Law School Loses Longtime Professor and National Police Reform Advocate
Longtime law professor, law school administrator, one time interim dean and national police reform advocate, Roger Goldman, passed away on July 29, 2023 surrounded by family.
A beloved colleague and professor, Goldman was known for his wit, advocacy, and ability to make people smile even discussing the most difficult of topics. Ever the cheerleader for those who knew him well, Goldman created longstanding connections across the University, the state, and the nation.
āThe many kindnesses Roger showed us when we first arrived at SLU are without number,ā said Professor Emeritus Alan Weinberger. āHe gave me my first opportunity to serve in law school administration the year he served as interim dean. He had a real gift for helping people out, and I donāt think anything brought him more joy.ā
Goldman, the Callis Family Professor of Law Emeritus, was named faculty member of the year three times, served twice as associate dean and once as interim dean. He taught constitutional law, civil rights, and civil procedure.
Best known professionally for his scholarship and advocacy work regarding police decertification, Goldman worked for decades researching the issue of problem police officers who moved from city to city. He quickly became the nationās leading expert on the subject, quoted frequently in publications across the country. He can be credited for legislation in 10 states that created registries and police decertification processes and dozens more that strengthened existing laws since he began his work nearly 40 years ago.
āRoger Goldmanās scholarly work on police accountability had widespread impact because his analyses were well-reasoned and his solutions were practical,ā said Goldmanās longtime colleague Dean Emeritus Michael Wolff. āRoger didnāt just publish and sit back and wait for admiring reviews. He persisted, making his scholarship into a movement that changed the laws as to police licensing and decertification in many states.ā
Goldman was integral in such legislation in Missouri, which since its passing, has seen more than 1,000 problem police officers off the force. Following the deaths of Michael Brown and George Floyd and the nationwide attention on police procedure, Goldman actively worked with policy makers in Massachusetts and Hawaii to create centralized bodies tasked with decertifying law enforcement officers. As of his passing, all but two states have such regulations. Additionally, his work was referenced in President Obamaās Task Force on 21st Century Policing.
Of his lifelong dedication to this pursuit, Goldman once said to a group of students āWhat counts as public interest work neednāt be limited to litigating on behalf of individual clients. I view my role as working on behalf of the unknown client, who will hopefully never become a victim of a ārepeat offenderā officer. The thought of the unknown client is what motivates me to keep going, pursuing decertification law state by state. And Iām in it until all the states have done it.ā
In 2017, Professor Goldman was inducted into the School of Lawās Order of the Fleur de Lis, the highest honor bestowed upon any member of the law school community.
Additionally, as Michael Wolff noted, āhe also published biographies of two heroes of the Supreme Courtās civil-rights era, Thurgood Marshall and William J. Brennan, reminders of what makes great Supreme Court justices great.ā
Goldman was also an active member of St. Louisā Jewish community. He was a founding member of the Central Reform Congregation and served as its first president in 1984. From 1974 to 1976, Goldman also served as the president of the ACLU of Eastern Missouri.
The son of prominent physician, Dr. Alfred Goldman and his wife Miriam, Goldman graduated from John Burroughs School. He received his bachelorās degree in English from Harvard University, and his J.D. from the University of Pennsylvania Law School. He leaves behind his wife Stephanie Riven, two sons Sam and Josh and his wife Sarah, and two grandchildren, Jacob and Lily.
Read more about Professor Goldman's police decertification advocacy