Bernstein, 41, has been blind since birth. After winning the election, Bernstein had an assistant at his family's Detroit-area law firm begin reading briefs to him for mid-January arguments, including a medical marijuana case and a labor dispute covering thousands of state employees.
"It would be much easier if I could read and write like everyone else, but that's not how I was created," Bernstein said. "No question, it requires a lot more work, but the flip side is it requires you to operate at the highest level of preparedness. ... This is what I've done my entire life. This goes all the way back to grade school for me."
"Every new justice has to make a transition from whatever life he or she had before," Chief Justice Robert Young Jr. said. "His will be different than others, but he's extraordinarily successful and very driven. You don't enter Ironman competitions without having a steel backbone."
Indeed, Bernstein's remarkable background undoubtedly appealed to voters. He has run more than 15 marathons, and in 2008 completed a triathlon by riding a bike 180 kilometers, running 42 kilometers and swimming 4 kilometers with the help of guides. In 2012, he made headlines in New York City after being struck by a speeding bicyclist while running in Central Park, a collision that put him in a hospital for weeks.
As one of only two Democrats on the seven-member court, Bernstein is unlikely to crack the court's conservative sway.
But he's still expected to make a difference.
"His own experience and background is different than anyone else's at the conference table," said Justice Bridget McCormack, who was a law professor before being elected in 2012. "Richard knows a whole lot about disability law the rest of us don't. We don't get a lot of those cases. Who knows how it will be useful?"
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