In 1940, Thompson became an assistant district attorney of Middlesex County.[2] In 1944, Thompson managed DA Robert F. Bradford's successful campaign for Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts and was appointed to succeed Bradford as district attorney.[3][2] He was elected to full four-year terms in 1946, 1950, and 1954.[4] In 1951, he indicted Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyDirk Jan Struik professor on charges of conspiracy to overthrow the governments of the United States and Massachusetts.[5] The indictment was quashed in 1956 by judge Paul G. Kirk after the Massachusetts Supreme Court ruled in a different case that the federal Smith Act superseded Massachusetts' sedition laws.[6]
Massachusetts Superior Court
In 1956, Thompson was appointed to the Massachusetts Superior Court by Governor Christian Herter.[4] He remained on the bench until his death on September 3, 1973. He was 69 years old.[2]
References
^"List of Superior Court Justices Since 1859". Massachusetts Law Quarterly. 44: 126. 1959.
^ abcde"Judge George Thompson of Mass. Superior Court". The Boston Globe. September 4, 1973.
^Ainley, Leslie (November 12, 1944). "Shakeup in State Republican Leadership Likely to Follow Defeat". The Boston Globe.
^ ab"Thompson Named Superior Court Judge by Herter". The Boston Globe. January 10, 1956.
^"Guilt in Plot Denied by M.I.T. Professor". The New York Times. September 15, 1951.
^"Struik Suspension Lifted by M. I. T.; Status Unsettled". The Boston Globe. May 27, 1956.