College of Law News
Supreme Court case allowing sterilizations a fraud, law professor writes in new book
October 15, 2008
In Three Generations, No Imbeciles: Eugenics, the Supreme Court and Buck v. Bell (Johns Hopkins University Press), author Paul A. Lombardo provides the only fully documented account ever written of the 1927 Buck case. Buck was the only time in Supreme Court history that an intrusive medical procedure-involuntary sterilization-was endorsed as a tool of government eugenic policy. It is doubly infamous for the court's opinion, written by renowned Justice Oliver Wendell Jr. Holmes' declaration that "Three generations of imbeciles are enough" led to lifelong infamy for Carrie Buck and her family. Lombardo was the last person to interview Carrie Buck before she died, and the book incorporates material he discovered over more than twenty-five years of research. Items such as Carrie Buck's medical records, the honor roll grade book of her daughter, Vivian, private correspondence of the lawyer who was named to represent her, and the only existing photos of all three generations of the Buck family support the conclusion that the Buck case was a fraud. Although the Buck decision set the stage for several hundred thousand operations in the United States and other countries, and was cited at the Nuremberg trials in defense of Nazi sterilization experiments, it has never been overturned. This book tracks the career of Buck in American memory, as a potent symbol of government control of reproduction and a troubling precedent in the human genome era. In his book, Lombardo argues that the sham defense presented by Carrie Buck's lawyer doomed his client from the outset. "For many years he sat on the board of directors at the institution where Buck was being held. He was a strong advocate for the sterilization of inmates during that period. He had no intention of defending her-he threw the case" Lombardo said. Although seven state legislatures have rejected past laws and repudiated eugenic policies in recent years, the idea of preventing certain people from having children hasn't gone away. In September, Louisiana State Rep. John LaBruzzo (R-Metarie) said he is studying a plan to pay poor women $1,000 to have their Fallopian tubes tied. "His argument echoes comments straight from the eugenics era," Lombardo said. "Hard times are coming, the politician says, and we need to cut costs. Just sterilize the poor, the disabled and criminals and it will keep our taxes low." Lombardo has played a key role, both as an historian and a lawyer, in advocating for legislative denunciations of past eugenics laws. In 1980, however, he had only as passing acquaintance with the U.S. eugenics movement when a headline in a Charlottesville, Virginia newspaper grabbed his attention. The headline read "‘I Wanted Babies Bad'-Woman Told of Her Sterilization," and the article described a lawsuit that had been filed to overturn the Buck case. It was the start of a quarter-century of research for Lombardo. He dug through case records and the papers of the lawyer who orchestrated it, eventually finding Carrie Buck and talking with her in the last weeks of her life, then attending her funeral. He found Buck's school report cards and her daughter's honor roll record, which contradicted the Holmes comment. While studying the papers of a former eugenics expert, Lombardo discovered how the man had manufactured evidence to make the state's case against Carrie Buck. Other records confirmed the case was not just a tragedy, but also a legal sham.
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| Interview with LombardoConducted by Michael Davis(run time 4:06) Transcript of InterviewWhen the U.S. Supreme Court in 1927 upheld states' rights to forcibly sterilize those deemed to be "feeble minded" Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes' opinion notoriously declared that "three generations of imbeciles are enough." A new book by Georgia State University law professor Paul Lombardo casts light on the failings - intentional or otherwise - of the lawyer trying the case and exposes evidence that the family at its center was not who the state portrayed them to be. LOMBARDO: "The case of Buck v. Bell pitted a young 17-year-old girl in Virginia against Dr. John Bell who wished to sterilize her. Dr. Bell and his colleagues at the Lynchburg Colony for the Epileptic and Feeble Minded were putting in place a new law in 1924 which gave the state the power to sexually sterilize people who had been declared socially inadequate. And that definition included such things as what they called feeble mindedness, mental deficiency, poverty, etc. So the case goes through the Virginia courts, and it reaches, eventually, the United States Supreme Court in 1927 yielding one of the more infamous decisions of that court, an opinion written by Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., saying of Carrie Buck, her mother and her daughter, all deemed to be feeble minded: Three generations of imbeciles are enough. Lombardo's book, "Three Generations, No Imbeciles: Eugenics, the Supreme Court and Buck v. Bell" is available this month from the Johns Hopkins University Press. Its subject, the Buck case, which has never been overturned, has been a source of interest for Lombardo for more than 25 years. LOMBARDO: It's true that the decision has never been overturned. I by chance came upon it in the early 1980s when a lawsuit had been brought in Virginia, where I was living, to overturn the Buck case and my interest in the case stemmed from that challenge. I later found records that described the case in great detail and the office records of the attorney who wrote the law and argued it before the Supreme Court. So my interest began as a kind of historical biography of that lawyer. One of the things I argue in the book is that the conclusion of the case was the result of incredibly bad lawyering, sometimes intentionally bad lawyering, on the part of the man who was appointed to represent Carrie Buck. He threw the case. The fix was in. He was not interested in defending her, he was interested in supporting the sterilization program of the institution where she was living. He in fact had supported it as a member of the board of directors of that institution for many years. So it's interesting as we're talking about this to realize that many of the most horrific programs of the eugenics movement were helped along by the fact that we went into economic decline in the early 1930s. And it's fascinating to see someone who is in a legislature today saying straightforwardly "looks likes like hard times are coming, we need to save money, let's start sterilizing people again." A lawmaker in Louisiana has proposed to do just that, by offering women living in poverty $1,000 to have their tubes tied. For Lombardo, the scenario echoes the past. LOMBARDO: The representative down in Louisiana this week said that there were generational families on welfare - one generation after the other - and the only way to break that chain and thereby save tax money, was to sterilize such people. His argument is exactly the same as the argument made in the 30 states who passed sterilization laws. He didn't bother to spend a lot of time trying to make the genetic argument, he just said it straightforwardly, "we'll save money this way," he said, so "why don't we sterilize them?" Professor Lombardo will be discussing his book Oct. 27 at 7:15 p.m. at the Decatur Library at a Georgia Center for the Book event. For Georgia State University RadioLine, I'm Michael Davis. |


A notorious U.S. Supreme Court decision that led to more than sixty thousand involuntary sterilizations of people described as "feebleminded and socially inadequate" was a fraud, says a new book by a Georgia State University law professor. The book documents how the case was initiated to hide the shame of a poor Virginia girl named Carrie Buck, pregnant after she had been raped.
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