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Not forgotten

Judge Lefkow’s story rarely spoken, but always there

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(MCT) — Sometimes when a trial is over, a couple of jurors will approach Judge Joan Lefkow and make a sympathetic or admiring remark that lets her know that they know her story.

She figures they’ve Googled her and found it, though some may have been around Chicago long enough to remember.

“As the years go by, a lot of people aren’t aware of it,” she said Friday when I went to visit her in her chambers in the Dirksen Federal Building. “And that’s OK.”

At 69, Lefkow is slender and animated; her work with a personal trainer shows. Friday morning, in preparation for an afternoon ceremony in her honor, she was wearing jaunty red pumps with her blue dress, and she looked relaxed and happy. She pointed to a photo on a bookshelf.

“This is the love of my life,” she said.

The love of her life is named Jack. He is 21 months old. He has his grandfather’s eyebrows, the eyebrows of the grandfather he will never meet.

Lefkow still sees an occasional flash of the day she lost Jack’s grandfather, her husband, Michael.
She no longer grieves the way she once did, she said. She was sitting in a rocking chair in the dim study behind her main office, near Jack’s stroller.

“But it’s still always there.”

On Feb. 28, 2005, Joan Lefkow walked into her North Side home at dusk and found her husband and 89-year-old mother shot to death. The killer, who later killed himself, turned out to be a man who had appeared before her in court.

“The Lefkow murders,” as they were called, became national news and then, like all news, faded from public view.

For the next seven years, Lefkow closed her chambers on Feb. 28, to take time to grieve and remember. This year, on the eighth anniversary, she kept working.

“I felt it’s time,’” she said. “I don’t mean to minimize it. It never, ever leaves us. But it’s just part of who we are now.”

When her husband died, the thing Joan Lefkow worried about most was how to bring her four daughters safely into adulthood.

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