In December, I signed an order I believed was routine—one of thousands I’ve approved over more than two decades on the bench. The paperwork concerned St. Catherine’s Children’s Home, foreclosed by a bank and facing eviction on Christmas Eve. The law was clear, the timeline firm. Still, nothing in my career prepared me for the weight of what that signature would set in motion, or for the lesson that followed.
On the night the eviction was to be enforced, the unexpected arrived first. Nearly two hundred bikers rolled in and formed a quiet, deliberate ring around the building. There was no threat, no shouting—only resolve. Their leader explained they weren’t there to fight the law, but to shield children who had already lost too much. With the holiday hours away, they believed stability mattered more than procedure. The message, carried by engines idling in the cold, was simple: protect the vulnerable.
What happened next showed how solutions can emerge when people refuse to look away. Riders and neighbors organized overnight—raising funds, making calls, and pressing for alternatives. By morning, a deal was reached: the loan would be restructured, the eviction paused, and the home given a chance to breathe. It wasn’t a loophole or a technicality that saved the day; it was collective will. The children woke up safe because a community decided they should.
That night changed how I understand my role. The law provides structure, but justice requires discernment. Sometimes, the most meaningful outcomes come when people challenge outcomes—not with anger, but with care. The bikers’ quiet courage reminded me that appearances can mislead and that rules alone don’t protect those who need it most. Since then, I’ve promised myself to weigh the human cost before the ink dries—because justice, at its best, listens before it decides.