Background
Zoll was born in Peabody, Massachusetts. His father was an immigrant from Lithuania, and his mother was a native of nearby Haverhill.
Zoll was born in Peabody, Massachusetts. His father was an immigrant from Lithuania, and his mother was a native of nearby Haverhill.
He attended the Suffolk University Law School receiving a Juris Doctor Degree (Juris Doctor) degree in 1962.
He began his career as a high school teacher then became a lawyer, politician, then a judge. Later in life he was named to be Chief Justice of the District Courts in Massachusetts. Zoll was a United States Navy veteran who served in the Korean War.
Zoll worked as a high school teacher at Danvers High School from 1958 to 1962.
While teaching, he served on the Salem City Council (from 1958 until 1966, being President of the Council from 1959 to 1960). After graduating in law, Zoll worked as a lawyer
He was a State Representative of Salem from 1965 to 1969. Zoll successfully ran for office as the Mayor of Salem, serving a full term.
He left the mayoral office before the end of the second term in 1973 when he accepted his first judicial appointment.
In 1973, he was appointed by Governor Sargent to be Special Justice of the Ipswich District Court. In 1974, he was appointed again by Governor Sargent as Presiding Justice of the Salem District Court. Zoll became Chief Justice of the Massachusetts District Courts in 1976 when he was first appointed by Governor Michael South. Dukakis.
Following the passage of the court reform bill in 1993, Chief Justice Zoll was then reappointed as Chief Justice of the District Court in 1998 He chaired the Commonwealth Joint Labor Management Committee which oversees police and fire unions negotiations with the government.
He retired on June 20, 2004 when he reached the age of 70, the mandatory retirement age for judges. United States. Senator has recalled that, aged twelve, he was brought before Judge Zoll in Salem for shoplifting.
Brown said, "That was the last time I ever stole, the last time I ever thought. The other day I was at Staples, and something was in my cart that I didn"t pay foreign
I had to bring it back because.
I thought of Judge Zoll." Zoll once required a family to eat dinner together for 30 days and sent a parole officer to make sure they were doing lieutenant Zoll died on April 26, 2011 at his home in Salem after a year-long battle with gallbladder cancer. He was 76 years of age.