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STEPHEN G.
BREYER was born August 15, 1938, in San Francisco. He
was graduated from Stanford University in 1959 and traveled
to Oxford University on a Marshall Scholarship where he
received a B.A. from Magdalen College in 1961. Breyer
earned an LL.B from Harvard Law School in 1964. He served
as a law clerk for Associate Justice Arthur J. Goldberg
of the U.S. Supreme Court during the 1964 Term. From 1965
to 1967 Breyer worked in the U.S. Department of Justice
as a special assistant to the Assistant U.S.Attorney for
Antitrust, Donald F. Turner. In 1967 Breyer began his
academic career at Harvard Law School, where he taught
until 1994. He also taught at the Harvard University Kennedy
School of Government from 1977-1980. In 1973 Breyer returned
to Washington, D.C., as an assistant special prosecutor
in the Watergate investigation. He stayed on for the following
two years as special counsel to the Administrative Practices
Subcommittee of the Senate Judiciary Committee. In 1979
he served for two years as chief counsel of the Senate
Judiciary Committee. President Jimmy Carter appointed
Breyer to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit
in 1980 and he became its Chief Judge in 1990. He served
as a member of the U.S. Sentencing Commission from 1985-1989.
The following year Breyer became a member of the Judicial
Conference of the United States. On May 14, 1994, President
Bill Clinton nominated Breyer Associate Justice of the
Supreme Court. He took the oath of office on August 3,
1994.
Image Credit: Collection of
the Supreme Court of the United States, Photographer:
Steve Petteway
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