Tim Hall
on 12 hours ago
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He was 88, a veteran, and about to lose his home.
He sat in his wheelchair and wept… then the judge stepped down from the bench.
Arthur, an 88-year-old Vietnam veteran, sat in his wheelchair in the back of the courtroom. His wife was gone, he had no children, and his small house was falling apart. He’d been cited for code violations he couldn’t afford to fix — a broken porch, peeling paint, and a leaking roof.
The judge, a 65-year-old man known for his stern, “by-the-book” rulings, called his case.
Arthur listened, his hands trembling, as the city attorney listed the violations and the thousands in fines. When the attorney formally requested the court’s permission to condemn the property if the fines weren’t paid, the finality of it hit him. This was it. He was losing his home.
The judge began to speak. “Mr. Harris, the city is asking for…”
He stopped. He just looked at the frail old man, who had now buried his face in his hands, his shoulders shaking in a silent, heartbreaking sob.
The courtroom went quiet. The judge, his own face tightening with emotion, looked conflicted. “We will take a 15-minute recess,” he announced abruptly, banging his gavel.
When he returned, the courtroom was buzzing. The judge looked not at the attorneys, but directly at Arthur.
“Mr. Harris,” the judge said, his voice softer now. “I spent my recess on the phone. I have spoken with the director of the local VFW, who is a friend of mine, and with our county’s Veterans’ Fund. All fines are hereby dismissed.”
Arthur looked up, his face a mask of stunned disbelief.
“Furthermore,” the judge continued, “a local contractor’s union has already pledged to do all the repairs, pro bono, starting next week.”
This second wave of kindness was too much. Arthur, who had been crying from despair, now broke down in tears of overwhelming relief.
The judge then did something no one had ever seen. He stepped down from his high bench, walked directly to the wheelchair, and pulled the old soldier into a full, strong hug.
As Arthur wept into the judge’s robe, he whispered, his voice trembling, “I… I didn’t think anybody cared anymore.”
The judge held him tighter and whispered back, his voice thick, “We do. I do. You served us. We don’t forget that.”
#compassion #humankindness
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