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1 | | SENATE RESOLUTION |
2 | | WHEREAS, The members of the Illinois Senate are saddened |
3 | | to learn of the death of the Honorable Benjamin K. Miller, |
4 | | former Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Illinois, who |
5 | | passed away on February 25, 2024; and |
6 | | WHEREAS, Judge Miller was born to Clifford C. and Mary M. |
7 | | Miller in Springfield on November 5, 1936; he graduated from |
8 | | Springfield High School in 1954 and Southern Illinois |
9 | | University Carbondale in 1958; he received his law degree from |
10 | | Vanderbilt University Law School in 1961; he graduated from |
11 | | the U.S. Army Intelligence School in Maryland in 1962; and |
12 | | WHEREAS, Upon completion of law school, Judge Miller |
13 | | returned to Springfield, where he worked in private practice |
14 | | from 1961 to 1976; during this time, he served in both the U.S. |
15 | | Army Reserve and U.S. Navy Reserve; he was appointed to the |
16 | | Circuit Court for the 7th Judicial Circuit by the Supreme |
17 | | Court of Illinois in 1976, and he was elected to that position |
18 | | in 1978; he then served as Presiding Judge in the Criminal |
19 | | Felony Division of the Circuit Court in Sangamon County from |
20 | | 1976 to 1980; he was elected Chief Judge of the 7th Judicial |
21 | | Circuit, serving in that capacity until he was elected to the |
22 | | 4th District Appellate Court in 1982; and |
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1 | | WHEREAS, Judge Miller was elected to a ten-year term on |
2 | | the Supreme Court of Illinois in 1984, representing the 4th |
3 | | Judicial District, which covers much of central Illinois; he |
4 | | was elected Chief Justice in 1991, becoming the first and only |
5 | | Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Illinois to be from |
6 | | Sangamon County; he served in that role until January 1, 1994; |
7 | | that same year, he was reelected to the Supreme Court of |
8 | | Illinois; and |
9 | | WHEREAS, During his tenure as Chief Justice of the Supreme |
10 | | Court of Illinois, Judge Miller was known for his |
11 | | intelligence, ethics, and forward-thinking approach and for |
12 | | always championing ways to improve the court system; his |
13 | | leadership led to profound changes in the judicial system, |
14 | | including expanding judicial performance evaluations |
15 | | statewide, adding non-attorneys to disciplinary hearing boards |
16 | | that ruled on lawyer misconduct, and clarifying the |
17 | | restrictions on political activity by judges and judicial |
18 | | candidates by amending the Code of Judicial Conduct; he also |
19 | | established the Special Commission on the Administration of |
20 | | Justice and the Illinois Family Violence Coordinating Council; |
21 | | and |
22 | | WHEREAS, Judge Miller had a lifelong interest in bioethics |
23 | | and helped develop the medical-legal curriculum at Southern |
24 | | Illinois University School of Medicine, where he served as an |
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1 | | adjunct professor in the Department of Medical Humanities for |
2 | | several years; after retirement, he also served in an of |
3 | | counsel capacity at the law firm Jenner & Block in Chicago for |
4 | | many years; and |
5 | | WHEREAS, Judge Miller was active in many community |
6 | | organizations, including serving as president of the Greater |
7 | | Springfield Chamber of Commerce and the Springfield Mental |
8 | | Health Association, a board member of Sparc and the |
9 | | Springfield-Sangamon County Youth Services Bureau, and a |
10 | | member of the Illinois State Bar Association, the Sangamon |
11 | | County Bar Association, and the Central Illinois Women's Bar |
12 | | Association, where he became the association's first male |
13 | | member; he also helped establish a center for battered women |
14 | | in Springfield and provided legal advice to victims of |
15 | | domestic abuse; from 1988 to 1991, he chaired the Illinois |
16 | | Courts Commission, the constitutional body authorized to |
17 | | discipline or suspend members of the judiciary; and |
18 | | WHEREAS, Judge Miller received a number of accolades, |
19 | | including being awarded an honorary Doctor of Laws from the |
20 | | John Marshall Law School in 1991 and named to the Order of |
21 | | Lincoln, the State's highest civilian honor, in 2019; he was |
22 | | the namesake of the Justice Benjamin K. Miller Recognition |
23 | | Award, which was established to honor outstanding members of |
24 | | the community and the judiciary for their work in preventing |
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1 | | family violence; and |
2 | | WHEREAS, Judge Miller was a world-class sailor, and he |
3 | | enjoyed sailing his 37-foot sailboat, Adventure, throughout |
4 | | the Caribbean and South America; and |
5 | | WHEREAS, Judge Miller's impact on the law is both |
6 | | significant and substantial; he wrote over 487 opinions, |
7 | | participated in more than 2,000 cases, and evaluated over |
8 | | 20,000 requests for review; he will be remembered for serving |
9 | | as a leader in court reform and ethics and as a tireless |
10 | | advocate for victims of domestic abuse; and |
11 | | WHEREAS, Judge Miller was preceded in death by his |
12 | | parents, Clifford C. and Mary M. Miller; and |
13 | | WHEREAS, Judge Miller is survived by his sister, Carol |
14 | | Costello; his nephews, John Costello and David (Julie) |
15 | | Costello; his niece, Katherine (Mark) Whitlock, and her sons, |
16 | | Ben and Jack Whitlock; Jennifer A. Johnson; and many friends; |
17 | | therefore, be it |
18 | | RESOLVED, BY THE SENATE OF THE ONE HUNDRED THIRD GENERAL |
19 | | ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we mourn the passing of |
20 | | the Honorable Benjamin K. Miller, former Chief Justice of the |
21 | | Supreme Court of Illinois, and extend our sincere condolences |