During his tenure as a Deputy State Attorney General, Wong was appointed by then-Governor
Pat Brown to the Municipal Court of the Los Angeles Judicial District in 1959, making him the first Chinese American named to the bench in the continental United States. Two years later, Judge Wong was elevated to the
Los Angeles County Superior Court, where he served for over 20 years. Despite his busy schedule as a Municipal Court Judge, Wong served as Cubmaster of
Cub Scout Pack 527 of the Hollywood Wilshire Council of the
Boy Scouts of America. One of his Cub Scouts was
Lance Ito, later to become trial judge in the infamous
O. J. Simpson murder case. Ito appointed then-retired Judge Wong to serve as a special master to retrieve a
switchblade knife from the Simpson residence that had been missed by police detectives. Even after he retired from the bench in 1982, he continued to be involved in his community. Wong researched and reported on racial issues within the Los Angeles Airport Police Bureau at the request of the Los Angeles Department of Airports; was appointed by then-Mayor of Los Angeles
Tom Bradley to serve on a panel tasked with drafting an ethics policy for the
City of Los Angeles; and was appointed Chair of the Asian Pacific American Focus Program of the
National Conference of Christians and Jews to combat the rise in violence against Asian Americans. After his formal retirement, Wong served as a senior judge on the Los Angeles Superior Court. He also served as a Justice
pro tem of the California Court of Appeal, Second Appellate District, in 1980. In retirement, he acted as a discovery referee and private mediator, handling a number of high-profile matters. Together with his wife, Dolores, Judge Wong was also an ardent supporter of the Chinese American community, making significant contributions to the Asian Pacific American Legal Center, the Chinatown Service Center and the Asian Pacific American Friends of the Center Theater Group. == Personal life and legacy ==