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Andrey Vyshinsky
Vyshinsky
Historical Figure
Nationality: Soviet Union (born in the Russian Empire, of Polish background)
Year of Birth: 1883
Year of Death: 1954
Cause of Death: Heart failure
Religion: Officially atheist, originally Catholicism
Occupation: Lawyer, Judge, Diplomat, Educator, Politician
Political Party: Communist Party of the Soviet Union
Political Office(s): Foreign Commissar
Fictional Appearances:
Joe Steele
POD: 1878;
Relevant POD: July, 1932
Novel or Story?: Novel only (as "Andy Wyszynski")
Type of Appearance: Direct
Nationality: United States
Occupation: Lawyer
Political Party: Democratic Party
Political Office(s): United States Attorney General

Andrey Yanuarevich Vyshinsky (Russian: Андре́й Януа́рьевич Выши́нский, Andrej Yanuar'evič Vyšinskij; Polish: Andrzej Wyszyński) (10 December [O.S. 28 November] 1883 – 22 November 1954) was a Soviet politician, jurist and diplomat.

Vyshinsky was an ethnic Pole born in the modern Ukraine in what was then the Russian Empire. He became interested in revolutionary ideas during his university days, eventually joining the Mensheviks. He participated in the 1905 Russian Revolution, was arrested, and sentenced to prison in 1908. While in Baku prison, he met Joseph Stalin. Upon his release, he became a successful lawyer in Moscow, where he also continued his activities as a Menshevik. After the Russian Revolution and end of the Russian Civil War, Vyshinsky changed his allegiance to the Bolsheviks.

Throughout the 1920s, Vyshinsky participated in a number trials of "undesirables". In 1935, he was appointed State Prosecutor of the Soviet Union, and became the legal mastermind of the Great Purge. During World War II, Vyshinsky was given a number of diplomatic responsibilities, including bringing Latvia in the USSR. In 1945, he helped install a communist government in Romania.

He was the Soviet Foreign Minister from 1949 to 1953, after having served as Deputy Foreign Minister under Vyacheslav Molotov since 1940. He also headed the Institute of State and Law in the Soviet Academy of Sciences. He died while in New York City in 1954.

Andrey Vyshinsky in Joe Steele[]

Andy Wyszynski was a Chicago attorney who served as the Attorney General of the United States under President Joe Steele from 1933 until shortly after Steele's death in 1953.

Wyszynski was the child of Polish immigrants. He first came to national prominence as part of the team that prosecuted Belva Gaertner. When Gaertner was acquitted, Wyszynski announced that "Juries are full of jerks."[1]

As Attorney General, Wyszynski prosecuted some of the most famous wreckers in U.S. history, including the Supreme Court Four in 1934[2] and Father Charles Coughlin in 1935.[3] He was also responsible for prosecuting Soviet spies after World War II[4], and after the Japanese War.[5] He held the office until shortly after Steele's death in March 1953, when Steele's successor, John Nance Garner asked for his resignation.[6]

Wyszynski was notorious for his bombast both inside and outside the courtroom. He routinely called defendants insulting names and loudly called for their execution. He was also quite smug, knowing full well that the defendants would ultimately confess, be convicted, and would finally be executed.

Literary comment[]

Wyszynski is not mentioned in the short story at all.

References[]

  1. Joe Steele, pg. 99.
  2. pgs. 99-108.
  3. Ibid. pgs. 122-128.
  4. Ibid., pgs. 342-344
  5. Ibid. pg. 376.
  6. Ibid. pg. 416
Political offices
(OTL)
Preceded by
Ivan Akulov
Procurator General of the Soviet Union
1935–1939
Succeeded by
Mikhail Pankratov
Preceded by
Vyacheslav Molotov
Foreign Minister of the Soviet Union
1949-1953
Succeeded by
Vyacheslav Molotov
Political offices
(Joe Steele)
Preceded by
William D. Mitchell
United States Attorney General
March 1933 - March 1953
Succeeded by
Vacancy
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