Newport Beach judge dies at 82
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Deepa Bharath
Floyd H. Schenk, a retired Orange County Superior Court judge and
longtime Newport Beach resident known to have been an innovator on
the bench, died Saturday after a long battle with Alzheimer’s
disease. He was 82.
Judge Schenk, a presiding judge at Harbor Justice Center for many
years, was widely known for starting a program for first-time drunken
drivers at the West Orange County Municipal Court in Westminster. He
would require young offenders between ages 18 and 21 to spend Friday
and Saturday nights in hospital emergency rooms and see firsthand the
consequences of driving under the influence.
He also ordered them to spend three hours at the county morgue and
write a 1,000-word essay about their experiences. In the judge’s own
words, the program was a form of “shock treatment” for the young
people. That program received a Disneyland Community Service Award in
1988.
Schenk also gained popularity when he initiated the “pro tempore”
program, which called on attorneys to volunteer their time to
arbitrate small-claims matters. He was recognized by the California
Bar Assn. for that effort.
Schenk had all the right ingredients to make a great judge, said
his wife, Berit.
“He was a prince of a man,” she said. “He was honest, loved his
work and tried to be fair all the time. He was quite a person.”
Schenk was born in Los Angeles on Oct. 25, 1923. In 1946, after
spending three years in the U.S. Navy during World War II, he
enrolled in undergraduate classes in UCLA and eventually graduated
from the Loyola University School of Law in 1950.
Schenk had a law practice in Hollywood until 1963 and later in
Palm Springs and Newport Beach. He lived in Newport Beach for the
last 26 years.
Schenk is survived by his wife, Berit; sons Joseph A. Schenk II
and Kenneth Mitchell; daughters Gayle Bonilla, Alida Lucas and Ellen
Reader; and several grandchildren and great grandchildren.
Funeral services are private. In lieu of donations, the family
requests that donations be made to the Alzheimer’s Assn.
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