DEAN EMERITUS EUGENE R.
MILIHIZER participated in hundreds of appeals,
tried scores of criminal cases, and served in multiple
leadership positions as an Army Judge Advocate. For three
years, he held a teaching appointment at the Judge Advocate
General's School at the University of Virginia. In 2001, he
joined the Ave Maria faculty and his course of offerings
have included Criminal Procedure, Criminal Law, National
Security Law and Military Law. Dean Emeritus Milhizer has
been an invited presenter at law schools across the country
and his legal scholarship has been published in many
prestigious law journals. In May 2006, he was appointed
Associate Dean for Academic Affairs, and in April 2009, he
was appointed Acting Dean of the Law School. In January
2010, he was appointed the Law School's second President and
Dean, and he served in that position until his return to
full-time teaching in the summer of 2014. During the summer
of 2009, under his leadership, the Law School successfully
accomplished the unprecedented feat of relocating from
Michigan to Florida.
"The all-encompassing
structure of Milhizer’s Dissecting Anatomy of a Murder
makes it unique and a must-read for the Anatomy
completist. Specifically, the book divides into three
sections: the early life and career of lawyer John D.
Voelker (pen name Robert Traver), a detailed comparison of
the real-life case, the real-life story of how Lt. Coleman
A. Peterson shot and killed tavern owner Maurice Chenoweth
point-blank in Big Bay vs. the screenplay depictions of case
materials, and lastly an intense legal analysis of the
pivotal issues including the insanity defense, jury
nullification, and the underutilization of voir dire
(eliminating unqualified jurors).
Sprinkled
throughout the copiously footnoted book are wonderful
reminisces from John Voelker about his career both as a
struggling lawyer and then as 16 years as prosecuting
attorney for Marquette County. Voelker’s love for the
rugged beauty and wilderness of the U.P. comes through his
disdain for how the newly constructed Big Mac bridge would
open up the U.P. to just about anybody and how carefully he
hid his favorite trout fishing hole. Some of these
reflections come to us through excerpts of his three prior
unsuccessful novels and his extensive personal diaries which
give us a rare look at the man behind the mirror. In one of
life’s cruel ironies, Voelker was finally selected as a
Michigan Supreme Court justice just weeks after Anatomy
of a Murder became a New York Times
Bestseller. This would have also solved his financial woes
but at the cost of forsaking his beloved U.P." -- read
the full review by Victor R. Volkman, U.P. Book
Review