three books and, in later life, co-wrote a one-act play that was performed off-Broadway. He died in 2019 at age 95.

Early life and military service Edit

Seymour was born in Huntington, West Virginia, on July 7, 1923, the son of Whitney North Seymour (1901–1983) and Lola Vickers Seymour (d. 1975).[1][3] He grew up in the Manhattan borough of New York City,[1] in a rowhouse in the Greenwich Village.[4] Seymour's father was a prominent attorney[4] who served as assistant solicitor general during the Herbert Hoover administration.[1] Seymour's brother was academician Thaddeus Seymour.[5]

Seymour graduated from the Kent School in Connecticut in 1941.[1] He joined the U.S. Army in 1943,[6] serving as an artillery officer in the Pacific theater during World War II, and resigning in 1945 with the rank of captain.[1]

After the war, Seymour attended college at Princeton University, graduating magna cum laude with a AB in 1947.[7][6] He then attended Yale Law School, earning a LLB degree in 1950.[8][1]

Career Edit

Early career in law and politics Edit

Seymour joined the law firm of Simpson Thacher & Bartlett in 1950;[1] his father had been a longtime partner at the firm.[1][5] He was an assistant U.S. attorney in Manhattan from 1953 to 1956.[1] Seymour then returned to private practice before being appointed, three years later, as counsel to the State Commission on New York City Governmental Operations.[9]

Seymour was a member of the New York State Senate from 1966 to 1968, sitting in the 176th and 177th New York State Legislatures. He was the Republican nominee for the United States House of Representatives in the New York's 17th congressional district in November 1968, running against Democrat Ed Koch in the "silk stocking" district.[1][10]

In the Republican primary election, Seymour eked out a win against S. William Green, receiving 12,291 votes to Green's 10,851.[11] To maintain his nearly perfect record of attendance in the state Senate, Seymour also missed many opportunities to make campaign appearances during the primary campaign.[11] In the general election, Koch and Seymour differed more on matters of style than on issues of policy; Koch was an adept and indefatigable campaigner with a constant public presence, while the patrician Seymour disliked street politics.[11] Koch spoke about his record of engaging in protests and pickets (on causes such as support for the Delano grape strike and opposition to the Vietnam War) while Seymour that he had "never joined any kind of protest march or demonstration" except for a march to ban automobiles from Central Park.[11] Although he received the endorsement of Mayor John V. Lindsay, Seymour lost the race; Koch won with 48% of the vote (on both the Democratic and Liberal Party ballot lines), while Seymour received 45% of the vote and Conservative Party candidate Richard J. Callahan received 5.8% of the vote.[11] Seymour thus became the first Republican in three decades to lose the congressional election in the "silk stocking" district.[9]

Involvement in founding of the NRDC Edit

In 1970, Seymour was among the group that co-founded the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC), and served on its board.[12][13] The NRDC's establishment was partially an outgrowth of the Scenic Hudson Preservation Conference v. Federal Power Commission, the Storm King case, in which Seymour was involved.[12] The case centered on Con Ed's plan to build the world's largest hydroelectric facility at Storm King Mountain. The proposed facility would pump vast amounts of water from the Hudson River to a reservoir, and release it through turbines to generate electricity at peak demand.[14] A dozen concerned citizens organized the Scenic Hudson Preservation Conference in opposition to the project, citing its environmental impact, and the group, represented by Seymour, his law partner Stephen Duggan, and David Sive, sued the Federal Power Commission, and successfully achieved a ruling that groups such as Scenic Hudson and other environmentalist groups had standing to challenge the FPC's administrative rulings.[14] Realizing that continued environmental litigation would require a nationally organized, professionalized group of lawyers and scientists, Duggan, Seymour, and Sive obtained funding from the Ford Foundation[12][14] and joined forces with Gus Speth and other recent Yale Law School graduates of the class of 1969 to form the NRDC, with John H. Adams as the group's first staff member, Duggan as its first chairman, and Seymour, Laurance Rockefeller, and others as board members.[12]

U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York Edit

He was U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York from 1970 to 1973, replacing Robert Morgenthau.[1] As U.S. Attorney, Seymour and his criminal division chief, Harold Baer Jr., took action to reduce a large backlog of criminal cases in the Southern District.[15][16][a] As U.S. Attorney, Seymour also prosecuted New York City Police Department corruption and misconduct cases brought by the Knapp Commission. Under Seymour, former Richard Nixon Cabinet members John N. Mitchell and Maurice H. Stans were indicted on charges of accepting illegal campaign contributions from fugitive Robert Vesco, but both were acquitted.[2] He also oversaw the prosecutions of a number of organized crime figures, including Frank Costello, and corrupt public officials, including former State Senator Seymour R. Thaler.[1][2] Seymour was, however, initially skeptical about the practical use of the then-new Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act; in a meeting with G. Robert Blakey, the law professor who pioneered the act, Seymour dismissed RICO as a waste of time.[18] Later, after RICO's value in fighting organized crime was demonstrated, Seymour acknowledged that "in hindsight we were one hundred percent wrong."[18]

As U.S. Attorney, Seymour represented the United States government in seeking an injunction to stop The New York Times from publishing the Pentagon Papers; the United States Supreme Court ultimately ruled in favor of the Times in the case New York Times Co. v. United States.[1] Seymour's longtime friend Powell Pierpoint said that Seymour "represented the government like a good soldier, though I don't think he personally believed in the case. ... He made a damn good argument out of a poor case. He presented the argument himself. That's the kind of fellow Mike is."[2] Later, however, Seymour was critical of the Times's handling of the case; in a 1994 article in the New York State Bar Journal, he wrote that he remained "appalled at the arrogance and irresponsibility displayed by the news media in setting up a totally unnecessary confrontation over publication of stolen classified documents relating to U.S. policies in Vietnam."[19] In Seymour's view, from a practical perspective, the government had "lost the battle but won the war" in the Pentagon Papers cases, since the Times and Washington Post, following the Supreme Court's decision, did not publish material whose release could damage national security, such as the "secret Defense Department study directly affecting military and intelligence operations and secret diplomatic efforts to achieve peace."[19]

Return to private practice and 1982 Senate election Edit

After stepping down in the U.S. Attorney post in 1973, Seymour returned to private practice at Simpson Thacher & Bartlett.[9]

Seymour unsuccessfully sought the Republican nomination for U.S. Senator from New York in the 1982 election. He ran as a self-described moderate Republican,[6] in the mold of Dwight Eisenhower or Jacob Javits.[2] Seymour was backed by many former aides to Mayor Lindsay,[6] and had the most establishment support.[20] He won the support of the Republican Party's New York State Committee, but former State Banking Superintendent Muriel Siebert and State Assemblywoman Florence M. Sullivan garnered enough support to make it onto the primary ballot.[21] Sullivan, the most conservative of the primary candidates, won the primary with a comfortable lead.[20] Seymour came in last place,[22] and later said that he had taken "a foolish stab" at the nomination.[23]

In 1982, Seymour departed from Simpson Thacher & Bartlett after more than three decades of affiliation with the firm, believing that large law firms were becoming too bureaucratic.[2][23] He joined with another lawyer, Peter Megargee Brown (formerly of Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft), to form a small two-person firm.[23][24]

Independent counsel in Deaver case Edit

In May 1986, a panel of three federal judges appointed Seymour as independent counsel to investigate Michael Deaver, a senior aide to President Ronald Reagan.[2][25] Deaver was the deputy chief of staff in the Reagan White House before leaving in May 1985 and becoming a lobbyist for the Canadian government.[26] Deaver was indicted on five counts of perjury on charges that he had given false testimony to a grand jury that he did not remember a January 1985 meeting with Canadian ambassador Allan Gotlieb and his wife Sondra.[26] Deaver challenged the constitutionality of the independent counsel provisions of the Ethics in Government Act, but the D.C. Circuit rejected his claim in 1987.[27][b]

During the investigation, Seymour stirred controversy by issuing a subpoena to the Gotliebs, seeking their testimony.[26] The Canadian government lodged a formal protest with the U.S. government, arguing that an attempt to serve the subpoena was a violation of diplomatic immunity, and the U.S. Department of State urged Seymour to drop the subpoena.[26] The U.S. district court quashed the subpoena on grounds of diplomatic immunity and ruled Allan Gotlieb had not waived his immunity by agreeing to respond to written questions from the independent counsel.[29] Gotlieb ultimately did not testify at Deaver's 1987 trial, although former national security adviser Robert C. McFarlane and former U.S. ambassador to Canada Paul H. Robinson Jr. did both testify as witnesses for the prosecution.[30] Deaver was convicted of perjury.[31]

Later life and death Edit

Seymour eschewed conventional notions of retirement,[32] and remained active as a New York lawyer into his 90s.[17] In 2000 and 2001, he represented cartoonist Dan DeCarlo in his unsuccessful litigation against Archie Comics over ownership of Josie and the Pussycats.[33][34][35]

Seymour died at Charlotte Hungerford Hospital in Torrington, Connecticut, on June 29, 2019, at age 95.[1]

Civic leadership Edit

Seymour served at various points as president of the New York State Bar Association, trustee of the New York Public Library, and director of the Municipal Art Society of New York.[1] In August 1964, the Municipal Art Society designated Seymour as the leader of its efforts to permanently establish the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission. As a prominent civic leader, Seymour's efforts were instrumental in the passage of the Landmarks Law in 1965.[36]

In 1976, Seymour organized the National Citizens Emergency Committee to Save Our Public Libraries, which advocated for public libraries and opposed budget cuts.[37] Seymour was a staunch opponent of political action committees, believing them to have a malign effect on Congress, and was a founder of Citizens Against PACs.[2]

Writings Edit

Seymour authored three books:[1]

  • In Why Justice Fails (Morrow, 1973), Seymour addressed a variety of issues, including overburdened courts and flaws in the prison system, and recommended various reforms.[38]
  • In United States Attorney: An Inside View of 'Justice' in America Under the Nixon Administration (Morrow, 1975), Seymour reviewed the history of federal law enforcement, criticized bureaucracy in the U.S. Department of Justice, called for more vigorous investigation and prosecution of white-collar crimes, and criticized the "arrogance and political expediency in the Nixon Justice Department."[39] Seymour proposed a reform in which the Federal Bureau of Investigation would be separated from the Justice Department, and a new non-political post of chief prosecutor would be created.[39] In a review of the book in ABA Journal, reviewer Richard J. Hoskins noted that the book was "not tightly organized" and wrote "Seymour is not a lively writer. He speaks with the force of straightforward conviction, but seldom with style."[39] Hoskins nevertheless called the book a worthwhile read in the aftermath of the Watergate scandal.[39]
  • In Making a Difference (Morrow, 1984), Seymour profiled various individuals—ranging from Prudence Crandall to Muhammad Ali to Alexander Woollcott—to show various character attributes linked to public service.[40] A Kirkus review described the work as a "well-meaning sermon/book" and criticized the "relentlessly banal, uplift prose" as "bland and superficial."[40]

In later life Seymour, his wife Catryna, and their daughters Tryntje and Gabriel, co-wrote and produced Stars in the Dark, a one-act play about Hans and Sophie Scholl and their role in the White Rose resistance group in Nazi Germany in the 1940s.[1] The play, which took around five years to write, was released in 2008 (when Seymour was 85) and had five performances off-Broadway.[1][41]

Personal life Edit

In 1951, Seymour married Catryna Ten Eyck, who died in 2017. He had two daughters.[1] Seymour was a "rather formal man";[16] his tendency to "come across as a stiff, even dour, candidate" may have inhibited his political aspirations.[23]

Seymour maintained homes in Greenwich Village, Manhattan, and Salisbury, Connecticut. He was an avid watercolorist and oil painter.[1]

Seymour was an Episcopalian. He was a member of The Players.[23]

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Seymour became a lifelong friend and mentor to Baer, who later served on the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York.[17]
  2. ^ The Supreme Court ultimately upheld the constitutionality of the independent counsel provision in Morrison v. Olson, 487 U.S. 654 (1988), a case involving different parties. Seymour submitted an amicus brief to the Supreme Court in the Morrison case.[28]

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u McFadden, Robert D. (June 29, 2019). "Whitney North Seymour Jr., Former U.S. Prosecutor Who Fought Corruption, Dies at 95". The New York Times. Retrieved June 29, 2019.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Howard Kurtz & Saundra Saperstein, Seymour Argued Pentagon Papers Suit, Washington Post (May 30, 1986).
  3. ^ Lola Vickers Seymour, 74, Wife of Bar Leader, Dead, The New York Times (November 25, 1975).
  4. ^ a b James M. Lindgren, Preserving South Street Seaport: The Dream and Reality of a New York Urban Renewal District (NYU Press, 2014), page 16.
  5. ^ a b Whitney North Seymour Sr., a champion of civil liberties, United Press International (May 21, 1983).
  6. ^ a b c d Purnick, Joyce (March 15, 1982). . The New York Times. Archived from the original on May 24, 2015. Retrieved February 18, 2018.
  7. ^ . Archived from the original on February 20, 2011.
  8. ^ . Archived from the original on February 20, 2011.
  9. ^ a b c Nicholas Gage, Seymour to Quit As U.S. Attorney, New York Times (January 24, 1972).
  10. ^ Robert D. McFadden, Edward I. Koch, a Mayor as Brash, Shrewd and Colorful as the City He Led, Dies at 88, New York Times (February 1, 2013).
  11. ^ a b c d e Jonathan Soffer, Ed Koch and the Rebuilding of New York City (Columbia University Press, 2010), pp. 78–80.
  12. ^ a b c d Robert Gottlieb, Forcing the Spring: The Transformation of the American Environmental Movement (revised ed.: Island Press, 2005), pp. 193–94.
  13. ^ Jon Bowermaster, "Green Giants: On the Front Lines with Two Rival Guardians," New York (April 16, 1990).
  14. ^ a b c McGee Young, "The Price of Advocacy: Mobilization and Maintenance in Advocacy Organizations" in Advocacy Organizations and Collective Action (eds. Aseem Prakash & Mary Kay Gugerty), pp. 40–42.
  15. ^ Arnold H. Lubasch, New Procedures Help a Federal Court Reduce Backlog of Criminal Cases, New York Times (March 15, 1971).
  16. ^ a b Craig R. Whitney, Seymour Gets 900 Indictments in 10 Months as U.S. Attorney and Strives to Cut Court Jam as Pledged, New York Times (November 9, 1970).
  17. ^ a b Philip R. Schatz, Judicial Remembrance: Hon. Harold Baer Jr. of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, Federal Lawyer (January/February 2015), pp. 27–28.
  18. ^ a b Selwyn Raab, Five Families: The Rise, Decline, and Resurgence of America's Most Powerful Mafia Empires (Thomas Dunne Books, 2005), pp. 180–81.
  19. ^ a b Whitney North Seymour, Jr., "Press Paranoia—Delusions of Persecution in the Pentagon Papers Case," New York State Bar Journal (February 1994).
  20. ^ a b Josh Barbanel, State Legislator Is Senate Choice, New York Times (September 14, 1982).
  21. ^ Frank Lynn, G.O.P. Leaders Back Seymour for Senate; Primary Fight is Set, New York Times (June 18, 1982).
  22. ^ Results of Primary Races Throughout the State, New York Times (September 25, 1982).
  23. ^ a b c d e B. Drummond Ayres Jr., The Independent Style of Deaver's Prosecutor, New York Times (June 8, 1987).
  24. ^ Deirdere Carmody & Laurie Johnston, New York Day By Day, New York Times (January 21, 1983).
  25. ^ Philip Shenon, Seymour, Once Prosecutor Here, is Named to Head Deaver Inquiry, New York Times (May 30, 1986).
  26. ^ a b c d Howard Kurtz, Canada Protests Attempt to Subpoena Envoy, Wife, Washington Post (May 28, 1987).
  27. ^ Deaver v. Seymour, 822 F.2d 66 (D.C. Cir. 1987).
  28. ^ Morrison v. Olson, 487 U.S. 654 (1988).
  29. ^ Ruth Marcus, Canada Pressure on Deaver Case, Washington Post (October 14, 1987).
  30. ^ Bill McAllister, McFarlane, Ex-Diplomat Testify in Deaver Trial, Washington Post (November 10, 1987).
  31. ^ Stuart Taylor Jr., Justices to Decide Constitutionality of Special Prosecutor Law, New York Times (February 23, 1988).
  32. ^ Whitney North Seymour Jr., Re-thinking Retirement July 10, 2019, at the Wayback Machine, New York State Bar Journal (January 2003).
  33. ^ Hank Stuever, The Cat In the Lawsuit, Washington Post (August 19, 2000).
  34. ^ Michael Dean, "Supreme Court Rejects DeCarlo Appeal," The Comics Journal 240 (December 2001).
  35. ^ Leslie Eaton, Legal Claws Bared Over a Pussycat; Josie's Artist Claims Ownership In Suit Against Archie Comics, New York Times (February 19, 2001).
  36. ^ Anthony C. Wood, Preserving New York: Winning the Right to Protect a City's Landmarks (Routledge, 2008).
  37. ^ Redmond Kathleen Molz & Phyllis Dain, Civic Space/Cyberspace: The American Public Library in the Information Age (MIT Press: 1999), pp. 26–27.
  38. ^ "Recent Publications," 87 Harv. L. Rev. 916 (1974).
  39. ^ a b c d Richard J. Hoskins, "Review of United States Attorney: An Inside View of 'Justice' in America Under the Nixon Administration," American Bar Association Journal, Vol. 63, No. 10 (October 1977), p. 1442, 1444.
  40. ^ a b Making a Difference, Kirkus Reviews, Vol. 51 (February 20, 1983), p. 1301.
  41. ^ John Eligon, Former U.S. Attorney Makes His Playwriting Debut, New York Times (August 19, 2008).

External links Edit

New York State Senate
Preceded by Member of the New York State Senate
from the 28th district

1966
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of the New York State Senate
from the 26th district

1967–1968
Succeeded by
Legal offices
Preceded by United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York
1970–1973
Succeeded by

whitney, north, seymour, mike, seymour, redirects, here, mississippi, state, senator, mike, seymour, mississippi, politician, july, 1923, june, 2019, known, friends, mike, seymour, american, politician, attorney, from, york, city, born, prominent, family, seym. Mike Seymour redirects here For the Mississippi state senator see Mike Seymour Mississippi politician Whitney North Seymour Jr July 7 1923 June 29 2019 known to friends as Mike Seymour 1 2 was an American politician and attorney from New York City Born to a prominent family Seymour graduated from Princeton University and Yale Law School and served in the United States Army during World War II He served in the New York State Senate from 1966 to 1968 and as U S Attorney for the Southern District of New York from 1970 to 1973 Mike SeymourUnited States Attorney for the Southern District of New YorkIn office January 16 1970 June 4 1973PresidentRichard NixonPreceded byRobert MorgenthauSucceeded byPaul J CurranMember of the New York State SenateIn office 1966 1968Preceded byAbraham Bernstein 28th John J Marchi 26th Succeeded byJoseph Zaretzki 28th Roy M Goodman 26th Constituency28th district 1966 26th district 1967 1968 Personal detailsBornWhitney North Seymour Jr 1923 07 07 July 7 1923Huntington West Virginia U S DiedJune 29 2019 2019 06 29 aged 95 Torrington Connecticut U S Political partyRepublicanSpouseCatryna Ten Eyck m 1951 died 2017 wbr Children2RelativesWhitney North Seymour father Thaddeus Seymour brother EducationPrinceton University AB Yale University LLB Military serviceBranch serviceUnited States ArmyYears of service1943 1945RankCaptainBattles warsWorld War IIAs U S Attorney Seymour prosecuted a number of high profile organized crime and corruption cases A moderate Republican Seymour unsuccessfully sought a seat in the U S House of Representatives in 1968 and unsuccessfully sought the Republican nomination for U S Senate in 1982 Seymour was an attorney for many years with the law firm of Simpson Thacher amp Bartlett but left in the early 1980s to form a smaller law firm In 1986 he was appointed as independent counsel to investigate former Reagan White House official Michael Deaver and successfully secured a perjury conviction the next year Seymour co founded the Natural Resources Defense Council an environmentalist group in 1970 As a civic leader in New York he served on a number of boards and played an important role in the Municipal Art Society s push for passage of the city s 1965 Landmarks Law Seymour wrote three books and in later life co wrote a one act play that was performed off Broadway He died in 2019 at age 95 Contents 1 Early life and military service 2 Career 2 1 Early career in law and politics 2 2 Involvement in founding of the NRDC 2 3 U S Attorney for the Southern District of New York 2 4 Return to private practice and 1982 Senate election 2 5 Independent counsel in Deaver case 2 6 Later life and death 3 Civic leadership 4 Writings 5 Personal life 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksEarly life and military service EditSeymour was born in Huntington West Virginia on July 7 1923 the son of Whitney North Seymour 1901 1983 and Lola Vickers Seymour d 1975 1 3 He grew up in the Manhattan borough of New York City 1 in a rowhouse in the Greenwich Village 4 Seymour s father was a prominent attorney 4 who served as assistant solicitor general during the Herbert Hoover administration 1 Seymour s brother was academician Thaddeus Seymour 5 Seymour graduated from the Kent School in Connecticut in 1941 1 He joined the U S Army in 1943 6 serving as an artillery officer in the Pacific theater during World War II and resigning in 1945 with the rank of captain 1 After the war Seymour attended college at Princeton University graduating magna cum laude with a AB in 1947 7 6 He then attended Yale Law School earning a LLB degree in 1950 8 1 Career EditEarly career in law and politics Edit Seymour joined the law firm of Simpson Thacher amp Bartlett in 1950 1 his father had been a longtime partner at the firm 1 5 He was an assistant U S attorney in Manhattan from 1953 to 1956 1 Seymour then returned to private practice before being appointed three years later as counsel to the State Commission on New York City Governmental Operations 9 Seymour was a member of the New York State Senate from 1966 to 1968 sitting in the 176th and 177th New York State Legislatures He was the Republican nominee for the United States House of Representatives in the New York s 17th congressional district in November 1968 running against Democrat Ed Koch in the silk stocking district 1 10 In the Republican primary election Seymour eked out a win against S William Green receiving 12 291 votes to Green s 10 851 11 To maintain his nearly perfect record of attendance in the state Senate Seymour also missed many opportunities to make campaign appearances during the primary campaign 11 In the general election Koch and Seymour differed more on matters of style than on issues of policy Koch was an adept and indefatigable campaigner with a constant public presence while the patrician Seymour disliked street politics 11 Koch spoke about his record of engaging in protests and pickets on causes such as support for the Delano grape strike and opposition to the Vietnam War while Seymour that he had never joined any kind of protest march or demonstration except for a march to ban automobiles from Central Park 11 Although he received the endorsement of Mayor John V Lindsay Seymour lost the race Koch won with 48 of the vote on both the Democratic and Liberal Party ballot lines while Seymour received 45 of the vote and Conservative Party candidate Richard J Callahan received 5 8 of the vote 11 Seymour thus became the first Republican in three decades to lose the congressional election in the silk stocking district 9 Involvement in founding of the NRDC Edit In 1970 Seymour was among the group that co founded the Natural Resources Defense Council NRDC and served on its board 12 13 The NRDC s establishment was partially an outgrowth of the Scenic Hudson Preservation Conference v Federal Power Commission the Storm King case in which Seymour was involved 12 The case centered on Con Ed s plan to build the world s largest hydroelectric facility at Storm King Mountain The proposed facility would pump vast amounts of water from the Hudson River to a reservoir and release it through turbines to generate electricity at peak demand 14 A dozen concerned citizens organized the Scenic Hudson Preservation Conference in opposition to the project citing its environmental impact and the group represented by Seymour his law partner Stephen Duggan and David Sive sued the Federal Power Commission and successfully achieved a ruling that groups such as Scenic Hudson and other environmentalist groups had standing to challenge the FPC s administrative rulings 14 Realizing that continued environmental litigation would require a nationally organized professionalized group of lawyers and scientists Duggan Seymour and Sive obtained funding from the Ford Foundation 12 14 and joined forces with Gus Speth and other recent Yale Law School graduates of the class of 1969 to form the NRDC with John H Adams as the group s first staff member Duggan as its first chairman and Seymour Laurance Rockefeller and others as board members 12 U S Attorney for the Southern District of New York Edit He was U S Attorney for the Southern District of New York from 1970 to 1973 replacing Robert Morgenthau 1 As U S Attorney Seymour and his criminal division chief Harold Baer Jr took action to reduce a large backlog of criminal cases in the Southern District 15 16 a As U S Attorney Seymour also prosecuted New York City Police Department corruption and misconduct cases brought by the Knapp Commission Under Seymour former Richard Nixon Cabinet members John N Mitchell and Maurice H Stans were indicted on charges of accepting illegal campaign contributions from fugitive Robert Vesco but both were acquitted 2 He also oversaw the prosecutions of a number of organized crime figures including Frank Costello and corrupt public officials including former State Senator Seymour R Thaler 1 2 Seymour was however initially skeptical about the practical use of the then new Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations RICO Act in a meeting with G Robert Blakey the law professor who pioneered the act Seymour dismissed RICO as a waste of time 18 Later after RICO s value in fighting organized crime was demonstrated Seymour acknowledged that in hindsight we were one hundred percent wrong 18 As U S Attorney Seymour represented the United States government in seeking an injunction to stop The New York Times from publishing the Pentagon Papers the United States Supreme Court ultimately ruled in favor of the Times in the case New York Times Co v United States 1 Seymour s longtime friend Powell Pierpoint said that Seymour represented the government like a good soldier though I don t think he personally believed in the case He made a damn good argument out of a poor case He presented the argument himself That s the kind of fellow Mike is 2 Later however Seymour was critical of the Times s handling of the case in a 1994 article in the New York State Bar Journal he wrote that he remained appalled at the arrogance and irresponsibility displayed by the news media in setting up a totally unnecessary confrontation over publication of stolen classified documents relating to U S policies in Vietnam 19 In Seymour s view from a practical perspective the government had lost the battle but won the war in the Pentagon Papers cases since the Times and Washington Post following the Supreme Court s decision did not publish material whose release could damage national security such as the secret Defense Department study directly affecting military and intelligence operations and secret diplomatic efforts to achieve peace 19 Return to private practice and 1982 Senate election Edit After stepping down in the U S Attorney post in 1973 Seymour returned to private practice at Simpson Thacher amp Bartlett 9 Seymour unsuccessfully sought the Republican nomination for U S Senator from New York in the 1982 election He ran as a self described moderate Republican 6 in the mold of Dwight Eisenhower or Jacob Javits 2 Seymour was backed by many former aides to Mayor Lindsay 6 and had the most establishment support 20 He won the support of the Republican Party s New York State Committee but former State Banking Superintendent Muriel Siebert and State Assemblywoman Florence M Sullivan garnered enough support to make it onto the primary ballot 21 Sullivan the most conservative of the primary candidates won the primary with a comfortable lead 20 Seymour came in last place 22 and later said that he had taken a foolish stab at the nomination 23 In 1982 Seymour departed from Simpson Thacher amp Bartlett after more than three decades of affiliation with the firm believing that large law firms were becoming too bureaucratic 2 23 He joined with another lawyer Peter Megargee Brown formerly of Cadwalader Wickersham amp Taft to form a small two person firm 23 24 Independent counsel in Deaver case Edit In May 1986 a panel of three federal judges appointed Seymour as independent counsel to investigate Michael Deaver a senior aide to President Ronald Reagan 2 25 Deaver was the deputy chief of staff in the Reagan White House before leaving in May 1985 and becoming a lobbyist for the Canadian government 26 Deaver was indicted on five counts of perjury on charges that he had given false testimony to a grand jury that he did not remember a January 1985 meeting with Canadian ambassador Allan Gotlieb and his wife Sondra 26 Deaver challenged the constitutionality of the independent counsel provisions of the Ethics in Government Act but the D C Circuit rejected his claim in 1987 27 b During the investigation Seymour stirred controversy by issuing a subpoena to the Gotliebs seeking their testimony 26 The Canadian government lodged a formal protest with the U S government arguing that an attempt to serve the subpoena was a violation of diplomatic immunity and the U S Department of State urged Seymour to drop the subpoena 26 The U S district court quashed the subpoena on grounds of diplomatic immunity and ruled Allan Gotlieb had not waived his immunity by agreeing to respond to written questions from the independent counsel 29 Gotlieb ultimately did not testify at Deaver s 1987 trial although former national security adviser Robert C McFarlane and former U S ambassador to Canada Paul H Robinson Jr did both testify as witnesses for the prosecution 30 Deaver was convicted of perjury 31 Later life and death Edit Seymour eschewed conventional notions of retirement 32 and remained active as a New York lawyer into his 90s 17 In 2000 and 2001 he represented cartoonist Dan DeCarlo in his unsuccessful litigation against Archie Comics over ownership of Josie and the Pussycats 33 34 35 Seymour died at Charlotte Hungerford Hospital in Torrington Connecticut on June 29 2019 at age 95 1 Civic leadership EditSeymour served at various points as president of the New York State Bar Association trustee of the New York Public Library and director of the Municipal Art Society of New York 1 In August 1964 the Municipal Art Society designated Seymour as the leader of its efforts to permanently establish the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission As a prominent civic leader Seymour s efforts were instrumental in the passage of the Landmarks Law in 1965 36 In 1976 Seymour organized the National Citizens Emergency Committee to Save Our Public Libraries which advocated for public libraries and opposed budget cuts 37 Seymour was a staunch opponent of political action committees believing them to have a malign effect on Congress and was a founder of Citizens Against PACs 2 Writings EditSeymour authored three books 1 In Why Justice Fails Morrow 1973 Seymour addressed a variety of issues including overburdened courts and flaws in the prison system and recommended various reforms 38 In United States Attorney An Inside View of Justice in America Under the Nixon Administration Morrow 1975 Seymour reviewed the history of federal law enforcement criticized bureaucracy in the U S Department of Justice called for more vigorous investigation and prosecution of white collar crimes and criticized the arrogance and political expediency in the Nixon Justice Department 39 Seymour proposed a reform in which the Federal Bureau of Investigation would be separated from the Justice Department and a new non political post of chief prosecutor would be created 39 In a review of the book in ABA Journal reviewer Richard J Hoskins noted that the book was not tightly organized and wrote Seymour is not a lively writer He speaks with the force of straightforward conviction but seldom with style 39 Hoskins nevertheless called the book a worthwhile read in the aftermath of the Watergate scandal 39 In Making a Difference Morrow 1984 Seymour profiled various individuals ranging from Prudence Crandall to Muhammad Ali to Alexander Woollcott to show various character attributes linked to public service 40 A Kirkus review described the work as a well meaning sermon book and criticized the relentlessly banal uplift prose as bland and superficial 40 In later life Seymour his wife Catryna and their daughters Tryntje and Gabriel co wrote and produced Stars in the Dark a one act play about Hans and Sophie Scholl and their role in the White Rose resistance group in Nazi Germany in the 1940s 1 The play which took around five years to write was released in 2008 when Seymour was 85 and had five performances off Broadway 1 41 Personal life EditIn 1951 Seymour married Catryna Ten Eyck who died in 2017 He had two daughters 1 Seymour was a rather formal man 16 his tendency to come across as a stiff even dour candidate may have inhibited his political aspirations 23 Seymour maintained homes in Greenwich Village Manhattan and Salisbury Connecticut He was an avid watercolorist and oil painter 1 Seymour was an Episcopalian He was a member of The Players 23 Notes Edit Seymour became a lifelong friend and mentor to Baer who later served on the U S District Court for the Southern District of New York 17 The Supreme Court ultimately upheld the constitutionality of the independent counsel provision in Morrison v Olson 487 U S 654 1988 a case involving different parties Seymour submitted an amicus brief to the Supreme Court in the Morrison case 28 References Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u McFadden Robert D June 29 2019 Whitney North Seymour Jr Former U S Prosecutor Who Fought Corruption Dies at 95 The New York Times Retrieved June 29 2019 a b c d e f g h Howard Kurtz amp Saundra Saperstein Seymour Argued Pentagon Papers Suit Washington Post May 30 1986 Lola Vickers Seymour 74 Wife of Bar Leader Dead The New York Times November 25 1975 a b James M Lindgren Preserving South Street Seaport The Dream and Reality of a New York Urban Renewal District NYU Press 2014 page 16 a b Whitney North Seymour Sr a champion of civil liberties United Press International May 21 1983 a b c d Purnick Joyce March 15 1982 Seymour Entering Race for Senate The New York Times Archived from the original on May 24 2015 Retrieved February 18 2018 Simpson Thacher amp Bartlett LLP Archived from the original on February 20 2011 Simpson Thacher amp Bartlett LLP Archived from the original on February 20 2011 a b c Nicholas Gage Seymour to Quit As U S Attorney New York Times January 24 1972 Robert D McFadden Edward I Koch a Mayor as Brash Shrewd and Colorful as the City He Led Dies at 88 New York Times February 1 2013 a b c d e Jonathan Soffer Ed Koch and the Rebuilding of New York City Columbia University Press 2010 pp 78 80 a b c d Robert Gottlieb Forcing the Spring The Transformation of the American Environmental Movement revised ed Island Press 2005 pp 193 94 Jon Bowermaster Green Giants On the Front Lines with Two Rival Guardians New York April 16 1990 a b c McGee Young The Price of Advocacy Mobilization and Maintenance in Advocacy Organizations in Advocacy Organizations and Collective Action eds Aseem Prakash amp Mary Kay Gugerty pp 40 42 Arnold H Lubasch New Procedures Help a Federal Court Reduce Backlog of Criminal Cases New York Times March 15 1971 a b Craig R Whitney Seymour Gets 900 Indictments in 10 Months as U S Attorney and Strives to Cut Court Jam as Pledged New York Times November 9 1970 a b Philip R Schatz Judicial Remembrance Hon Harold Baer Jr of the U S District Court for the Southern District of New York Federal Lawyer January February 2015 pp 27 28 a b Selwyn Raab Five Families The Rise Decline and Resurgence of America s Most Powerful Mafia Empires Thomas Dunne Books 2005 pp 180 81 a b Whitney North Seymour Jr Press Paranoia Delusions of Persecution in the Pentagon Papers Case New York State Bar Journal February 1994 a b Josh Barbanel State Legislator Is Senate Choice New York Times September 14 1982 Frank Lynn G O P Leaders Back Seymour for Senate Primary Fight is Set New York Times June 18 1982 Results of Primary Races Throughout the State New York Times September 25 1982 a b c d e B Drummond Ayres Jr The Independent Style of Deaver s Prosecutor New York Times June 8 1987 Deirdere Carmody amp Laurie Johnston New York Day By Day New York Times January 21 1983 Philip Shenon Seymour Once Prosecutor Here is Named to Head Deaver Inquiry New York Times May 30 1986 a b c d Howard Kurtz Canada Protests Attempt to Subpoena Envoy Wife Washington Post May 28 1987 Deaver v Seymour 822 F 2d 66 D C Cir 1987 Morrison v Olson 487 U S 654 1988 Ruth Marcus Canada Pressure on Deaver Case Washington Post October 14 1987 Bill McAllister McFarlane Ex Diplomat Testify in Deaver Trial Washington Post November 10 1987 Stuart Taylor Jr Justices to Decide Constitutionality of Special Prosecutor Law New York Times February 23 1988 Whitney North Seymour Jr Re thinking Retirement Archived July 10 2019 at the Wayback Machine New York State Bar Journal January 2003 Hank Stuever The Cat In the Lawsuit Washington Post August 19 2000 Michael Dean Supreme Court Rejects DeCarlo Appeal The Comics Journal 240 December 2001 Leslie Eaton Legal Claws Bared Over a Pussycat Josie s Artist Claims Ownership In Suit Against Archie Comics New York Times February 19 2001 Anthony C Wood Preserving New York Winning the Right to Protect a City s Landmarks Routledge 2008 Redmond Kathleen Molz amp Phyllis Dain Civic Space Cyberspace The American Public Library in the Information Age MIT Press 1999 pp 26 27 Recent Publications 87 Harv L Rev 916 1974 a b c d Richard J Hoskins Review of United States Attorney An Inside View of Justice in America Under the Nixon Administration American Bar Association Journal Vol 63 No 10 October 1977 p 1442 1444 a b Making a Difference Kirkus Reviews Vol 51 February 20 1983 p 1301 John Eligon Former U S Attorney Makes His Playwriting Debut New York Times August 19 2008 External links EditOral history of Whitney North Seymour Jr from July 29 2006 from the New York Preservation Archive Project focusing on Seymour s work on historic preservation of New York courthouses Washington Square Park and South Street Seaport Appearances on C SPANNew York State SenatePreceded byAbraham Bernstein Member of the New York State Senatefrom the 28th district1966 Succeeded byJoseph ZaretzkiPreceded byJohn J Marchi Member of the New York State Senatefrom the 26th district1967 1968 Succeeded byRoy M GoodmanLegal officesPreceded byRobert Morgenthau United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York1970 1973 Succeeded byPaul J Curran Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Whitney North Seymour Jr amp oldid 1174518252, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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