Federal court Judge Manuel Barbosa likes to say that one of the
best things that happened to him during his 14-year judgeship was
getting to shake the hand that shook the hand that shook the hand of
Abraham Lincoln.
He said one of the worst came in dealing with people, many of
them Hispanic, who were blindsided by the foreclosures spawned by
the recent housing crisis.
A resident of Elgin since childhood, in 1998 Barbosa became the
first Hispanic bankruptcy judge to serve in the U.S. Northern
District of Illinois. He retired Friday.
Barbosa, 65, said he met a Princeton University professor who
shook the hand of a man who at age 4 had shaken hands with Honest
Abe. Another career highlight was meeting U.S. Supreme Court Justice
Elena Kagan when she was dean of Harvard Law School.
"I always tell those stories to students," he said.
Though people may think of bankruptcy court as staid or boring,
it often is about real, human suffering, Barbosa said.
"It's a lot more interesting than I had expected," he said. "The
image that a lot of people have ... is that it's a lot of paper
shuffling and figures and accounting. But it touches on a lot of
lives of people. With individuals, often it's a mater of their
future, their livelihood. Even with companies, you often have a
large number of employees whose livelihoods might be at stake."
Sometimes there are good outcomes, such as when companies are
able to reorganize and survive bankruptcy, he said.
But there are also limits to how much the court system can help
honest, but unfortunate, people, he said.
"It's difficult sometimes when you see the suffering that people
are undergoing, and there is only so much you can do," he said.
One particular case involving a Ponzi scheme early in his career
stands out.
"A lot people lost their life savings, their kids' college money.
One woman was in tears, saying, 'That's what we were saving for our
kids' college,'" he said.
His courtroom was particularly busy during the foreclosure crisis
that hit in 2008, which disproportionately affected Latinos, he
said.
"Perhaps the more notable thing is that a lot of (Latinos) didn't
seem to really know what was going on. It's one thing when you're in
a financial bind but you kind of understood how you got there. A lot
of times these people seemed to be totally befuddled."
Before becoming a judge, Barbosa worked as a private practice
lawyer and served as chairman of the Illinois Human Rights
Commission from its creation in 1980 to 1998. He also worked as an
assistant state's attorney in Kane County for about a year and a
half, he said.
Retirement will allow him to do things he couldn't do as a judge,
he said.
"I want to be involved with several nonprofit efforts," said
Barbosa, who founded the Club Guadalupano of Elgin scholarship
program for college-bound Latino students. "When you're on bench,
you cannot solicit money for funding. I felt kind of hamstrung by
that."
He also wants to devote more time to what he called a "sort of
autobiographical writing project" that traces the history of his
family to the Mexican Revolution of 1910.
Barbosa came to the U.S. when he was just 2 months old. His
family first lived on a cotton farm by the Texas border, then
migrated to Nebraska and eventually settled in Elgin when he was 10.
Barbosa attended St. Edward High School in Elgin, the former St.
Procopius College -- now Benedictine University -- and The John
Marshall Law School in Chicago.
He's looking forward to attending more lectures -- in history
mostly, but also politics and anthropology -- at the University of
Chicago, and do more speaking engagements here and in Mexico, he
said.
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News Column
Hispanic Judge Retires, Reflects on Career
Jan. 1, 2013
Elena Ferrarin
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Source: (C) 2012 Chicago Daily Herald. via ProQuest Information and Learning Company; All Rights Reserved
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