The Volokh Conspiracy
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William E. Humphrey's Death Certificate
His cause of death was cerebral hemorrhage.

Why is the case called Humphrey's Executor v. United States? Because William E. Humphrey died while the case was being litigated. His estate continued the case, seeking Humphrey's backpay. Chief Justice Sutherland's majority opinion states:
"William E. Humphrey, the decedent, on December 10, 1931, was nominated by President Hoover to succeed himself as a member of the Federal Trade Commission, and was confirmed by the United States Senate."
While teaching this case in 2017, I joked that President Roosevelt removed William Humphrey from the FTC, and from the land of the living. That's one way to make sure the courts do not reinstate him!
A person watching the lecture on YouTube heard the joke, and checked up on it. Humphrey's obituary did not state a cause of death. But my viewer requested a copy of the death certificate from the D.C. Department of Health. In fact, Humphrey's executioner was cerebral hemorrhaging and arteriosclerosis. He died in his home. Humphrey was not assassinated.
There is one legal curiosity here: the certificate lists his occupation as "Retired." That's one way to put getting fired.
I've had this document in my archives for nearly eight years. With Humphrey's Executor on the chopping block, now seems like the right time to publish it.
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The Wikipedia article made me laugh.
And FDR's firing for political reasons wasn't?
You might want to ponder the meaning of "joke."
Brings back memories of one of the first things you got to do as a "Real Doctor" signing Death Certificates, OK haters, not just for my own patients who didn't have the intestinal fortitude to stay in this moral coil (In Medicine, like in Sports, you're only as good as your patients/players, how did Casey Stengel's 62' Mets do?) but on call you'd have to "pronounce" private Attendings patients who died and sign the form,
Remember one Foreign Grad-jew-ma-ate asking me what the procedure was for declaring a patient dead, I told him, first make sure the patient's really dead (you'd be amazed how many "Declared" patients have woken up on the ride to the mortuary)
"Then you must say, "Under the Laws of Hippocrates, Socrates, and Amadeus, I declare you (insert patients name here) legally dead!"
OK, he realized I was busting his balls, it's medical humor, like how in the Navy they send the junior Ensign to find the Striped Pain, Blow the DCO,
Frank
I wonder if Prof. Blackman knows the DC law about publishing Death Certificates.
Well don't jerk us off right to the moment of completion! what's the DC law, and what kind of time is he looking at?
And on further review, I think you're full of shit, because you see Death Certificates published all the time.
"Death records become public after 75 years." DC Health site
Why are they suppressing the long-form death certificate?
Diagnoses on death certificates are notoriously inaccurate. Back then, even more so. first, the diagnosis most be medically accurate. In those days, without an autopsy, that was not the case. (I don't know if Mr. Humphrey had an autopsy; in any case, the death certificate may have been filed before the autopsy, if any.) Second, many doctors regard completion of these as nuisance paperwork, and aren't careful. In hospitals, the task may devolve to an inexperienced junior resident. What we know is that Mr. Humphrey died.
What
Allan