Julian Soshnick
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Julian Soshnick | |
Julian Soshnick
|
|
Born | August 17, 1938 Brooklyn, New York |
---|---|
Died | August 8, 2004 (aged 65) Rockport, Massachusetts |
Occupation | Lawyer |
Spouse | Martha |
Julian Soshnick was born on August 17, 1932 in Brooklyn, NY. Born and raised there, Soshnick graduated high school in Manhattan at age 16. He then attended and graduated Brandeis University and the Boston University School of Law. Drafted in 1957 and shipped out to Germany, he served four years as an officer in the U.S. Army's Judge Advocate General's Corps
Married to Martha in 1957, Soshnick has two children, Jo Anne and Jeffrey Adam, and one granddaughter Ella.
In the early 60s he was Assistant Attorney General of Massachusetts under Edward J. McCormack, and then under Edward Brooke. He was co-prosecuting attorney with John Bottomly during the 1964 Boston Strangler case. (Soshnick later appears in a cameo role in the 1968 movie, The Boston Strangler.) Subsequently, he continued in private practice as a notable trial lawyer. In 1971, he defended 400 Vietnam veterans that were arrested for protesting on the Lexington Green in Massachusetts.
He was instrumental in founding Analogic Corporation in 1967, and variously serving as its Vice President, Legal Counsel, Director and long-term officer.
Julian Soshnick died of lung cancer August 8, 2004 at the age of 71 at his home in Rockport, Massachusetts.