Judge Griffin

Judge Griffin

Chief Judge Griffin (drawn by Brian Bolland).
Publication information
Publisher Rebellion Developments
First appearance 2000 AD prog 27 (1977)
Created by John Wagner and Ian Gibson

Chief Judge Griffin is a fictional character in the Judge Dredd comic strip in 2000 AD. He was not named until his third appearance.

He was chief judge of Mega-City One between 2101 and 2104 (1979 to 1982).

Fictional character biography

Judge Griffin
Chief Judge of Mega-City One
In office
2101–2104
Deputy Judge Pepper[1]
Preceded by Judge Cal
Succeeded by Judge McGruder

Before becoming chief judge, Griffin was principal of the Academy of Law,[2] and personally trained whole generations of the city's judges, including Judge Dredd, Judge Cal, and the first Judge Giant. During a fight to the death between Dredd and a crooked Judge Gibson, Griffin had every cadet brought in to watch as "it will be a valuable lesson".[3]

When the insane tyrant Chief Judge Cal usurped control of the city, Griffin gathered his Academy staff and several other Judges, including Giant, together to form a rebel organisation. The wounded Judge Dredd was taken to one of their safehouses and Griffin called for him to be their leader.[4] The two of them fought side by side during the guerilla conflict and were among the few rebel Judges that survived to the end. Following Cal's death, Dredd was the unanimous choice of the judges for the office of chief judge, but Dredd declined and nominated his old mentor Griffin instead.[5]

Griffin maintained a great respect for Dredd; when the other members of the Council of Five questioned Dredd's actions after the Judge Child quest, it was Griffin who staunchly defended Dredd and his judgement, reminding the others of Dredd's actions during the reign of Judge Cal. Griffin vetoed an inquiry into Dredd and the possibility of another quest to find the Judge Child.[6]

Griffin was leader of his city during its peak, and proved to be a capable ruler. However his term of office proved to be a short one. Early in the Apocalypse War of 2104 he was captured by the enemy and brainwashed, to be used as a puppet quisling leader for propaganda purposes, to encourage the surrender of the war-weary population. Since a rescue operation would have been impossible, Dredd found it necessary to assassinate him instead. Griffin actually managed to fight back through the brainwashing to confess his guilt live on air just before this event.[7]

He was succeeded by Judge McGruder, who was the sole member of the ruling Council of Five to survive the war.[8]

Judge Dredd movie

Judge Griffin in Judge Dredd portrayed by Jürgen Prochnow.

A different version of Judge Griffin appeared in the 1995 Judge Dredd film, played by Jürgen Prochnow. He serves on the Council of Five and openly expresses his views that Mega-City One needs a tougher criminal code and to expand executions to include lesser crimes. When Judge Dredd is put on trial for murder and seemingly incontrovertible evidence is introduced, Chief Justice Fargo asks to halt the proceedings so that he can confer with Griffin. Fargo is deeply upset that Dredd may be guilty of murder and may have the same homicidal tendencies as Rico, both of whom were products of a top secret cloning program (the "Janus Project") that the Council of Five initiatied over forty years ago, which may now come to light. Griffin suggests that if Fargo takes the Long Walk out to the Cursed Earth he can get Dredd's sentence commuted from death to life imprisonment, and this will prevent the truth from coming out. Fargo does so, and Griffin becomes chief justice, and it soon becomes clear that Griffin plotted the removal of Dredd and Fargo, to become chief justice and to push through his new, stricter laws, and restart the cloning program on a larger scale. Unfortunately he had arranged for Rico to escape from jail to help in these schemes, and Rico kills Griffin in an attempt to seize power for himself.

This version of Griffin effectively fills the role of Judge Cal in the comic.

Bibliography

Griffin appeared in the following stories (all written by John Wagner except where otherwise indicated):

References

  1. 2000 AD #108
  2. 2000 AD #27
  3. 2000 AD #35
  4. 2000 AD #91
  5. 2000 AD #108
  6. 2000 AD #182
  7. 2000 AD #261
  8. 2000 AD #270
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