Pryor had trouble finding work as a black attorney in the private sector. Instead he went to work at the
Justice Department, first at the
Civil Division and then the
United States Attorney's Office in D.C. In 1968, after an interval as an attorney for the
Bell Telephone Company, Pryor was appointed by President
Lyndon B. Johnson to the District of Columbia Court of General Sessions, the predecessor to the
Superior Court of the District of Columbia. His first days on the bench were immediately after the
1968 Washington, D.C. riots following the
assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., and some of the defendants who appeared before him were schoolmates of his and others from a similar background. Looking back on this time, Judge Pryor later reflected, "There had to be some kind of discipline, but at the same time, I did feel some empathy for the people brought before the court. This conflict had been percolating for a long time, and now it was coming into the open. In those cases where serious crimes had been committed I applied the appropriate legal standards, even though I did feel for the people involved. I felt it was important to make a clear distinction: rioting and looting was not an expression of civil rights, nor was it an appropriate form of protest, it was criminal conduct." After serving as chief judge from 1984 to 1988, Pryor assumed senior status and continued to hear cases until 2019. Beginning in 1988, he taught criminal law and procedure at the
University of the District of Columbia David A. Clarke School of Law. Judge Pryor died November 19, 2020, in an assisted living facility in Silver Spring, Md., from renal failure. ==References==