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Collins, Jack G. (Jack Gore), 1930-2010

 Person

Biography

Jack Gore Collins was born in Waukegan, Illinois, in 1930. He joined the Navy Reserve Officer Training Corps to pay his tuition to Princeton University, where he graduated in 1952. He then served in the Navy at the tail end of the Korean War. He met Janine Decker during leave in 1954, and they were married in 1957; they later had three children. He earned a law degree at Harvard Law School in 1958. After graduation, he relocated to Oregon to be a law clerk for Oregon Supreme Court Justice Walter Perry for a year. In 1958, he went into private law practice in Salem, Oregon. He became an assistant attorney for the U.S. Department of Justice in 1963. He worked under U.S. Attorney Sidney Lezak. He was promoted to first assistant U.S. attorney in 1966. In 1982, Charles Turner replaced Sidney Lezak, and Collins was made chief of the Civil Division. In 1992, his title changed to chief of the Asset Forfeiture Division. He retired three years later in 1995. He taught administrative law at Lewis and Clark College and later at Portland State University. He died in 2010.

Found in 1 Collection or Record:

Oral history interview with Jack G. Collins

 Collection
Identifier: SR1250
Abstract

Oral history interview with Jack G. Collins conducted by Bruce James on August 15, 1996, as part of the United States District Court Oral History Project. Collins was an assistant U.S. attorney for Oregon.

Dates: 1996 August 15

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