A child of
Polish and
Austrian immigrants, he became the youngest person ever admitted to the Texas bar (
1925), and in
1931 he joined the
Houston firm that became
Fulbright & Jaworski.
During
World War II, he prosecuted one of the largest Army court-martials of that war, the case of
Guglielmo Olivotto, an Italian prisoner of war, who died with a noose around his neck, lynched at a military post on
Puget Sound in 1944. Twenty-eight
African-American soldiers were indicted and convicted. However, in October of 2007, a review board issued a ruling that could lead to overturning the convictions of all 28 soldiers, granting honorable discharges and providing them with back pay.
The board found that the court-martial was flawed, that the defense was unjustly rushed and that Jaworski, a young lieutenant colonel at the time, had important evidence that he did not share with defense lawyers.
During the Second World War, Jarworski also prosecuted the
Johannes Kunze murder trial, where five German prisoners of war were accused of beating to death a fellow prisoner for being a "traitor".
Subsequently, he served as a war crimes prosecutor in Germany. He declined to participate in the
Nuremberg Trials on grounds that the prosecution there was based on laws that did not exist at the time of the culpable acts. He rose to the rank of colonel, and subsequently, in his law firm, he was commonly addressed as "Colonel Jaworski."
He was a friend of President Lyndon Johnson. In the 1960 Presidential election, Jaworski represented Johnson in the lawsuit filed to stop Johnson from running for the US Senate from Texas at the same time he was running for Vice-President. Jaworski won. However, Jaworski did not always support Democratic candidates. He supported
Richard Nixon, contributed to
George H.W. Bush in his run for the Presidency in 1980, and after Bush conceded the nomination he became Treasurer of Democrats For Reagan during the 1980 election.
Having been convinced of his integrity, in 1980 Mr. Jaworski aided former Nixon staffer Egil "Bud" Krogh, whom he had sent to prison in 1973, in his request to be reinstated to the Washington State Bar.