The April 15 death of retired U.S. Supreme Court Justice Byron White at age 84 brought forth a raft of lawyerly memories that predate his 1962 appointment to the court. Sandwiched between his fame as a college and pro football star and his 31 years on the Supreme Court, White briefly but memorably served as then-U.S. Attorney General Robert Kennedy’s deputy attorney general.

Herbert “Jack” Miller, who served as head of the Department of Justice’s Criminal Division under Robert Kennedy, sat down with Byron White every night, after hours, to lay out the problems Miller was facing.

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