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Robert J. Parins

20the century American judge


Summary

20the century American judge

FieldValue
nameRobert J. Parins
imageRobert J Parins.png
altA black and white portrait of Robert J. Parins in a suit and tie
captionParins at a news conference in 1981
officePresident of the Green Bay Packers
term_start1982
term_end1989
predecessorDominic Olejniczak
successorBob Harlan
office1Wisconsin Circuit Judge for the Brown Circuit, Branch 2
term_start1August 1, 1978
term_end1June 1, 1982
predecessor1Transitioned from 14th circ.
successor1Vivi L. Dilweg
office2Wisconsin Circuit Judge for the 14th Circuit, Branch 2
term_start2January 1, 1968
term_end2July 31, 1978
predecessor2Raymond J. Rahr
successor2Transitioned to Brown circ.
office3District Attorney of Brown County, Wisconsin
term_start3January 1, 1949
term_end3January 1, 1951
predecessor3J. Norman Basten
successor3Bernard J. Bertrand
partyDemocratic
birth_date
birth_placeGreen Bay, Wisconsin, U.S.
death_date
death_placeHobart, Wisconsin, U.S.
restingplaceAllouez Catholic Cemetery, Green Bay
alma_materUniversity of Wisconsin Law School
professionLawyer, judge

Robert James Parins (August 23, 1918May 26, 2017) was an American lawyer, judge, and National Football League executive. He was president of the Green Bay Packers from 1982 to 1989, and served in various other leadership roles in the Packers organization. He previously served 14 years as a Wisconsin circuit court judge in Brown County (1968–1982) and served two years as district attorney (1949–1951). Later in life, acting as a reserve judge, he played a notable role in a case related to the American serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer.

He was elected president of the Green Bay Packers in 1982, serving as the first full-time president in team history. His tenure was marked more for organizational successes than on-field victories. In recognition of his accomplishments, which included the formation of the Green Bay Packers Foundation, financial improvements, and facility expansion, Parins was inducted into the Green Bay Packers Hall of Fame in 1998.

Early life

Robert Parins was born on August 23, 1918, in Green Bay, Wisconsin. He graduated from Green Bay East High School in 1936 and received a law degree from the University of Wisconsin Law School in 1942. Parins was a noted lifelong fan of the Green Bay Packers, which started during his childhood. He attended games in the 1920s and even helped early Packers players—Parins noted Jug Earp specifically—carry their equipment before games.

Professional career

After his college graduation, Parins took a job as an insurance adjuster with Employer's Mutual of Wausau in Minneapolis, Minnesota. He moved back to Green Bay in 1944 and began practicing law. He served as the Brown County, Wisconsin, district attorney from 1949 to 1950. He practiced law with the firm of Cohen, Parins, Cohen and Grant until 1967. In 1968, he was elected a Wisconsin circuit court judge for the 14th Judicial Circuit, which covered Brown, Door, and Kewaunee counties. While in this role, he lectured across the state to schools and judicial groups. Parins served as a state circuit court judge until 1982, when he retired to serve as president of the Green Bay Packers. After his tenure with the Packers ended in 1989, he returned to serving as a judge in a reserve capacity. He also handled over 1,000 mediation or arbitration cases before retiring from his legal career at the age of 88.

Jeffrey Dahmer case

In 1993, Parins was selected to hear an appeal regarding the dismissal of police officers Joseph T. Gabrish and John Balcerzak. The officers were originally fired for returning Konerak Sinthasomphone to serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer. Sinthasomphone, a 14-year-old Laotian boy, was abducted by Dahmer and had been reported missing. He escaped Dahmer the next day and was found naked, drugged, and bleeding by three black women. The women called police and officers showed up, two being Gabrish and Balcerzak. The officers escorted Sinthasomphone back inside Dahmer's apartment, where he convinced the officers that Sinthasomphone was his romantic partner and was drunk. They subsequently made homophobic remarks regarding the incident. Sinthasomphone became Dahmer's 13th rape and murder victim.

Parins was chosen for his experience with similar cases and due to not living in Milwaukee, where the events took place. In 1994, Parins ruled that even though the officers had made mistakes, they should not have been dismissed because they did not commit "gross negligence" in the discharge of their duties. He ordered the officers reinstated and awarded each around as back pay. The ruling was controversial, with both the family of Sinthasomphone and the Milwaukee police force disagreeing with Parins's decision.

Green Bay Packers

In 1966, Parins was elected to the board of directors of Green Bay Packers, Inc., the non-profit organization that owns the Green Bay Packers. Parins was elected to the executive committee as vice president in 1979. Two years later, in 1981, Parins assumed all of the roles and responsibilities of the presidency but still retained his vice president title. In 1982, after the death of Dominic Olejniczak, Parins was formally elected president of the Packers. Parins became the first full-time president in the Packers' history and took on the additional title of chief executive officer in 1988. He would serve as president for seven years until retiring in 1989. Parins was succeeded in the role of president by Bob Harlan. Parins's retirement marked an end to the tradition of electing local leaders to be president—Harlan was promoted from within and his profession was in football. Parins remained on the board of directors until 1994, after which he was named director emeritus. He held the position of honorary chairman from 1991 to 1994.

Although Parins's time as president saw little on-field success, his tenure was notable for the Packers' financial improvements, reorganized management structure and expansion of team facilities. While Parins was president, the Packers' record was 43–61–2 and they only made the playoffs once. However, Parins implemented various committees, including an investment committee, to try to harness the skills of the various board members. The Packers saw immediate results, with the team reporting a profit increase from in 1986 to in 1987. Some of this increase can be attributed to the 72 new private box seats added to Lambeau Field, which increased the stadium's capacity to 56,926. The Packers constructed their first indoor practice facility and expanded their administrative offices. The net worth of the Packers also grew from to during his tenure. Parins was additionally credited with separating the head coach and football management duties by hiring a vice president of football operations for the first time. One of Parins's lasting impacts, though, came from the creation of the Green Bay Packers Foundation—the Packers' charitable organization—in 1986. In recognition of these accomplishments, Parins was inducted into the Green Bay Packers Hall of Fame in 1998.

Personal life

Parins was active in the local community, a noted sports enthusiast, and an outdoorsman. He was married in 1941 to Elizabeth Carroll and had five children. Parins died on May 26, 2017, in Hobart, Wisconsin, at the age of 98.

References

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References

  1. Christl, Cliff. "Judge Robert J. Parins".
  2. Christl, Cliff. (May 27, 2017). "Judge Robert J. Parins set stage for Packers' success".
  3. (May 31, 2017). "Parins, The Hon. Robert J.". [[Green Bay Press-Gazette]].
  4. Smothers, Mike. (May 16, 1982). "Parins reflects on his first love — the law". [[Green Bay Press-Gazette]].
  5. "Balcerkzak v. City of Milwaukee".
  6. (May 22, 1993). "New judge to hear appeals of cops fired in Dahmer case". [[The Journal Times]].
  7. (April 28, 1994). "Victory for Two in Dahmer Case". [[The New York Times]].
  8. (March 5, 1992). "The Estate Of Konerak Sinthasomphone v. The City of Milwaukee". [[United States District Court]].
  9. Balagtas, Tristan. (October 13, 2022). "Who Was Konerak Sinthasomphone, the Jeffrey Dahmer Victim Who Police Returned to the Killer's Home?".
  10. Ke, Bryan. (October 10, 2022). "Konerak Sinthasomphone: The Jeffrey Dahmer victim police failed to protect".
  11. Worthington, Rogers. (August 2, 1991). "Could Police Have Saved Young Victim?". [[Chicago Tribune]].
  12. (April 28, 1994). "Dahmer police get jobs, pay". [[Wisconsin State Journal]].
  13. (July 26, 1994). "Money for appeal in cop case denied". [[Green Bay Press-Gazette]].
  14. "Executive Committee & Board of Directors".
  15. (October 12, 1981). "Packers Shuffle Top Management". [[The New York Times]].
  16. "Packers Chronology". [[Green Bay Packers, Inc.]].
  17. McGinn, Bob. (April 28, 1989). "Most signs point toward Harlan for president: Part 1". [[Green Bay Press-Gazette]].
  18. Shultz, Bob. (June 10, 1989). "Harlan is Serious About Packers: Part 1". [[The Capital Times]].
  19. Shultz, Bob. (June 10, 1989). "Harlan is Serious About Packers: Part 2". [[The Capital Times]].
  20. (May 28, 2017). "Judge Robert J. Parins, Packers' first full-time president, dies".
  21. Looney, Douglas S.. (August 28, 1989). "Shake-up In Title Town".
  22. Murphy, Mark. (June 10, 2017). "Judge Parins brought Packers into modern era of NFL".
  23. Maillet, Jeff. (May 27, 2017). "Robert Parins, former Packers president, dies at 98". [[Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel]].
  24. Chiari, Mike. (May 27, 2017). "Former Packers President Judge Robert J. Parins Dies at Age 98".
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