Judge Goodman

Judge Goodman

Chief Judge Goodman (drawn by Brian Bolland)
Publication information
Publisher IPC Magazines Ltd; later Rebellion Developments
First appearance 2000 AD #2 (1977)
Created by Pat Mills, Kelvin Gosnell, Peter Harris, John Wagner (writers) and Mike McMahon (artist)
In-story information
Full name Clarence Goodman

Chief Judge Clarence Goodman is a fictional character in the Judge Dredd stories published in the British comic 2000 AD. He appeared in the first episode of Judge Dredd in March 1977 (although he was not named until issue 86), and was the first regularly recurring supporting character.

Biography

Judge Goodman
Deputy Chief Judge of Mega-City One
In office
2052–2057
Chief judge Judge Solomon
Preceded by Deputy Chief Judge of the United States (himself)
Chief Judge of Mega-City One
In office
2057–2100 or 2101
Deputy Judge Fodder
Judge Cal
Preceded by Judge Solomon
Succeeded by Judge Cal

Goodman was joint deputy chief judge at the end of Chief Judge Fargo's term in office, and later continued as deputy under Chief Judge Solomon after Fargo resigned. When Fargo botched a suicide attempt, Goodman helped Solomon to fake Fargo's death. In 2057 Goodman became Chief Judge of Mega-City One and immediately created the Council of Five to assist him and began to arm up the Judges to the extent that they could challenge the military. He attempted to convince President Robert L. Booth not to initiate a world war, but to no avail, and after the Atomic Wars in 2070 he deposed Booth and became head of state, establishing the Justice Department as a stable new government.[1]

Goodman was well liked by his people[2] as he deliberately cultivated an image as a 'kindly uncle' figure in public.[3] Under his leadership, Mega-City One dramatically increased its outer-space colonial presence from 2095 onwards: the resources on other worlds were necessary for humanity's survival, though he privately doubted whether Earth deserved to spread out into space.[4]

There were three major crises during Goodman's time in power. The first of these was the outbreak of civil war between Mega-City One and Texas City, when Texas declared full independence.[5] With the Cursed Earth a near impenetrable barrier between the cities, Goodman eventually conceded that the civil war was futile and - in a move not entirely popular with all of his colleagues - he recognised Texas City's independence. (These events apparently took place between 2083 and 2086, and were mentioned on the cover of an issue of 2000 AD and adopted in a Judge Dredd novel and the role-playing game. However they may have been retconned by the story "Origins" which implied that the cities may have become independent by mutual consent following the Atomic Wars.)

The second crisis occurred at the start of 2099 when Goodman was possessed by a malevolent psychic mutant known as the Monkey, who forced him to lead the city into anarchy before Dredd killed it. Before he was saved, some corrupt judges were convincing Deputy Chief Judge Cal to stage a coup.[6]

The third crisis came when the robots of Mega-City One rebelled against their masters and the Robot War claimed millions of lives. The Chief Judge had previously clashed with Judge Dredd on the issue of banning highly intelligent robots and when he refused to do this Dredd actually resigned. The advent of the robots' rebellion saw Goodman change his mind extremely fast and Judge Dredd took up his badge once more to put down the revolt.[7] The Chief Judge knew just how much the city owed Dredd and how much it depended on him, so when he was forced to convict Judge Dredd of murder after he was framed by Cal, Goodman found it very hard to come to terms with his decision. Even after Judge Dredd had demonstrated his innocence, the Chief Judge was a broken man and Cal was free to plot his demise.[8]

His reign finally came to an end when he was murdered on the orders of his own deputy in 2100 or 2101.[9] Cal succeeded him.

Continuity issues

There used to be some controversy among fans as to whether Goodman succeeded Chief Judge Fargo directly, or whether Judge Solomon served in between. This was eventually settled by the story "Origins" in 2006. However, his stated term of office contradicts two earlier mentions:

All three stories were written by John Wagner.

Appearances

Judge Goodman first appeared in prog #2 of 2000 AD and died in #89 (March 1977November 1978). He also appeared as a major character in the story Origins (20062007), appearing in flashbacks.

Bibliography

Other versions

DC Comics version

Another version of Goodman appeared in the short lived Judge Dredd series published by DC Comics from 1994 to 1995. In this version Fargo survived as chief judge until 2099, when Goodman succeeded him. This version of Goodman was portrayed as much younger than the 2000 AD character was in 2099.

IDW

Goodman also appears in IDW Publishing's Judge Dredd: Year One series, which started in 2013.

References

  1. "Origins," 2000 AD #1505-1519 and 1529-1535
  2. 2000 AD #89
  3. Dredd Year One: The Cold Light of Day by Michael Carroll
  4. "Maelstrom", Megazine 2.73-2.80
  5. Dread Dominion (Stephen Marley, 1994, ISBN 0-352-32929-7)
  6. "Monkey On My Back," Judge Dredd Megazine #204-206
  7. "Robot Wars," 2000 AD #10-17
  8. 2000 AD #86-88
  9. "The Day the Law Died!" episode 1, 2000 AD #89
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