Former Attorney General Griffin Bell hospitalized

Attorney who helped design Georgia school desegregation plan has pancreatic cancer

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Saturday, January 03, 2009

Former United States Attorney General Griffin Bell was being treated at Piedmont Hospital in Atlanta on Saturday for complications due to pancreatic cancer.

The 90-year-old was also experiencing kidney failure and had developed pneumonia, according to his granddaughter, Katherine Bell McClure of Atlanta. Bell has battled kidney disease for years and was recently diagnosed with cancer. Bell told the AJC in early December that the cancer was not treatable.

Enlarge this image

Todd Bennett / AP

Judge Griffin B. Bell speaks to students at the University of Georgia School of Law on April 18, 2007.

Enlarge this image

MARION CROWE / AJC file

U.S. Circuit Judge Griffin Bell in 1971 his address declared an ‘alarming rise’ in crime.

Recent headlines:

   • Metro and state news

On Monday, Bell, was admitted to a hospital in his hometown of Americus and by midweek was transferred to Piedmont, McClure said.

“He’s in a lot of pain right now, but he’s still talking,” McClure said.

Bell is one of Georgia’s legal icons. As a judge, he was one of the architects of Georgia’s school desegregation plan, an achievement Bell himself said in a recent interview was one of the most important of his career.

He started his career as a young attorney in Savannah, and eventually became a senior partner at the King & Spalding law firm in Atlanta.

In the early 1960s Bell was appointed to the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals by President John F. Kennedy. In 1977, Bell was appointed United States Attorney General by President Jimmy Carter. Bell served as a private attorney to President George H. W. Bush and had a client list that included some of the top names in politics and business, including E.F. Hutton and former Atlanta Mayor Andrew Young.

Earlier this month, Bell’s new book “Footnotes to History: A Primer on the American Political Character,” was published by Mercer University Press. It is a collection of speeches he gave during his long career. Originally scheduled for release this spring, the publisher pushed up the release date after Bell’s health worsened.

On Saturday, Bell’s hospital room was filled with family members who listened as Bell told them stories about his youth and the family’s history, McClure said.

Late in the day, a minister came by to talk with Bell. McClure, who was present, said he told the minister, “I have certainly gotten a fair deal in life, despite having a difficult death.”


Kudzu Services » Find the right people for the job