Maurice Leon “Mel” Opotowsky, a former newspaper editor and tenacious free press advocate who was identified for serving to to advance 1st Modification rights, has died.
Opotowsky died April 18 at Claremont Manor retirement neighborhood, the place he lived along with his spouse, Bonnie Opotowsky, in accordance with their son, Didier Opotowsky. He mentioned his father’s reason behind dying just isn’t sure, and that he had Parkinson’s. He was 92.
Opotowsky was a prime editor on the Riverside Press-Enterprise when the paper introduced two circumstances earlier than the U.S. Supreme Court docket that resulted in landmark rulings advancing the general public’s proper to view sure authorized proceedings. He was later a founding board member of the First Modification Coalition, a nonprofit devoted to defending the free press and preserving entry to authorities information and conferences.
“I don’t know that there’s one other single particular person in California who had such a constructive and long-lasting affect on open authorities in our state,” mentioned David Snyder, govt director of the First Modification Coalition. Opotowsky remained an lively board member till his dying and had emailed Snyder suggesting work the group might take up simply weeks in the past, he added. “His longevity, his persistence and his tenacity are the stuff of legend.”
Opotowsky joined the Press-Enterprise in 1973 after working as an editor at Newsday. He was identified for fostering a tradition that emphasised exhausting information and accountability journalism, mentioned former columnist Dan Bernstein, who labored on the Press-Enterprise from 1976 to 2014.
Again then, the information group put out two papers: the morning Enterprise and the afternoon Press, which had been later merged. Opotowsky finally climbed the ranks to grow to be managing editor of the mixed version.
“He was just about on everyone’s shoulder as they wrote and reported tales, as a result of he was a really robust and aggressive editor who was skeptical of presidency and skeptical of politicians,” Bernstein mentioned. “And none of us needed to be left not asking the query that he would have regarded for instantly.”
In January 1984, the paper gained the primary of two Supreme Court docket rulings which can be nonetheless usually cited by attorneys looking for entry to courtroom proceedings. Albert Greenwood Brown Jr. was on trial for the kidnapping, rape and homicide of 15-year-old Susan Jordan, whose physique was present in an orange grove close to her Riverside highschool. When it got here time for jury choice, the choose closed the courtroom.
After difficult the transfer, the Press-Enterprise efficiently gained a 9-0 ruling giving members of the general public and press the presumed and constitutional proper to attend jury choice, mentioned Bernstein, who wrote a ebook in regards to the proceedings referred to as “Justice in Plain Sight: How a Small-City Newspaper and Its Unlikely Lawyer Opened America’s Courtrooms.”
Roughly two and a half years later, the paper gained a second Supreme Court docket ruling affirming that preliminary hearings ought to be open to the general public. That was after a problem stemming from the case of Robert Diaz, a Riverside County nurse who had killed at the least 12 sufferers by injecting them with lidocaine.
Opotowsky was concerned in each challenges — significantly the second, for which he served because the Press-Enterprise’s level man, Bernstein mentioned. He would usually rewrite parts of authorized briefs, he added.
“He was reputed to know as a lot about constitutional regulation as plenty of attorneys did,” he mentioned. “Whether or not it was authorities conferences, courtrooms or information, he was just about adamant that every one information ought to be open and all courtrooms ought to be open.”
One or each of the rulings have been cited as precedents in a slew of high-profile proceedings, together with these associated to the Oklahoma Metropolis bombing, 9/11, the Boston Marathon bombing, the Aurora, Colo., theater taking pictures and Martha Stewart’s perjury case, Bernstein mentioned.
Opotowsky retired as editor of the Press-Enterprise in 1999, turning into an ombudsman, tasked with investigating and responding to reader complaints. Along with his open information advocacy work, he taught at Cal State Fullerton.
He was rightly identified for being unsparingly direct, mentioned Kris Lovekin, a former schooling reporter on the Press-Enterprise. She recalled one story through which Opotowsky demanded {that a} reporter unmask a donor to UC Riverside who needed to stay nameless, figuring {that a} public college should be required to reveal its backers. After he resolved to get an legal professional concerned, the Press-Enterprise’s then-publisher, Howard H. “Tim” Hays, was compelled to reveal that it was he who had, actually, made the donation, Lovekin mentioned.
On the identical time, Opotowsky was additionally sort and compassionate when warranted, she mentioned. A eager chronicler of the world round him, he was creating journalism up till the tip of his life, she mentioned.
“He was nonetheless writing tales about folks in Claremont Manor, in regards to the folks he lived with,” Lovekin mentioned. “He would submit it on Fb and we’d learn in regards to the different residents.”
Opotowsky was remembered for his dry wit that at occasions leaned acerbic. He had a tender spot for sensible jokes and a good softer spot for his grandchildren and great-grandchildren, his son mentioned. He beloved horseback using, fox looking and making an attempt totally different eating places, he mentioned.
Opotowsky was born in New Orleans on Dec. 13, 1931. His mom was sick, so certainly one of her sisters-in-law stuffed out the registration card and submitted it to the town to supply a start certificates, Didier Optowsky mentioned. The sister-in-law named him Maurice Leon after their father — opposite to a convention amongst some Jewish people who dictates infants shouldn’t be named after dwelling kin, he mentioned.
“My grandmother was so livid she refused to name him Maurice, refused to name him M.L.,” Didier Opotowsky mentioned. “So she referred to as him Mel.”
His father didn’t be taught his authorized title till he was drafted into the Military, Didier Opotowsky mentioned.
True to his roots, Opotowsky was additionally identified to make huge batches of purple beans and rice — sufficient to feed all the household for weeks, his son mentioned. “They had been good,” he mentioned. “However we might get drained after the fifth day or so.”
He’s survived by his spouse Bonnie; son Didier; daughters Joelle Opotowsky, Keturah Persellin and Jamie Persellin; 18 grandchildren and plenty of great-grandchildren. He’s preceded in dying by a daughter, Arielle Opotowsky, who died as an toddler.
A memorial service has been set for Might 18 at Claremont Manor corridor.