In any event, Judge Irving Kaufman had his controversial moments during his 40+ years on the federal bench, first as a DJ in Manhattan and then on the Second Circuit. His acts and comments during the Rosenberg trial - especially those concerning the death sentence he imposed - may have cost him a Supreme Court nomination. The Second Circuit reversed the convictions in the Apalachin meeting trial, over which Kaufman presided. But the man could write:
Lok v. INS, 548 F.2d 37 (2d Cir. 1977).We have had occasion to note the striking resemblance between some of the laws we are called upon to interpret and King Minos's labyrinth in ancient Crete. The Tax Laws and the Immigration and Nationality Acts are examples we have cited of Congress's ingenuity in passing statutes certain to accelerate the aging process of judges. In this instance, Congress, pursuant to its virtually unfettered power to exclude or deport natives of other countries, and apparently confident of the aphorism that human skill, properly applied, can resolve any enigma that human inventiveness can create, has enacted a baffling skein of provisions for the I.N.S. and courts to disentangle. . . Emboldened by Thesean courage and fortified by a close examination of the statutory language, we believe that the Board of Immigration appeals erred in denying the petitioner relief on the ground that it did, and remand for consideration on a proper basis.