Judge Cooke is dead
at 85 By
DAVID HULSE
MONTICELLO - Under
a bright blue Sullivan County sky, one of its favorite sons, Judge Lawrence
H. Cooke, was laid to rest at Rock Ridge Cemetery on Monday.
Thousands mourned
his loss over the weekend after the 85-year-old Monticello native and
former Chief Judge of New York State passed away at home on August 17,
following a lengthy illness.
The county courthouse,
which had been renamed in Cooke's honor three years ago, became his bier
as he was laid in state Sunday afternoon in the central courtroom amid
a sea of flowers and an honor guard of state and local police agencies.
The
Sullivan County Sheriff's Department estimated some 2,000 persons attended.
The judge's grandchildren
delivered the readings at Monday's Mass of Christian Burial at a packed
St. Peter's Church. Sitting Chief Judge Judith Kaye, also a Monticello
native, eulogized Judge Cooke, saying, "At the center of all the things
he did was the simple fact that he liked and believed in and cared about
people. People were important to him." (The complete text of Judge Kaye's
remarks can be found on page 5.)
People stood along
the street and Monticello firefighters joined them in saluting the passing
funeral entourage.
In Albany Governor
George Pataki issued an August 18 statement saying, "New York today mourns
the death of Chief Judge Lawrence Cooke, the twentieth Chief Judge of
our State Court of Appeals. Chief Judge Cooke served this State with distinction,
with dignity and intelligent good humor, and he will be sorely missed.
"During his tenure
on the Court of Appeals, he devoted himself tirelessly to the improvement
of judicial administration, both in New York and throughout the country.
In recent years, I was honored to have Judge Cooke head up the State's
Judicial Screening Committee, a task he performed with his customary skill.
"Judge Cooke was
great New Yorker who furthered the great cause of justice throughout his
long and distinguished career, and all New Yorkers are saddened by his
passing."
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