Background
O'Hern was born in Red Bank in 1930 and attended Regis High School on the Upper East Side of Manhattan.
O'Hern was born in Red Bank in 1930 and attended Regis High School on the Upper East Side of Manhattan.
He graduated from Fordham College in 1951. After leaving form active duty, he graduated from Harvard Law School in 1957, and served as a clerk to United States Supreme Court Justice William J. Brennan, Jr.
He was an elected official in his hometown of Red Bank, serving on its borough council and as Mayor of Red Bank, New Jersey. Governor of New Jersey Brendan Byrne named him a commissioner of the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, and later as Counsel to the Governor. Byrne submitted his Supreme Court nomination to the New Jersey Senate, and he was confirmed on May 20, 1981, and sworn in on August 6, 1981.
T.L.O. (1985). He retired at age 70, and was replaced by James R. Zazzali. Their daughter, Eileen Marie O'Hern, married William Kent Luby. O'Hern died at age 78 on April 1, 2009 due to brain cancer at his home in Red Bank.
O'Hern was noted for his "Sal's tavern" test, which suggested that if an opinion wouldn't make sense to the "gang" at Sal's Tavern in Red Bank, New Jersey it should be rewritten. The train station in Red Bank was named in his honor in November 2014.