Judge (2000 AD)
Judges | |
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Judge Rico, a street judge, painted by Carlos Ezquerra | |
Publication information | |
Publisher | Rebellion Developments |
First appearance | 2000 AD #2 (5 March, 1977) |
Created by |
John Wagner (writer) Carlos Ezquerra (artist) Pat Mills (editor) |
In-story information | |
Type of organization | Law enforcement |
Base(s) | Grand Hall of Justice |
Judge (or street judge) is a title held by several significant characters in Judge Dredd and other series which appear in the British comics 2000 AD and Judge Dredd Megazine. In the fictional future history of the series, the role of "Judge" combines those of judge and police officer, thus avoiding long legal wrangles by allowing for criminals to be tried and sentenced on the spot. Since they overthrew the U.S. Constitution in 2070, Judges have also held supreme political power in Mega-City One. Collectively they are known as the Justice Department.
Overview
In the comic strip, Judges are the product of many years' training and psychological conditioning. Training, which takes place in the Academy of Law, generally begins at age five.[1] The Judges recruit promising children, and grow their own clones. Judge Dredd is himself a clone of the Judges' founder, Chief Judge Fargo.[2]
The Judges themselves are not above the law – a violation that would earn a citizen a few months in an Iso[lation]-Cube earns a Judge a twenty-year sentence of hard labor on Saturn's moon, Titan, after surgical modification to enable the convict to survive Titan's atmosphere.[3]
For most of the strip's history, the Judges are led by a Chief Judge and a Council of Five.[4] The Judges have their own domestic intelligence division (the Public Surveillance Unit),[5] and their own medical facilities. There are a number of specialist divisions within the Judges, notably Psi Division, which consists of psychic judges used to predict the future and read minds, and Tek Division, made of forensic scientists and engineers. The SJS (Special Judicial Squad) monitor and police the Judges internally.[4]
In the Judge Dredd future history, the Judge System originated in the United States (see History of Mega-City One), but spread around the world. In most of these nations the Judges control all aspects of the government; but differ in customs: the Judges of Ireland, for example, are allowed to drink and smoke, or be married,[6] whereas MC-1 Judges have virtually no private life.[7] Corruption is endemic amongst the Judges of Brit-Cit, and bribery is often essential to progress through the ranks.[8]
Block Judges (Judges assigned to a particular cityblock) also hear civil cases in each City Block, where they try compensation claims, libel, slander, divorce, alimony, and small claims matters.[9]
Notable Judges appearing in the series include Judge Anderson (of Psi Division), Judge Hershey, Judge Kraken, Judge Giant, and the eponymous Judge Dredd.
Divisions/Bodies
Within the Mega-City One legal system there are numerous bodies and divisions who have specialised tasks:
- Street Division (normal Judges)
- Riot squads
- H-Wagon crews (aerial units)
- Heavies/Manta Tank crews (artillery)
- Academy of Law
- Psi Division (judges with psychic powers, encompassing Exorcist Judges and the Department of Magic)
- Special Judicial Squad or SJS (internal affairs)
- Tek Division, a.k.a. Technical Division (scientists)
- "Wally Squad" (Undercover Division)
- Space Corps
- Public Surveillance Unit (PSU)
- Black Ops
- Defence Division (army)
- Public Relations Division
- Accounts
- Traffic
- Med Division
- Fire Division
- Meat Wagons (corpse disposal, often using civilian auxiliaries)
- Township deputies (mutant deputies drafted to police Cursed Earth townships)
- Holocaust Squad (teams of disgraced Judges who undertake suicide missions at times of extreme peril to Mega-City One)
In 2134, there was an across-the-board divisional merger,[10] creating:
- Street Division: absorbing Meat Wagon, H-Wagon, Riot, and Sniper divisions
- Undercover Operations Division: newly created and encompassing SJS, Black Ops, Wally Squad, and PSU.
Training
Before becoming fully fledged street judges, cadet judges usually must spend 15 years (or, exceptionally, 13 years)[11] at the Academy of Law, where they receive intensive training and conditioning.
A cadet is inducted into the Academy either as a cloned infant (as does Judge Dredd),[2] or as a child aged five (although older children have been recruited). After this, unsupervised contact with the city outside is forbidden, in order to maintain the strictest discipline and mental conditioning.[12]
Cadet Judges must leave both the Academy and the city itself during their "Hotdog Run": a training mission into the Cursed Earth, to test the cadets under combat conditions; fatalities are not unknown. A senior Judge will command and assess the cadets during the Hotdog Run.
On graduating from the Academy, cadets become known as rookie judges. A rookie's uniform is similar to that of a full judge, with two differences: the helmet is white rather than black and red, and the badge consists of only one half of a full judge's badge and does not show the rookie's name[13] (this design is sometimes varied by artists; see illustration, right). (Note however that some artists have wrongly depicted cadets in rookies' uniforms, and rookies in full judges' uniforms).
Before becoming a full judge, a rookie must undergo assessment by a more experienced Senior Judge. The failure rate is extremely high, and the few who pass their Final Assessment exchange their white helmet and "half-eagle" for the black and red helmet and "full eagle" at a brief ceremony before the chief judge.[13]
Notable characters seen taking their final assessments are the original Judge Giant, the other Judge Giant, Judge Rico, Judge Kraken, and Dredd himself (in flashbacks). The film Dredd depicts Judge Anderson's final assessment.
Cadets who fail to graduate are expelled from the Academy. Rookies who fail their final assessment earlier had no right of appeal,[14] but this is no longer the case.[15] Failed cadets and rookies are either employed as auxiliaries or leave the Justice Department altogether.
Ever since the Day Of Chaos storyline, the department has taken on retrainees; judges transferred from other megacities to bolster their ranks.
Retirement
When a street judge retires from service at the end of his career, he may choose to leave Mega-City One for exile outside the city. He may do this either in the Cursed Earth, a radioactive desert outside the city walls, or in the Undercity, the ruins of New York that lie beneath the mega-city. The Long Walk begins with a brief ceremony at the city gates, wherein the retiring judge walks through an honour guard of judges as they discharge their firearms into the air, while another judge formally bids him farewell. Once they take the Long Walk, judges are expected never to return, but to die "bringing law to the lawless".
Retiring judges may also be placed in administrative or teaching posts, instead of taking the Long Walk. The Long Walk may however be the best for to a judge who has been subject to disciplinary proceedings for misconduct not warranting criminal prosecution.
Cursed Earth Judges are essentially vigilantes. Although they are expected to uphold the same standards of behavior as street judges, they receive no supervision or support from the city. As such, some of them openly flout the code of practice that street judges must obey- drinking, smoking, or breaking celibacy for example. Cursed Earth judges also act as traveling magistrates, holding makeshift small-claims courts in the various settlements around the wasteland; for these, the arrival of a judge is a rare and exciting event, akin to a carnival, and therefore, along with legitimate grievances, some villagers file frivolous or ridiculous cases for entertainment value.
The Long Walk was introduced in 2000 AD #147, in the 1980 story "Judge Minty," written by John Wagner. In the 1995 feature film, the Long Walk is mandatory for all Judges upon retirement.
Notable instances
Two unprecedented exceptions to the normally inflexible rule that judges who take the Long Walk do not return from it were Chief Judge McGruder and Judge Dredd himself:
- Chief Judge McGruder resigned in 2108 when she blamed herself for an error of judgement which cost hundreds of lives. Dredd presided over her Long Walk ceremony.[16]
- Dredd took the Long Walk in 2112, after succumbing to doubts regarding the ethics of the Judge System,[17] brought to a head after he received a posthumous letter from William Wenders, a child killed as an indirect result of the Judges' suppression of the Democratic March.[18] In the Cursed Earth, Dredd learned about the catastrophe known as Necropolis, and returned to Mega-City One to defeat the Dark Judges, recruiting McGruder along the way.[19] Thus Dredd and McGruder were the first judges ever to return to the city after taking the Long Walk. This later became the focus of former Chief Judge Silver's legal challenge to McGruder's return to office, as Silver insisted that McGruder was disqualified from being chief judge as "Judges don't go back". Silver did not object to Dredd adjudicating between them even though Dredd had also returned from the Long Walk.[20]
- In the 1995 film, Chief Judge Fargo (played by Max von Sydow) takes the Long Walk into the Cursed Earth, and shortly afterwards is murdered by Mean Machine Angel. (The 2000 AD comic strip version of this character never took the Long Walk.)
History
The Judge System was created by Eustace Fargo, special government prosecutor for street crime, between 2027 and 2031, to combat a rising tide of violent crime and to speed up the process of justice. While there was heavy protest in Congress over the idea of abandoning due process, the electorate was in favour and President Gurney (who supported Fargo's plan) was re-elected with a massive majority.[21] The original uniforms heavily resembled that of normal American police officers, albeit with helmets and heavy body armour, and rode Lawranger motorcycles.
Following the Third World War of 2070 and discovering that President Booth had stolen the election, the Judges invoked the "oldest law of them all" overthrowing the Government of the United States and seizing power, with popular support, and the chief judge became the country's ruler. The Judicial model has subsequently spread throughout the globe becoming the most common form of government on Earth by the 22nd century.[22]
Foreign variations
Every Mega-City seen is policed and run (either completely or partially) by a Judge system, which more or less resembles that of Mega-City One. Variations exist on the uniforms and overall system of government:
- Some Judge systems, such as the Irish (Murphyville) and Australian (Sydney-Melbourne Conurb) ones, have far more lenient and relaxed laws and codes of practise for Judges. Conversely, East-Meg Two (USSR) has a far more militarised and oppressive law, while Japan's Hondo City has a more disciplined and stoic culture among the Judges. Casablancan Judges operate under Sufi-based law.
- Several systems are openly corrupt and serving the ruling figures - Ciudad Barranquilla is traditionally the main example, and the mafia become the Judges in Las Vegas.
- The remit of the Judges may be different – the Pan-African Judges are an intra-continental peacekeeping force.
- Japan still retains the Shogun as constitutional monarch; the Vatican's Judges (and the city itself) are still answerable to the Pope and senior priests; and Scotland's Cal-Hab Judges are a subordinate branch of Brit-Cit.
- Lunar colony Luna-1 traditionally gained many of its Judges from foreign Mega-Cities, and until 2099 the position of Judge Marshal was replaced every six months and held by a senior Earth Judge. It finally gained a mostly domestic Judge system solely because, following cataclysms like Judgement Day, the Earth cities could not afford to send any Judges.
- Brit-Cit's Justice Department has much of its internal work done by Administrators, who do not have judicial powers; in other Mega-Cities, almost every worker is a Judge (including accountants).
- The Judicial forces of Brit-Cit, Murphyville, and Sino-Cit allow Judges to marry, have children, and have some form of civilian life. Many other Mega-Cities stick with a monastic code, especially MC-1.
- Some Judges deliberately pattern their uniforms after their country's flag.
Places that lack a Judge force include the Mediterranean Free State, Mongolian Exclusion Zone, Canadia (Canada), and the Web (Borneo and Indonesian islands). In some cases, this is a deliberate choice; in others, such as the Web, it is because they cannot afford it.
The foreign Judge stories and spin-off strips have been criticised for relying too much on foreign stereotypes and clichés – Egypt's Judges are based on Ancient Egyptians, the South American Judges are corrupt and incompetent and speak in exaggerated accents, Japanese Judges are samurai figures, etc. Dredd writer Gordon Rennie once wrote a list of foreign stereotypes used in 2000 AD and said "follow them closely, and you're probably in with a chance of pitching a Foreign Judge story to the Megazine circa 1993".[23]
Dark Judges
The Dark Judges are undead creatures from an alternative reality ("Deadworld"), who argue that because all crime is committed by the living, life is a crime and the punishment is death. Their leader, Judge Death, is Judge Dredd's arch-enemy.
Before its extermination, Deadworld was ruled by a murderous and corrupt Judge force; their uniforms were a grey, black, and dark-red variation of Mega-City One's, with pterodactyls in place of eagles as decoration. There does not appear to have been an Atomic War in this world, as the cities shown resembled run-down 20th Century cities rather than the Mega-Cities. The Dark Judges took control of this Judge force and used it to assist them in their global genocide before disposing of it.[24]
Judges
Chief Judges
- Judge Fargo
- Judge Solomon
- Judge Goodman
- Judge Cal
- Judge Griffin
- Judge McGruder
- Judge Silver
- Judge McGruder (second term)
- Judge Volt
- Judge Hershey
- Judge Francisco
- Judge Sinfield (acting chief judge)
- Judge Francisco (second term)
- Judge Hershey (second term)
Other notable judges
- Judge Joe Dredd
- Former judge Rico Dredd
- Judge Rico
- Judge Anderson
- Judge Buell
- Former judge Galen DeMarco
- Judge Edgar
- Judge Giant sr
- Judge Giant jr
- Judge Grice
- Judge Guthrie
- Judge Janus
- Judge Kraken
- Judge Lopez
- Judge Niles
- Judge Shenker
Dark Judges
- Judge Death
- Judge Fear
- Judge Fire
- Judge Mortis
See also
- List of minor characters in Judge Dredd, which contains details of other Judges.
Notes
- ↑ 2000 AD prog 522
- 1 2 2000 AD prog 552
- ↑ 2000 AD prog 30
- 1 2 2000 AD prog 86
- ↑ 2000 AD prog 959
- ↑ 2000 AD progs 727-732
- ↑ 2000 AD progs 461-463, 755
- ↑ "Judge Dredd: Deathmasques," Dave Stone, 1993. ISBN 0-352-32873-8
- ↑ 2000 AD prog 1284
- ↑ 2000 AD progs 1803
- ↑ 2000 AD prog 775
- ↑ 2000 AD prog 121
- 1 2 2000 AD prog 27
- ↑ 2000 AD prog 663
- ↑ 2000 AD prog 1656
- ↑ "Chief Judge Resigns," 2000 AD #457
- ↑ "Tale of the Dead Man," 2000 AD #668
- ↑ "A Letter to Judge Dredd," 2000 AD #661
- ↑ "Necropolis," 2000 AD #684
- ↑ "Return of the King," 2000 AD #733-735
- ↑ 2000 AD prog 1510
- ↑ 2000 AD prog 68
- ↑ Judge Dredd Megazine #228: "You're Next, Punk!"
- ↑ "Judge Dredd: Dead Reckoning," 2000 AD progs 1000-1006
References
- Mega-City Judges and Judges of Note from Other Cities at the International Catalogue of Superheroes
- Judges at the Comic Book DB
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