Untitled Document
                              
    
        
            | For Immediate Release | For More Information Contact: | 
        
            | June 27, 2010 | Kathleen Arberg (202) 479-3211 | 
    
Martin David Ginsburg, husband of Supreme Court Justice Ruth  Bader Ginsburg, died today, June 27, 2010, at his home in Washington, D.C.,  due to complications of metastatic cancer.
Martin Ginsburg was born in Brooklyn, New York  on June 10, 1932.  He was the son of Morris  Ginsburg and Evelyn (Bayer) Ginsburg. He earned an A.B. from Cornell University  in 1953 and a J.D. magna cum laude from Harvard Law School  in 1958. It was at Cornell   University that Martin  Ginsburg and Ruth Bader Ginsburg met on a blind date in 1951. They were married  on June 23, 1954 at his parents’ home on Long Island. 
Martin Ginsburg served in the U.S. Army from 1954 until 1956  and was stationed at Fort Sill, Oklahoma where he taught in the Artillery School.  He returned to law school in 1956 and joined the firm of Weil, Gotshal &  Manges following graduation.  He was  admitted to the New York bar in 1959 and to  the District of Columbia  bar in 1980. He taught at New York University Law  School in the 1960s and was the  Beekman Professor of Law at Columbia   Law School.  When Ruth Bader Ginsburg was appointed to the United States Court of Appeals  for the District of Columbia Circuit in 1980 and the family moved to Washington, D.C., Martin  Ginsburg joined the faculty of the Georgetown   University Law   Center.  He was also of counsel to the firm of Fried,  Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson. He was a visiting professor at Stanford Law  School in the spring of 1978, at Harvard Law School in the spring of 1986, at University of Chicago  Law School in the spring of 1990, and at New York University   Law School  in the spring of 1993. 
Professor Ginsburg was co-author, with Jack S. Levin of Chicago, of Mergers, Acquisitions, and Buyouts, a  semi-annually updated tax treatise. He held numerous positions as an expert in  the tax field including chair of the Committee on Simplification of the  American Bar Associations Tax Section, chair of the New York State Bar  Association’s Tax Section, and consultant to the American Law Institute’s  Federal Income Tax Project. He also served as a member of advisory groups to  the Commissioner of the Internal Revenue, the Treasury Department, and the Tax  Division of the Department of Justice. In 2006, he was awarded the American Bar  Association Tax Section’s Distinguished Service Award.
Mr. Ginsburg is survived by his wife and his two children,  Jane Carol Ginsburg, the Morton Janklow Professor of Literary and Artistic  Property at Columbia   Law School,  and James Steven Ginsburg, founder and president of the Chicago Classical  Recording Foundation. He is also survived by four grandchildren.
A private interment service will be held at Arlington National Cemetery.