Bruce Jacob

Bruce Robert Jacob (born March 26, 1935 in Chicago, Illinois) was Assistant Attorney General for the State of Florida during the early 1960s. He represented the state in the Supreme Court case Gideon v. Wainwright, arguing that Clarence Earl Gideon, an indigent, poorly educated man charged with a felony, had no right to be provided with counsel.[2]

Bruce Jacob
Assistant Attorney General of Florida
Personal details
Born
Bruce Robert Jacob[1]

March 26, 1935 (1935-03-26) (age 85)
Chicago, Illinois
Political partyDemocratic
ProfessionLawyer

He has a B.A. degree from the Florida State University and a J.D. degree from the Stetson University College of Law.

After leaving the Attorney General's office, Jacob worked as a private lawyer for the firm of Holland, Bevis & Smith, now Holland & Knight, in Bartow and Lakeland, Florida. He, at that time, completed his LL.M. degree at Northwestern University, and joined the faculty of Emory University School of Law]], where he established the Legal Assistance for Inmates Program at the Atlanta Penitentiary.

In 1969, Jacob was appointed, by the Supreme Court, as counsel for petitioner in the case of Kaufman v. United States. Later, while at the Harvard Law School, he served as a Research Associate in the Center for Criminal Justice, assisted in the establishment of the Harvard Prison Legal Assistance Project, and supervised the work of law students in the defense of criminal cases and in the representation of indigents in civil matters in the Community Legal Assistance Office, Cambridge, Massachusetts. He received the S.J.D. from the Harvard Law School.

Jacob subsequently served as Professor and Director of Clinical Programs at The Ohio State University College of Law, as Dean and Professor of the Mercer University School of Law and as Vice President of Stetson University and Dean of Stetson College of Law from 1981 through 1994. He is an author and co-author of articles on Criminal Law and Procedure, Civil Rights and Civil Liberties, and the Administrative Law of Corrections. While on sabbatical leave during 1994–95, he took courses in the LL.M. program in Taxation at the University of Florida College of Law, and received that LL.M. in 1995. He currently teaches constitutional law, criminal procedure, criminal law and administrative law courses at the Stetson University College of Law.

Dean of Stetson University College of Law

Jacob served as Dean of Stetson University College of Law from 1981 to 1994.[3]

References

  1. https://www.floridabar.org/directories/find-mbr/profile/?num=38974
  2. Gideon v. Wainwright, 372 U.S. 335 (1963)
  3. Swygert & Vause, Florida's First Law School at 681 (Durham, N.C.: Carolina Academic Press, 2006)


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