John Swainson
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John Swainson

the rise and fall of a wounded warrior

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322 pages 2010

About This Book

Few people today remember John Swainson. As a teenage soldier he lost
both legs in a WWII landmine explosion. Back in the United States, following
a meteoric political rise in the Michigan State Senate, Swainson was
elected as Michigan’s youngest governor since Stevens T. Mason.
In 1970 Swainson was elected to the Michigan Supreme Court,
becoming one of the few public officials to have served in the legislative,
executive, and judicial branches of state government. Then, in 1975, he was
indicted on federal charges of bribery and
perjury, and convicted of lying to a federal
grand jury. Forced to leave the state Supreme
Court and disbarred from practicing law, he
became a pariah, sinking into depression and
alcoholism. He virtually disappeared from
public view.
Lawrence Glazer re-examines the FBI’s investigation of Swainson and
delves into his 1975 trial in detail. He reveals new information from eyewitnesses
who never testified and, in a poignant coda, relates the little-known
story of Swainson’s rehabilitation and return to public life as a historian.
Lawrence M. Glazer has served as an assistant Michigan Attorney General, as chief legal
adviser to Michigan governor James Blanchard, and as a State Circuit Judge.
isbn
Oct. 2010 $39.95
978-0-87013-971-0
cloth, 316 pages, 6×9
b&w photos, notes,
bibliography, index
world rights

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