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MIAMI (AP) — Larry Seidlin, the
wisecracking judge who presided in the dispute over Anna Nicole
Smith's remains and was lampooned for his sobbing announcement of
the verdict, will resign next month, a court spokesman said
Tuesday.
The circuit judge's letter to Gov. Charlie
Crist says, "it is now time for me to devote more of my daily life
to my own young family and to pursue the many opportunities that
have been offered to me outside the judicial system and I have
disregarded until now."
Seidlin gave no specifics on his plans after
his July 31 resignation, though rumors have swirled for months that
he was considering a deal for a television court show.
"He won't say," said Chris Stotz, a
spokesman for the 17th Judicial Circuit. "He's not commenting on
what his future plans are."
A phone message left for Seidlin at his Fort
Lauderdale chambers was not immediately returned.
His resignation letter said his
opportunities are varied but "all share in common a further
commitment to helping my fellow citizens through roles in the
educational system, the media and non-profit organizations."
The former New York cab driver — 56 years
old and on the bench nearly 29 years — helped make the hard-fought
dispute over the fate of Smith's body a national obsession.
He opened his chambers to television cameras
and quickly made clear he was no ordinary judge. On the opening day
of the case in February, he declared: "This body belongs to me
right now."
Seidlin addressed an endless lineup of
attorneys as "my good lawyer," sometimes calling them "California"
or "Texas." He divulged the minutiae of his days, from his morning
swim to the tuna sandwich he was having when assigned the case.
Proceedings at times became such a
cacophonous free-for-all — one attorney once broke into song — that
the case was being called a circus, a description Seidlin, in one
of his rare serious moments, sternly rejected.
"There's no circus here, my friend," he shot
back.
The judge has countless admirers, too, who
claim his tearful announcement that Smith would be buried next to
her son in the Bahamas gave a glimpse of how much he cares about
those who step into his courtroom.
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