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Jerry
Farmer practiced law for thirty years during some
of the most interesting times in our nation's history.
He tried misdemeanor cases for two years before prosecuting
felons for robbery, rape, murder, you name it. Having
loved the Bible for as long as he can remember, Jerry
turned to it continually. Here are a few of the stories
he shared during our interview. Jerry explains how
the Bible helped him as he made decisions throughout
his career, rode with the police, stood for principle,
and tried murder cases.
SCHOOL OR JOB? -- NOT MY WAY, BUT THINE
I had decided to get my MBA from the University of
Michigan at the same time I was getting my law degree
from the Michigan Law School. I was planning on going
into corporate law so I took only one class in criminal
law. But God had something different planned for me.
The first big question arose when I graduated from
law school. I still needed one more class to get my
MBA, but I had two immediate job offers in law --
one in Atlanta and one in California. Michigan wouldn't
let me graduate with an MBA unless I took a statistics
class on campus. So my wife and I prayed about what
I should do. The story of Moses really helped us.
Moses was saved as a child, and then he saved his
people. God directed and supported Moses the entire
way. We felt comfortable that we would be told what
to do. My wife got a new job, which was progress in
her teaching career, so it made sense for me to stay,
take the class, and get my MBA. I went around to law
offices looking for work. One man guaranteed that
he could get me enough work to help pay the rent.
So, at his suggestion, I signed up for criminal cases
and started doing defense work. While I asked for
more cases because they provided more money, I really
didn't like defending the criminals.
Five words that I had learned in Sunday School steadied
my wife and me. Each morning we'd wake up with, "Not
my way, but Thine" (from Luke 22:42). We'd help
each other understand how we could do God's work,
not our own.
CITY ATTORNEY'S OFFICE
One day the City Attorney called me to say that this
was the last day he would hold a job for me. He convinced
me to take the job by promising that I wouldn't have
to do any more criminal work. He knew I wanted to
go into corporate law. He apologized to me my first
day on the job because everyone who could work on
criminal cases was gone, so I was assigned the criminal
cases.
This time I was representing the individual, the
city, and the police in misdemeanor cases -- assault
and batteries, drunk driving, petty theft, vandalism.
For every criminal case, there is a police officer
or a detective who sits by the prosecutor and gets
the information (pictures, interviews, etc.) for the
prosecutor. I liked the detective I was working with,
and I found that I also liked the work. So I asked
my boss if I could try more cases and be able to work
with that detective. He sure was surprised.
Riding with the police
At that point, I started riding with police officers
myself. I'd come home and have dinner with my wife,
spend time with her, and then go out and ride with
the police until 2:00 a.m. I would go on all the warrants.
I became the city attorney for the police department,
and I became one of the first, if not the first, attorneys
in the U.S, who had his office down by the chief of
police. This innovative idea really helped me move
up. I worked hard because I loved the work.
ANOTHER CROSSROAD -- TRUSTING IN GOD'S PROVISIONS
There was a change in the city council after an election,
and the first thing the mayor did was put a new boss
in the City Attorney's Office. He didn't like the
idea of an attorney being in the police department
and said he was going to put me in charge of sewer
contracts. Another individual had been asking me to
come work for him in the Prosecutor's Office ever
since I graduated from law school. At that time, no
one wanted to be in the Prosecutor's Office because
you didn't get paid very much. I would lose a lot
of money if I took that job.
Again I prayed. Proverbs is probably my favorite
book because I feel that God is talking to me. Some
of the purposes of the proverbs are to help us understand
wisdom, instruction, justice, and equity:
To know wisdom and instruction; to perceive the
words of understanding; To receive the instruction
of wisdom, justice, and judgment, and equity; To
give subtilty to the simple, to the young man knowledge
and discretion. A wise man will hear, and will increase
learning; and a man of understanding shall attain
unto wise counsels. Prov. 1:2-5
My wife, Carolyn, and I talked about what the proverbs
meant. Another proverb showed me where I had to put
my trust:
Trust in the Lord with all thine heart; and lean
not unto thine own understanding. In all thy ways
acknowledge him, and he shall direct thy paths.
Prov. 3:5, 6
Working together during civil unrest
Carolyn and I decided it was time to leave. But my
future boss persisted. We had worked together during
the Vietnam era when Michigan was a hotbed of demonstrations.
It was the height of hippiedom: women would take off
their tops in parks and dance around, daring the police
to arrest them. It reminded me of Sodom and Gomorrah.
People would throw rocks and fling typewriters out
of buildings. A police officer with whom I was talking
was knocked out by a metal ball-bearing from a sling
shot. Gas and dogs were used to subdue the violent
crowds. Because my future boss had seen me work and
worked with me when the County and City Attorney officers
met to discuss cases during this time, he told me
he would make an exception this once and start me
at a higher pay than normal. This ended up being the
best move I could've made. I went in as a first assistant,
which also didn't usually happen. Everyone was good
to me.
THE PROSECUTOR'S OFFICE (AT THE COUNTY)
Because I was a known commodity to the police, they
would come to me when they had a case. So I ended
up charging many people, including felons charged
with murder, rape, robbery -- you name it. This gave
me another opportunity to sit back and pray. Again,
Proverbs helped me:
The fear of the Lord is to hate evil: pride, and
arrogancy, and the evil way, and the froward mouth,
do I hate. Counsel is mine, and sound wisdom: I
am understanding; I have strength. Prov. 8:13,
14
Providing strength and principle for all
Hating evil is what the prosecutor, who represents
the victim, does. The prosecutor stands out alone
representing the neglected child, the abused wife,
those who are in poor situations. A lot of time the
defendants think they have a right to do the things
they do; they're very arrogant. So it feels very good
to be a prosecutor standing up for principle. "Sound
wisdom" goes hand in hand with principle and
law. The word "counsel" is also in the proverb.
Another name for an attorney is "counsel."
I felt that God was providing the proper counsel for
the victims to help them "have strength."
Strength means so many things -- not just muscles.
The victims could stand tall, have conviction in their
innocence, and have the strength to proceed. Victims
of abuse especially needed God's strength. People
were often fearful about appearing in court. In many
cases, the victims were not always clean-cut themselves.
I knew how vital it was that everyone be accorded
the same rights. A prostitute can be raped, too. Just
because someone does something immoral or illegal
doesn't mean that he or she can be taken advantage
of or abused. We watched out for people like that.
They were very difficult cases because the character
of the victims would come into question. The standard
defense would be, "I just didn't pay her, so
she made this charge against me." We wanted to
be sure we did the right thing, and this took a lot
of understanding and wisdom.
No fear in the courtroom with love and principle
Because I was now going to trial in addition to charging
people, it was really important for me not to do anything
wrong or make a mistake. I had to deal with the fear
that I could make a mistake in how I prepared the
case, or how I thought the defense counsel would attack
the victim, or that I would get a judge without a
backbone. One of the ideas that helped me was from
Paul:
For God hath not given us the spirit of fear; but
of power, and of love, and of a sound mind. Be not
thou therefore ashamed of the testimony of our Lord,
nor of me his prisoner: but be thou partaker of
the afflictions of the gospel according to the power
of God. II. Tim. 1:7, 8
I just love Paul and his letters. He is the epitome
of Christliness, and he never slowed down, despite
the fact he was thrown into prison, beaten to death,
bitten by a viper, and much more. Paul is not just
talking about power, but also about love. I really
worked to love both the victim and the defendant,
even though it was sometimes hard to do. You have
to love the hell out of the defendant in a way. I
knew that principle and love were the basis for law.
We love the law because the law is there to protect
us; laws based upon the Ten Commandments are good
laws.
I was very fortunate to be working with a boss who
valued principle. My boss always said that we treat
everyone the same. That's one of the reasons I went
to work with him. When the son of one of his good
friends who had much political clout was found stealing
something from a department store, my boss told the
officers to handle it just like any other case. The
only difference was that he wanted to call the father
and have the father turn in the son. Often it's much
easier not to charge someone, especially when the
newspapers are jumping on you or politicians are applying
pressure; but if you don't charge someone for a crime
he or she committed, there's no principle of law.
Murder trial that went to the Supreme Court
This period of time was the height of my trial work.
I had one particular case that was a horrible situation.
A fellow had killed 16-18 people in Detroit, which
was in a different county. He had plead and was found
not guilty by reason of insanity and was sent to the
mental health department. It was assumed he would
be there for the rest of his life. The only way he
could get out of the institution was if the director
determined this fellow could not injure anyone. This
man had no feelings. He was an amoral sociopath who
was a hit man. He had probably killed some for fun.
But during the time he was in the institution, the
Supreme Court made a ruling that made it unconstitutional
to hold him there without allowing him the right to
a trial by jury to determine if he could be released.
He had a trial, and his counsel found a psychiatrist
who testified that he was fit to be released. He was
let out. His wife and daughter were living in my county.
According to him, his wife had a boyfriend. So, he
found and murdered her.
I tried the case. It was a very important case because
this guy was a real bad apple. If he didn't get convicted,
he was going back out to kill more people. There was
tremendous pressure and fear. People were so petrified
of this guy and who he was and what he would do, that
as soon as the little daughter testified, the FBI
sent her away, put her in the witness protection program,
and gave her a new identity. Paul's words came to
mind throughout this trial:
For it is God which worketh in you both to will
and to do of his good pleasure. Do all things without
murmurings and disputings. Phil. 2:13, 14
I really prayed to know that God was working in me,
in all of us. This was very helpful. Going into this
trial everyday, I had to guard myself against the
hate -- the hateful comments the defendant said everyday
to me or about me. The "good pleasure" to
me was to make sure that this defendant was convicted
of first degree murder. In Michigan there's no parole
for first degree murder. I was in court constantly.
The case went all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court.
It was upheld all the way. I don't know if the fellow's
still alive, but I do know that I would have been
notified had he been released.
I'm grateful when right prevails.
We will continue with more
of Jerry's experiences as a prosecuting attorney next
month. Jerry will share with us how Bible stories
and the Sermon on the Mount helped him in court during
some very tense trials.
Please note that the BibleWise
focus of the month is on Judges. 
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