Kaufman entered private practice of law in New York City from 1932 to 1935. He was a Special
Assistant United States Attorney of the Southern District of New York from 1935 to 1939. He returned to private practice in New York City from 1940 to 1949. He was an Assistant United States Attorney from 1939 to 1940. He was Special Assistant to the
Attorney General of the United States from 1947 to 1948.[3]
Judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York
Kaufman received a
recess appointment from President
Harry S. Truman on October 21, 1949, to the
United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, to a new seat created by 63 Stat. 493. He was nominated to the same seat by President Truman on January 5, 1950. He was confirmed by the
United States Senate on April 4, 1950, and received his commission on April 7, 1950. His service was terminated on September 22, 1961, due to elevation to the Second Circuit.[3] Notable cases included:
1951: Kaufman is best remembered as the judge who presided over the espionage trial of
Julius and Ethel Rosenberg and imposed their controversial death sentences.
Roy Cohn, one of the
prosecutors in the case, claimed in his autobiography that his influence led to Kaufman's being appointed to the case, and that Kaufman had imposed the death penalty on Cohn's personal advice. This claim has not been verified, although it has been shown that after Kaufman learned that the FBI and Justice Department opposed death penalties in the case, he asked the prosecution to withhold its recommendation before issuing his death sentence. In his summing up Judge Irving Kaufman was considered by many to have been highly subjective: "Judge Kaufman tied the crimes the Rosenbergs were being accused of to their ideas and the fact that they were sympathetic to the Soviet Union. He stated that they had given the atomic bomb to the Russians, which had triggered Communist aggression in Korea resulting in over 50,000 American casualties. He added that, because of their treason, the Soviet Union was threatening America with an atomic attack and this made it necessary for the United States to spend enormous amounts of money to build underground bomb shelters."[4] Kaufman said that he had gone to
synagogue to pray before issuing his death sentence; this enraged
Supreme Court justice
Felix Frankfurter, who later wrote to judge
Learned Hand, "I despise a judge who feels God told him to impose a death sentence," and also told Hand that he was "mean enough" to stay on the court long enough to prevent Kaufman from having a chance to take Frankfurter's place in the so-called "
Jewish seat" on the Court.[5][6]
1959: Kaufman presided over the jury trial in the federal government's conspiracy case against twenty-one of the
Apalachin meeting delegates. The guilty verdicts of twenty of the men, and the stiff sentences Kaufman meted out, were later reversed and invalidated by the Court of Appeals.
Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit
Kaufman was nominated by President
John F. Kennedy on September 14, 1961, to the
United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, to a new seat created by 75 Stat. 80. He was confirmed by the Senate on September 21, 1961, and received his commission on September 22, 1961. He served as Chief Judge from 1973 to 1980. He assumed
senior status on July 1, 1987. His service was terminated on February 1, 1992, due to his death.[3] Notable cases included:
1966: Kaufman wrote an opinion in the case of United States v. Freeman 357 F.2d 606 (2d Cir. 1966). The judgment over-turned the rigid
M'Naghten standard for insanity defense and adopted the modern insanity defense described in Section 4.01 of
Model Penal Code developed by the
American Law Institute. The judgment embraced advances in psychiatry and emphatically rejected the M'Naghten test by stating that, "the outrage of a
frightened Queen has for far too long caused us to forego the expert guidance that modern psychiatry is able to provide."
1974: Kaufman was the chief judge in the decision (Coniglio v. Highwood Services, 1974) that prevents
Professional Football fans from gaining redress against the NFL's policy requiring them to purchase seats for
exhibition games at regular-season prices in order to qualify for season tickets.[7]
1975: Kaufman presided over the three-judge appeals court panel reviewing the deportation of
John Lennon and rejected the government's attempt to deport him from the United States to the
United Kingdom based upon his having pleaded guilty in England to possession of
hashish. After a widely publicized argument, Kaufman found that Lennon had been singled out for deportation for political reasons, allowed him to remain in the United States on what some observers characterized as a technicality, and criticized what he called the "labyrinthine provisions of the Immigration and Naturalization Act."
1980: Kaufman also wrote an opinion in the case of Filártiga v. Peña-Irala, 630 F.2d 876 (2d Cir. 1980). The case opened U.S. courts to foreigners who were
tortured in other countries. The case has had a wide-ranging impact on human rights and the role of corporations and their foreign operations.
Kaufman had been known to lament what he regarded as the distortion of judicial opinion and finding, as it passed through the filter of the media: "The judge is forced for the most part to reach his audience through the medium of the press whose reporting of judicial decisions is all too often inaccurate and superficial."[9]
^Radosh, Ronald (March 29, 2011).
"Cold Case: Ethel and Julius Rosenberg".
The Tablet. The Rosenberg case was a family affair—almost everyone involved was Jewish: the Rosenbergs and the Greenglasses, those who became government witnesses against the two couples, as well as the prosecutors,
Myles Lane,
Irving Saypol, and
Roy Cohn, and the justice who presided at the trial, Irving Kaufman