When Wayne Budd was growing up in Springfield his father wanted him to be a dentist. Instead he turned to the law for a career and became a trailblazer in his profession.
When Wayne Budd was growing up in Springfield his father wanted him to be a dentist.
“We had black dentists in our city and they seemed to be doing well,” Mr. Budd said of his father’s encouragement. “He said ‘you should be a dentist,’ because there was a pathway.”
Instead Mr. Budd, 80, chose his own path, turning to the law for a career and becoming a trailblazer in his profession. In 1980 he was named president of the Massachusetts Bar Association, becoming the first person of color to head a state bar association. In 1989, he was appointed U.S. Attorney for the district of Massachusetts, making him the top prosecutor in the state and the only black U.S. attorney at the time.
On a recent afternoon in a sitting room in his East Chop home, which he and his wife Jacqui have owned since 1987, Mr. Budd looked back on his career with pride.
“Professionally I have no regrets,” he said.
Throughout his career, Mr. Budd also helped break down barriers for other lawyers of color. In the late 1960s, soon after his legal career began, Mr. Budd co-founded the firm Budd, Wiley & Richlin as a way to provide opportunities for lawyers of color in Boston. It was a small firm of roughly 15 people and the majority of the founding partners were black. It became a launching pad for Mr. Budd’s career and people who looked like him, he said. His colleagues went on to become general counsels, managing partners at large corporate firms and district attorneys.
“I’m proudest of the fact that the firm, during the time it was in existence, did very well, but even more so the fact that so many of the people in the firm went on to do some significant things,” Mr. Budd said. “We’re all very close friends, like family.”
He said he enjoyed the independence of being a United States attorney.
“It’s like being a ship’s captain at sea. You’re given certain guidelines…but within that, you can decide what your priorities are going to be, you can decide how you carry out your mission.”
During Mr. Budd’s tenure, cities around the country were plagued by drug abuse, poverty and gun violence, he said, and Massachusetts was no exception. Community members tired of the violence in their neighborhoods asked Mr. Budd for help. He made it his mission to prosecute high-level drug dealers, including Darryl Whiting, a notorious gang leader who boasted he would never be caught. He lured children with gifts to bring them into the drug trade, Mr. Budd said.
“There was a major magazine article in which he said, ‘nobody can touch me, I’m God,’’’ Mr. Budd said. “Well, we figured out a way to do it.”
Mr. Whiting was convicted of running a 100-person drug ring and received a life sentence in 1990. At the trial, an undercover agent said Mr. Whiting preyed upon drug-addicted mothers.
“It was pretty satisfying, because we did some good,” Mr. Budd said.
In 1992, he was appointed Associate Attorney General in the Justice Department. Mr. Budd said that it was William Barr, serving his first stint as Attorney General at the time, rather than President George H. W. Bush, who went to bat for him.
“I haven’t worked with Mr. Barr in many, many years, but when I worked with him, he was just fine,” Mr. Budd said. “He wasn’t the guy that I observe from a distance [now].”
At the Justice Department, Mr. Budd oversaw the federal prosecution of police officers caught on camera beating up Rodney King in Los Angeles in 1991. The officers were acquitted in a state trial and it was Mr. Budd’s decision to try them in federal court. It wasn’t an easy decision, he said.
“Suppose we had not brought that case? People would be clamoring ‘why aren’t the Feds in here?’” he said. “Suppose we brought it and lost–did you stir up more trouble? Did you hit the wasp’s nest and cause a hullabaloo? So it was kind of tricky.”
In the end two of the four officers were found guilty. Recalling that time, Mr. Budd deferred credit for the two convictions to the trial lawyers.
“The people who did the real work should get the real credit,” he said.
After his time in government, Mr. Budd returned to private practice. Then in 2020 then-Boston Mayor Marty Walsh asked him to lead a task force to recommend reforms to the Boston Police Department.
“We had a good team, a good group of people that the mayor appointed,” he said.
Mr. Budd has three daughters: Keri, Kristy and Kimberly. Kimberly Budd has picked up the torch from her father: in 2020 she was appointed the chief justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, the first black woman to hold that position.
“When I became a lawyer, many years ago now, over 50 years ago, that court was made up of old white men,” he said. “Now to see Kim up there in charge of that court…it’s just a great feeling of sort of completion for me. To see her carry it on to the next level is phenomenally gratifying.”

Comments
The island should be so proud
New Englander Providence RIThe island should be so proud to have Wayne Budd as a resident. One more person who made a remarkable contribution to society with little recognition.
WOW!Great article about a
Trip Barnes Vineyard HavenWOW!Great article about a great guy! Bet a lot of crooks wished you had gone into dentistry!! On you go Wayne...all best wishes Trip
A heart warming story about a
Lionel Spiro ChappaquiddickA heart warming story about a wonderful man.
Wonderful article about a
Tom Murphy AquinnahWonderful article about a wonderful man.
Congratulations on a life well lived.
Great work Mr. Budd!
Mary Ann Romain NorthamptonGreat work Mr. Budd! Wonderful to hear that your daughters are following your path!
Wow, what an accomplished
Dean Rosenthal EdgartownWow, what an accomplished life, well done, Mr. Budd.
I’ll bet one of those
Shelley Christiansen Oak BluffsI’ll bet one of those inspiring Springfield dentists was my father’s classmate Billy Hall. Despite going the “wrong” way, Mr. Budd is a big inspiration in his own right. Thank you, Vineyard Gazette, for this worthy spotlight on an East Chop icon.
Wayne Budd is the epitome of
Harry Seymour Oak BluffsWayne Budd is the epitome of calm during turbulence. No wonder he is the go-to guy when voice of reason is sought to persuade the seemingly unpersuadable. He is a gracious and unpretentious man whose remarkable career and personal accomplishments reflect courage, unselfish commitment, and an unwavering devotion to family, colleagues, and friends
Wayne, we are fortunate and
Paul mcdonough ChappyWayne, we are fortunate and blessed to have you as friend, partner,neighbor and inspiration. Your kindness, intellect, and leadership have enriched so many lives , communities and institutions, You and Jacqui must be deservedly proud of all you have achieved.
Wayne Budd is exceptional and
Edward Redd Oak BluffsWayne Budd is exceptional and one of the reasons I aspired to become a lawyer today.He is a consummate gentleman ,a superb lawyer and another great reason to call the Vineyard home.I along with many am grateful he decided not to go into dentistry .
Always well respected. Thank
Liz Slaughter NewRochelle/OBAlways well respected. Thank you!
Inspiring! Thank you for
Moira Cullen CA/ChilmarkInspiring! Thank you for your service, Mr. Budd.
Wayne is a true trailblazer
Lee Jackson Van Allen Oak BluffsWayne is a true trailblazer whom I am proud to call a dear friend.
Excellent presentation worth
Carolyn Coverdale VT/OBExcellent presentation worth recognition in the Gazette. Wayne's dad, Mr Joseph Budd who was the first African American Police Officer in Springfield, MA would indeed be most proud of Wayne.
Congratulations Wayne, job
Karen Selsey NY/OBCongratulations Wayne, job well done
Bravissimo!
Charlena Seymour Oak BluffsBravissimo!
Hi Wayne. I did not realize
Captain Gary plymouthHi Wayne. I did not realize you and I were the same age. I think you look better than I do. It seem's so long ago when you guys were attending Jill and my wedding. Times for sure different. I still the you and I could have beat Mac and Bill at hoops.
Gary
A true class act. The
AW EdgartownA true class act. The benefits of Mr Budd's dedication and professional guidance are far reaching indeed. Many fond memories waiting on this lovely couple at an island restaurant year after year. Generosity, another of the many admiral qualites Mr Budd displays.
GREAT guy. A legend whose
Bijan C Bayne WashingtonGREAT guy. A legend whose daughter is a legend. Living ones
Congratulations, Wayne, on a
Solomon Watson NYC/OBCongratulations, Wayne, on a life well lived and jobs well done.
An inspiration as a lawyer
Alexis Shapiro Needham/EdgartownAn inspiration as a lawyer and a human being.
Wayne Budd is great man.
Norman Zalkind NewtonWayne Budd is great man. Everyone who has ever had contact with him knows it.
Wayne is a great man and an
David Van Allen Jr. MiltonWayne is a great man and an inspiration to the law community having trail blazed his way through adversity along the way and set the bar for many attorneys of color. I'm very proud and lucky to have known him my entire life.
Great article about a great
Philip Hart Los AngelesGreat article about a great man. I like to kid Wayne about being the young man in Springfield who helped James Naismith when he invented the game of basketball at the Springfield YMCA in 1891. And he’s only 80! Wow!
The one professor at Boston
Michael Morrison EdgartownThe one professor at Boston College Law School that left a lasting memory…even 35 years later. A true gentleman who genuinely cared about his students.
Such a giant! And heart of
Karen James Oak BluffsSuch a giant! And heart of gold. Thank you for all you continue to do.
It was an honor to come
Stacey BostonIt was an honor to come before you so long ago. Thank you for your service to the legal professions by giving people of color the path they deserved in law.
A fine man and a great
Leigh Perkins Southport MaineA fine man and a great colleague, once upon a time. Wonderful tribute.
Greenfield lays claim to the
James A, Fotopulos Greenfield, /Ma.Greenfield lays claim to the fact that the Budd family first started here in Greenfield, Ma. before his Dad went on to join the Springfield Police Department. Greenfield soooo VERY proud!!!
I graduated from 8th grade
Francis kiley Fort Myers floridaI graduated from 8th grade with Tony Budd in 1955 he was a class act, he was the first black person I knew.
To know of your accomplished
Eric G Patterson AtlantaTo know of your accomplished career,knowing your well raised daughters during my stints @ my family home across from the Inkwell,has me thinking 'what if my path towards being a lawyer?' were fulfilled during Mr Morehouse years of those time?...
Wishing you& your family the best ..
EP
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