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Alex Long, a University of Texas law professor who has researched the impact of politically charged music on the legal system, echoed Perlin's sentiment.
"Everyone wants to believe that the music they listen to says something about who they are," Long said.
"Being a judge is a pretty cloistered existence, having to crank out these opinions in isolation. Dylan was popular at the time they were coming of age and trying to figure out who they were," he said. "The chance to throw in a line from your favorite artist is tempting, a chance to let your freak flag fly."
The songwriter's work has made it into Supreme Court rulings, once by Chief Justice John Roberts in a 2008 ruling on billing firms hired by payphone operators. He paraphrased a lyric from "Like a Rolling Stone" -- "when you got nothing, you got nothing to lose," he wrote.
Dylan's words again impacted the court last year when Justice Antonin Scalia wrote an opinion criticizing colleagues for failing to rule on a question of employee e-mail privacy, writing: "'The times they are a-changin' is a feeble excuse for disregard of duty."