United States Judicial Conference of the United States
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Template:Sources The Judicial Conference of the United States, formerly known as the Conference of Senior Circuit Judges, was created by the United States Congress in 1922 with the principal objective of framing policy guidelines for administration of judicial courts in the United States. The Conference derives its authority from 28 U.S.C. Β§ 331, which states that it is headed by the chief justice of the United States and consists of the chief justice, the chief judge of each court of appeals federal regional circuit, a district court judge from various federal judicial districts, and the chief judge of the United States Court of International Trade.[1]
History
Responding to a backlog of cases in the federal courts, in 1922 Congress enacted a new form of court administration that advanced the institutionalization of an independent judiciary.[2] The establishment of an annual Conference of Senior Circuit Judges, later to be known as the Judicial Conference of the United States, culminated more than a decade of public debate on the reform of judicial administration. The Conference of Senior Circuit Judges provided the first formal mechanism by which members of the federal judiciary might develop national administrative policies, reassign judges temporarily, and recommend legislation.
Chief Justice William Howard Taft, appointed to the Supreme Court in 1921, had led a public campaign for federal judicial reform since leaving the White House in 1913. Taft proposed the appointment of at-large judges, what he called a "flying squadron", that could be assigned temporarily to congested courts. In Taft's plan, a conference of judges would serve primarily to assess the caseload of the lower courts and assign the at-large judges to courts in need. Taft, supported by a group of federal judges and legal scholars, hoped that the establishment of a more efficient federal judiciary would deflect the efforts of Senator George W. Norris and others who advocated an end to life tenure on the federal bench and the restriction of the lower federal courts' jurisdiction.
By the time Taft became Chief Justice, the increased caseload resulting from World War I and the enforcement of Prohibition had contributed to broad support for reform of the federal judiciary. Assuming a role as leader of the judiciary as well as the Supreme Court, Taft joined with Attorney General Harry M. Daugherty and appeared before the Senate Judiciary Committee to urge legislation. A large majority in Congress agreed with the need for reform, but both the Senate and the House of Representatives insisted on revising Taft's proposals so that they conformed more closely to the traditions of the federal judiciary.
Congress established an annual conference of the chief justice of the United States (or the senior associate justice if the chief is unable), and the senior circuit judge (now called the chief judge) from each judicial circuit and charged the conference with a general mandate to advise on the administrative needs of the federal courts. The act required the senior judge in each district to prepare an annual report of the business of the district's court. The conference would use these reports to prepare suggestions for the temporary transfer of judges, pending the approval of all courts involved. This expansion of the authority to transfer judges fell far short of Taft's concept of a permanent corps of at-large judges. Congress established 24 temporary judgeships, but adhered to the principle of fixed residency for district judges. Congress also declined to make the attorney general a member of the conference, although the act permitted the chief justice to request the attorney general to report on the business of the courts. Even without a formal relationship with Congress or the Department of Justice (which then administered the federal courts), the conference offered the judiciary a means of communicating its administrative needs.
The conference was renamed the Judicial Conference of the United States in 1948.[2] In 1956, Congress provided for the inclusion of the chief judge of the Court of Claims.[3] At that time, the judges of the Court of Customs and Patent Appeals (CCPA) declined to include a representative on the conference. The size of the conference nearly doubled following an act of 1957 that provided for the appellate and district judges in each circuit to elect a district judge to represent the circuit on the conference for a term of three years. In 1961 the chief judge of the CCPA began serving on the conference.[3] The chief judges of these Court of Claims and the CCPA served on the conference until 1982 when their courts merged to become the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit.[3] In 1990, Congress provided for the inclusion of the chief judge of the United States Court of International Trade.[3] In 1996, Congress expanded the district judge term up to five years and allowed senior district judges to serve.[3]
Committee activities
The Judicial Conference last revised its Advisory Committee structure in 1987, then naming a total of 20 Standing Advisory Committees, seven of which were then newly organized, and several of which absorbed other, previous Committees:[4]
- Committee on Administration of the Bankruptcy System, 1968βpresent
- Committee on Administration of the Magistrate Judges System, 1991βpresent
- Committee on Audits and Administrative Office Accountability, 2009βpresent
- Committee on the Budget, 1959βpresent
- Committee on Codes of Conduct, 1987βpresent
- Committee on Court Administration and Case Management, 1990βpresent
- Committee on Criminal Law, 1992βpresent
- Committee on Defender Services, 1987βpresent
- Executive Committee, 1968βpresent
- Committee on Federal-State Jurisdiction, 1987βpresent
- Committee on Financial Disclosure, 1992βpresent
- Committee on Information Technology, 2002βpresent
- Committee on Intercircuit Assignments, 1968βpresent
- Committee on International Judicial Relations, 1993βpresent
- Committee on the Judicial Branch, 1980βpresent
- Committee on Judicial Conduct and Disability, 2007βpresent
- Committee on Judicial Resources, 1987βpresent
- Committee on Judicial Security, 2006βpresent
- Committee on Rules of Practice and Procedure, 1958βpresent
- Committee on Space and Facilities, 2006βpresent
Each Advisory Committee is charged, respectively, with drafting proposed amendments for submission to the:
- Federal Rules of Civil Procedure;
- Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure;
- Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure;
- Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure; and
- Federal Rules of Evidence.
Members of the Advisory Committees include judges, representatives from the Department of Justice, law professors, and practicing attorneys. The Advisory Committees propose rules, subject them to public comment, and then submit them to the Standing Committee on Rules of Practice and Procedure, which in turn submits them to the Judicial Conference, which recommends them to the Supreme Court for approval. Explanatory notes of the drafting Advisory Committee are published along with the final adopted rules, and are frequently used as an authority on the interpretation of the rules.
Other active policy areas concern the operation of CM/ECF, the Case Management/Electronic Case Files system, and PACER, the electronic public access service for United States federal court documents.
On occasion, the Conference has authorized investigations of federal judges accused of criminal malfeasance. Those deemed guilty have been referred to the House Judiciary Committee for impeachment. This has happened three times during the 21st century.
Administrative Office of the United States Courts
The Administrative Office of the United States Courts (AO) is the administrative agency of the United States federal court system. The AO is the central support entity for the federal judicial branch. It provides a wide range of administrative, legal, financial, management, program, and information technology services to the federal courts. It was established in 1939.
The AO is directly supervised by the Judicial Conference, and implements and executes Judicial Conference policies, as well as applicable federal statutes and regulations. The AO facilitates communications within the judiciary and with Congress, the executive branch, and the public on behalf of the judiciary.
Judicial councils
Judicial councils are panels of each federal judicial circuit that are charged with making "necessary and appropriate orders for the effective and expeditious administration of justice" within their circuits.[5][6] Among their responsibilities is judicial discipline, the formulation of circuit policy, the implementation of policy directives received from the Judicial Conference, and the annual submission of a report to the Administrative Office on the number and nature of orders entered during the year that relate to judicial misconduct.[7][6] Each judicial circuit consists of the chief judge of the circuit and an equal number of circuit judges and district judges of the circuit.[8]
Lists of members
Current members
All members
The following list of Judicial Conference service is organized by the circuits and courts represented. It was compiled largely from the Reports of the Proceedings of the Judicial Conference and is complete through the most recent meeting of the conference. The list contains the names of those judges who were members of the conference, but not those who may occasionally have attended in their absence. District Judges are identified by the district in which they served.[10]
Supreme Court of the United States
- William Howard Taft, 1922β1929
- Charles Evans Hughes, 1929β1941
- Harlan Fiske Stone, 1941β1945
- Frederick Moore Vinson, 1946β1953
- Hugo Lafayette Black, 1953
- Earl Warren, 1954β1969
- Warren E. Burger, 1969β1986
- William Rehnquist, 1987β2005
- John Paul Stevens, 2005
- John Roberts, 2006βpresent
- George H. Bingham, 1922β1938
- Scott Wilson, 1939
- Calvert Magruder, 1940β1959
- Peter Woodbury, 1959β1964
- Bailey Aldrich, 1965β1972
- Frank M. Coffin, 1972β1983
- Levin H. Campbell, 1983β1990
- Stephen G. Breyer, 1990β1994
- Juan R. Torruella, 1994β2001
- Michael Boudin, 2001β2008
- Sandra Lynch, 2008β2015
- Jeffrey R. Howard, 2015β2022
- David J. Barron, 2022βpresent
- First Circuit District Judges
- George Clinton Sweeney (D. Mass.), 1958β1961
- Francis Ford (D. Mass.), 1961β1967
- Edward T. Gignoux (D. Me.), 1967β1973
- Andrew Caffrey (D. Mass.), 1973β1979
- Raymond J. Pettine (D.R.I.), 1979β1982
- W. Arthur Garrity Jr. (D. Mass.), 1982β1985
- Juan M. Perez-Gimenez (D.P.R.), 1985β1988
- Frank H. Freedman (D. Mass.), 1988β1991
- Francis J. Boyle (D.R.I.), 1991β1994
- Joseph L. Tauro (D. Mass.), 1995β1997
- Joseph A. DiClerico Jr. (D.N.H.), 1998β2000
- D. Brock Hornby (D. Me.), 2000β2003
- Hector M. Laffitte (D.P.R.), 2003β2006
- Ernest C. Torres (D.R.I.), 2007β2009
- Mary M. Lisi (D.R.I.), 2009
- Mark L. Wolf (D. Mass.), 2009β2012
- Paul Barbadoro (D.N.H.), 2012β2017
- Nancy Torresen (D. Me.), 2017β2021
- Gustavo GelpΓ (D.P.R.), 2021
- Aida Delgado-ColΓ³n (D.P.R.), 2021β2023
- William E. Smith (D.R.I.), 2023βpresent
- Henry Wade Rogers, 1922β1925
- Charles Merrill Hough, 1926
- Martin T. Manton, 1926β1938
- Learned Hand, 1939β1951
- Thomas W. Swan, 1951β1953
- Harrie B. Chase, 1953β1954
- Charles E. Clark, 1954β1959
- J. Edward Lumbard, 1960β1971
- Henry J. Friendly, 1971β1973
- Irving R. Kaufman, 1973β1980
- Wilfred Feinberg, 1980β1988
- James L. Oakes, 1989β1992
- Thomas J. Meskill, 1992β1993
- Jon O. Newman, 1993β1997
- Ralph K. Winter Jr., 1997β2000
- John M. Walker Jr., 2000β2006
- Dennis G. Jacobs, 2006β2013
- Robert A. Katzmann, 2013β2020
- Debra Ann Livingston, 2020βpresent
- Second Circuit District Judges
- Edward Jordan Dimock (S.D.N.Y.), 1958β1959
- Sylvester J. Ryan (S.D.N.Y.), 1959β1968
- Sidney Sugarman (S.D.N.Y.), 1968β1971
- David N. Edelstein (S.D.N.Y.), 1971β1974
- Jacob Mishler (E.D.N.Y.), 1974β1977
- T. Emmet Clarie (D. Conn.), 1977β1980
- Lloyd F. MacMahon (S.D.N.Y.), 1980β1982
- Constance B. Motley (S.D.N.Y.), 1982β1983
- Jack B. Weinstein (E.D.N.Y.), 1983β1986
- John T. Curtin (W.D.N.Y.), 1986β1989
- Charles L. Brieant (S.D.N.Y.), 1989β1995
- Peter Dorsey (D. Conn.), 1996β1998
- Charles P. Sifton (E.D.N.Y)., 1998β2001
- Frederick Scullin (N.D.N.Y.), 2001β2004
- Michael B. Mukasey (S.D.N.Y.), 2005β2006
- Kimba M. Wood (S.D.N.Y.), 2006β2007
- William K. Sessions III (D. Vt.), 2007β2010
- Raymond J. Dearie (E.D.N.Y.), 2010β2011
- Carol Amon (E.D.N.Y.), 2011β2013
- William M. Skretny (W.D.N.Y.), 2013β2016
- Colleen McMahon (S.D.N.Y.), 2016β2020
- Stefan R. Underhill (D. Conn.), 2020β2023
- Margo Kitsy Brodie (E.D.N.Y.), 2023βpresent
- Joseph Buffington, 1922β1937
- John Warren Davis, 1938
- John Biggs Jr., 1939β1965
- Harry E. Kalodner, 1966
- Austin Staley, 1966β1967
- William H. Hastie, 1968β1971
- Collins J. Seitz, 1971β1984
- Ruggero J. Aldisert, 1984β1986
- John J. Gibbons, 1987β1989
- A. Leon Higginbotham, 1990
- Dolores Sloviter, 1991β1997
- Edward R. Becker, 1998β2003
- Anthony J. Scirica, 2003β2010
- Theodore A. McKee, 2010β2016
- D. Brooks Smith, 2016β2021
- Michael Chagares, 2021βpresent
- Third Circuit District Judges
- Phillip Forman (D.N.J.), 1957β1959
- James Cullen Ganey (E.D. Pa.), 1959β1961
- Thomas M. Madden (D.N.J.), 1961β1966
- Thomas James Clary (E.D. Pa.), 1966β1968
- Wallace S. Gourley (W.D. Pa.), 1968β1970
- Caleb M. Wright (D. Del.), 1970β1972
- Michael Henry Sheridan (M.D. Pa.), 1972β1975
- Lawrence A. Whipple (D.N.J.), 1975β1978
- Alfred Leopold Luongo (E.D. Pa.), 1978β1981
- Gerald J. Weber (W.D. Pa.), 1981β1984
- Walter K. Stapleton (D. Del.), 1984β1985
- Murray M. Schwartz (D. Del.), 1985β1987
- William J. Nealon (M.D. Pa.), 1987β1990
- John F. Gerry (D.N.J.), 1990β1994
- Edward N. Cahn (E.D. Pa.), 1994β1997
- Donald E. Ziegler (W.D. Pa.), 1998β2000
- Sue L. Robinson (D. Del.), 2000β2003
- Thomas I. Vanaskie (M.D. Pa.), 2003β2005
- Garrett E. Brown Jr. (D.N.J.), 2005β2008
- Harvey Bartle III (E.D. Pa.), 2008β2011
- Gary L. Lancaster (W.D. Pa.), 2011β2013
- Joy Flowers Conti (W.D. Pa.), 2013β2015
- Leonard P. Stark (D. Del.), 2015β2017
- Christopher C. Conner (M.D. Pa.), 2017β2021
- Freda L. Wolfson, (D.N.J.), 2021β2023
- RenΓ©e Marie Bumb, (D.N.J.), 2023
- Juan Ramon SΓ‘nchez, (E.D. Pa.), 2023β2024
- Mitchell S. Goldberg, (E.D. Pa.), 2024βpresent
- Charles Albert Woods, 1922β1924
- Edmund Waddill Jr., 1925β1930
- John Johnston Parker, 1931β1957
- Simon E. Sobeloff, 1958β1964
- Clement F. Haynsworth, 1964β1981
- Harrison L. Winter, 1981β1989
- Sam J. Ervin III, 1989β1995
- J. Harvie Wilkinson III, 1996β2003
- William W. Wilkins, 2003β2007
- Karen J. Williams, 2007β2009
- William B. Traxler Jr., 2009β2016
- Roger Gregory, 2016β2023
- Albert Diaz, 2023βpresent
- Fourth Circuit District Judges
- Roszel C. Thomsen (D. Md.), 1958β1964
- Walter E. Hoffman (E.D. Va.), 1964β1970
- Oren R. Lewis (E.D. Va.), 1970β1973
- Charles E. Simons (D.S.C.), 1973β1979
- Robert R. Merhige (E.D. Va.), 1980β1985
- Frank Kaufman (D. Md.), 1985β1991
- W. Earl Britt (E.D.N.C.), 1991β1997
- Charles H. Haden II (S.D. W. Va.), 1998β2002
- David C. Norton (D.S.C.), 2003β2007
- James P. Jones (W.D. Va.), 2007β2011
- Deborah K. Chasanow (D. Md.), 2011β2016
- Robert J. Conrad, (W.D.N.C.), 2016β2021
- John P. Bailey (N.D. W. Va.) 2021βpresent
- Richard Wilde Walker Jr., 1922β1929
- Nathan Philemon Bryan, 1930β1934
- Rufus Edward Foster, 1935β1941
- Samuel Hale Sibley, 1942β1947
- Joseph Chappell Hutcheson Jr., 1948β1959
- Richard Taylor Rives, 1959β1960
- Elbert Parr Tuttle, 1961β1967
- John R. Brown, 1967β1979
- James P. Coleman, 1980
- John Cooper Godbold, 1981
- Charles Clark, 1982β1991
- Henry A. Politz, 1992β1998
- Carolyn Dineen King, 1999β2006
- Edith Hollan Jones, 2006β2012
- Carl E. Stewart, 2012β2019
- Priscilla Richman, 2019β2024
- Jennifer Walker Elrod, 2024βpresent
- Fifth Circuit District Judges
- Seybourn Harris Lynne (N.D. Ala.), 1958β1959
- Ben Clarkson Connally (S.D. Tex.), 1959β1962
- John Milton Bryan Simpson (M.D. Fla.), 1962β1965
- Herbert William Christenberry (E.D. La.), 1965β1968
- G. Harrold Carswell (N.D. Fla.), 1968β1969
- Joe Ewing Estes (N.D. Tex.), 1969β1971
- E. Gordon West (E.D. & M.D. La.), 1971β1974
- Alexander Lawrence (S.D. Ga.), 1974β1977
- William C. Keady (N.D. Miss.), 1977β1980
- John V. Singleton (S.D. Tex.), 1980β1983
- Adrian G. Duplantier (E.D. La.), 1983β1986
- Lyonel Thomas Senter Jr. (N.D. Miss.), 1986β1989
- Barefoot Sanders (N.D. Tex.), 1989β1992
- Morey L. Sear (E.D. La.), 1992β1995
- William H. Barbour Jr. (S.D. Miss.), 1996β1998
- Hayden Wilson Head Jr. (S.D. Tex.), 1999β2001
- Martin L. C. Feldman (E.D. La.), 2001β2004
- Glen H. Davidson (N.D. Miss.), 2005β2007
- Sim Lake III (S.D. Tex.), 2007β2010
- Sarah S. Vance (E.D. La.), 2010β2013
- Louis Guirola Jr. (S.D. Miss.), 2013β2016
- Lee H. Rosenthal (S.D. Tex.), 2016β2020
- S. Maurice Hicks Jr. (W.D. La.), 2020β2023
- Debra M. Brown (N.D. Miss.), 2023βpresent
- Loyal Edwin Knappen, 1922β1923
- Arthur C. Denison, 1924β1931
- Charles H. Moorman, 1932β1937
- Xenophon Hicks, 1938β1951
- Charles Casper Simons, 1952β1958
- Florence E. Allen, 1958
- John Donelson Martin, Sr., 1959
- Thomas Francis McAllister, 1959β1960
- Shackelford Miller Jr., 1961β1962
- Lester LeFevre Cecil, 1962β1963
- Paul C. Weick, 1964β1969
- Harry P. Phillips, 1969β1978
- George Clifton Edwards Jr., 1979β1983
- Pierce Lively, 1984β1988
- Albert J. Engel, 1988β1989
- Gilbert S. Merritt, 1990β1996
- Boyce F. Martin Jr., 1997β2003
- Danny J. Boggs, 2003β2009
- Alice M. Batchelder, 2009β2014
- R. Guy Cole Jr., 2014β2021
- Jeffrey Sutton, 2021βpresent
- Sixth Circuit District Judges
- Paul J. Jones (N.D. Ohio), 1958β1960
- Marion Speed Boyd (W.D. Tenn.), 1960β1963
- Ralph McKenzie Freeman (E.D. Mich.), 1963β1966
- Mac Swinford (E.D. & W.D. Ky.), 1966β1969
- Carl A. Weinman (S.D. Ohio), 1969β1972
- Robert Love Taylor (judge) (E.D. Tenn.), 1972β1975
- Damon J. Keith (E.D. Mich.), 1975β1978
- Charles M. Allen (W.D. Ky.), 1978β1981
- Frank J. Battisti (N.D. Ohio), 1981β1984
- Robert Malcolm McRae Jr. (W.D. Tenn.), 1984β1987
- Philip Pratt (E.D. Mich.), 1987β1989
- James P. Churchill (E.D. Mich.), 1989β1990
- Eugene Siler (E.D. & W.D. Ky.), 1990β1991
- Edward Johnstone (W.D. Ky.), 1991β1993
- Thomas Lambros (N.D. Ohio), 1993β1994
- John D. Holschuh (S.D. Ohio), 1995
- S. Arthur Spiegel (S.D. Ohio), 1995β1996
- Thomas A. Wiseman Jr. (M.D. Tenn.), 1997β2001
- Lawrence P. Zatkoff (E.D. Mich.), 2001β2004
- William Bertelsman (E.D. Ky.), 2005β2006
- Charles R. Simpson III (W.D. Ky.), 2006β2007
- Thomas M. Rose (S.D. Ohio), 2007β2009
- Solomon Oliver Jr. (N.D. Ohio), 2009β2010
- Thomas A. Varlan (E.D. Tenn.), 2010β2013
- Paul Lewis Maloney (W.D. Mich.), 2013β2016
- Joseph Martin Hood (E.D. Ky.), 2016β2019
- Thomas B. Russell (W.D. Ky.), 2019β2020
- Michael H. Watson (S.D. Ohio), 2020β2021
- Sara Elizabeth Lioi (N.D. Ohio), 2021β2023
- S. Thomas Anderson (W.D. Tenn.), 2023βpresent
- Francis E. Baker, 1922β1923
- Samuel Alschuler, 1924β1934
- Evan A. Evans, 1935β1947
- William Morris Sparks, 1948
- James Earl Major, 1949β1954
- Francis Ryan Duffy, 1954β1959
- John S. Hastings, 1959β1968
- Latham Castle, 1968β1969
- Luther M. Swygert, 1970β1974
- Thomas E. Fairchild, 1975β1981
- Walter J. Cummings, 1981β1986
- William J. Bauer, 1987β1993
- Richard A. Posner, 1994β2000
- Joel M. Flaum, 2000β2006
- Frank H. Easterbrook, 2006β2013
- Diane Pamela Wood, 2013β2020
- Diane S. Sykes, 2020βpresent
- Seventh Circuit District Judges
- William Joseph Campbell (N.D. Ill.), 1958β1961
- Luther M. Swygert (N.D. Ind.), 1961
- William E. Steckler (S.D. Ind.), 1962β1964
- Kenneth P. Grubb (E.D. Wis), 1964β1965
- Edwin A. Robson (N.D. Ill.), 1966β1969
- Robert A. Grant (N.D. Ind.), 1969β1972
- James Edward Doyle (W.D. Wis.), 1972β1975
- James B. Parsons (N.D. Ill.), 1975β1978
- S. Hugh Dillin (S.D. Ind.), 1979β1982
- John W. Reynolds (E.D. Wis.), 1982β1985
- Frank J. McGarr (N.D. Ill.), 1985β1987
- Sarah Evans Barker (S.D. Ind.), 1988β1991
- Barbara Crabb (W.D. Wis.), 1991β1994
- Michael M. Mihm (C.D. Ill.), 1995β1997
- Robert Lowell Miller Jr. (N.D. Ind.), 1998β2000
- Marvin Aspen (N.D. Ill.), 2000β2003
- J.P. Stadtmueller (E.D. Wis.), 2003β2006
- Wayne Andersen (N.D. Ill.), 2006β2009
- Richard L. Young (S.D. Ind.), 2009β2012
- RubΓ©n Castillo (N.D. Ill.), 2012β2016
- Michael Joseph Reagan (S.D. Ill.), 2016β2019
- Rebecca R. Pallmeyer (N.D. Ill.), 2019β2021
- Jon DeGuilio (N.D. Ind.), 2021β2024
- Virginia Mary Kendall (N.D. Ill.), 2024βpresent
- Walter Henry Sanborn, 1922β1926
- Kimbrough Stone, 1927β1947
- Archibald K. Gardner, 1947β1959
- Harvey M. Johnsen, 1959β1965
- Charles Joseph Vogel, 1965β1967
- Martin D. Van Oosterhout, 1968β1970
- Marion C. Matthes, 1970β1973
- Pat Mehaffy, 1973β1974
- Floyd R. Gibson, 1974β1979
- Donald P. Lay, 1980β1991
- Richard Arnold, 1992β1998
- Pasco M. Bowman II, 1998β1999
- Roger L. Wollman, 1999β2002
- David R. Hansen, 2002β2003
- James B. Loken, 2003β2010
- William J. Riley, 2010β2017
- Lavenski Smith, 2017β2024
- Steven Colloton, 2024βpresent
- Eighth Circuit District Judges
- Gunnar Hans Nordbye (D. Minn.), 1958β1962
- John Elvis Miller (W.D. Ark.), 1962β1963
- Richard M. Duncan (E.D. & W.D. Mo.), 1963β1965
- Roy W. Harper (E.D. & W.D. Mo.), 1965β1971
- Oren Harris (E.D. & W.D. Ark.), 1971β1974
- James H. Meredith (E.D. Mo.), 1974β1979
- Albert G. Schatz (D. Neb.), 1979β1985
- John F. Nangle (E.D. Mo.), 1985β1990
- Donald E. O'Brien (N.D. & S.D. Iowa), 1991β1997
- James M. Rosenbaum (D. Minn.), 1998β2005
- Lawrence L. Piersol (D.S.D.), 2006β2009
- Rodney W. Sippel (E.D. Mo.), 2009β2015
- Karen E. Schreier (D.S.D.), 2015β2016
- Linda R. Reade (N.D. Iowa), 2016β2021
- John R. Tunheim (D. Minn.), 2021β2024
- Roberto Lange (D.S.D.), 2024βpresent
- William Ball Gilbert, 1922β1930
- Curtis Dwight Wilbur, 1931β1944
- Francis Arthur Garrecht, 1945β1947
- William Denman, 1948β1957
- Albert Lee Stephens, 1957β1958
- Walter Lyndon Pope, 1959
- Richard H. Chambers, 1959β1976
- James R. Browning, 1976β1988
- Alfred T. Goodwin, 1988β1990
- J. Clifford Wallace, 1991β1995
- Procter Ralph Hug Jr., 1996β2000
- Mary M. Schroeder, 2001β2007
- Alex Kozinski, 2007β2014
- Sidney R. Thomas, 2014β2021
- Mary H. Murguia, 2021βpresent
- Ninth Circuit District Judges
- William C. Mathes (S.D. Cal.), 1958β1960
- William J. Lindberg (E.D. & W.D. Wash.), 1960β1963
- Gus J. Solomon (D. Ore.), 1963β1965
- Albert Wollenberg (N.D. Cal.), 1966β1969
- Fred M. Taylor (D. Idaho), 1969β1972
- Jesse W. Curtis (C.D. Cal.), 1972β1975
- Thomas J. MacBride (E.D. Cal.), 1975β1978
- Morell Sharp (W.D. Wash.), 1978β1980
- Raymond Clyne McNichols (D. Idaho), 1980β1981
- Manuel L. Real (C.D. Cal.), 1981β1984
- Robert J. McNichols (E.D. Wash.), 1984β1987
- Robert F. Peckham (N.D. Cal.), 1987β1990
- William D. Browning (D. Ariz.), 1990β1993
- William Matthew Byrne Jr. (C.D. Cal.), 1993β1996
- Lloyd D. George (D. Nev.), 1997β1999
- Judith N. Keep (S.D. Cal.), 1999β2003
- David Alan Ezra (D. Haw.), 2003β2005
- Charles R. Breyer (N.D. Cal.), 2006β2010
- Robert S. Lasnik (W.D. Wash.), 2010β2016
- Claudia Ann Wilken (N.D. Cal.), 2016β2019
- Rosanna M. Peterson (E.D. Wash), 2019β2021
- Leslie E. Kobayashi (D. Haw), 2021βpresent
- Robert E. Lewis, 1929β1940
- Orie Leon Phillips, 1940β1955
- Sam Gilbert Bratton, 1956β1959
- Alfred P. Murrah, 1959β1970
- David T. Lewis, 1970β1977
- Oliver Seth, 1978β1984
- William Judson Holloway Jr., 1984β1991
- Monroe McKay, 1991β1993
- Stephanie K. Seymour, 1994β2000
- Deanell R. Tacha, 2001β2007
- Robert H. Henry, 2008β2010
- Mary Beck Briscoe, 2010β2015
- Timothy Tymkovich, 2015β2022
- Jerome Holmes, 2022βpresent
- Tenth Circuit District Judges
- Eugene Rice (E.D. Okla.), 1958
- Royce H. Savage (N.D. Okla.), 1958β1961
- Ewing Thomas Kerr (D. Wyo.), 1962β1964
- Alfred A. Arraj (D. Colo.), 1964β1967
- Arthur Jehu Stanley Jr. (D. Kan.), 1967β1970
- Olin Hatfield Chilson (D. Colo.), 1970β1973
- Frederick A. Daugherty (E.D., N.D., & W.D. Okla.), 1973β1976
- Wesley E. Brown (D. Kan.), 1976β1979
- Howard C. Bratton (D.N.M.), 1979β1982
- Luther B. Eubanks (W.D. Okla.), 1982β1985
- Sherman G. Finesilver (D. Colo.), 1985β1988
- Earl E. O'Connor (D. Kan.), 1988β1991
- Richard P. Matsch (D. Colo.), 1991β1994
- Clarence A. Brimmer (D. Wyo.), 1994β1997
- Ralph G. Thompson (W.D. Okla.), 1998β2000
- Frank Howell Seay (E.D. Okla.), 2000β2003
- David L. Russell (W.D. Okla.), 2003β2006
- Alan B. Johnson (D. Wyo.), 2006β2009
- Robin J. Cauthron (W.D. Okla.), 2009β2012
- Dee Benson (D. Utah), 2012β2016
- Martha VΓ‘zquez (D.N.M.), 2016β2019
- Claire Eagan (N.D. Okla.), 2019β2023
- William P. Johnson (D.N.M.), 2023βpresent
- John C. Godbold, 1982β1986
- Paul H. Roney, 1986β1989
- Gerald B. Tjoflat, 1990β1996
- Joseph W. Hatchett, 1997β1999
- R. Lanier Anderson III, 1999β2002
- J. L. Edmondson, 2002β2009
- Joel F. Dubina, 2009β2013
- Ed Carnes, 2013β2020
- William H. Pryor Jr., 2020βpresent
- Eleventh Circuit District Judges
- William Clark O'Kelley (N.D. Ga.), 1982β1984
- James Lawrence King (S.D. Fla.), 1984β1987
- Sam C. Pointer (N.D. Ala.), 1987β1990
- Anthony Alaimo (S.D. Ga.), 1990β1993
- William Terrell Hodges (M.D. Fla.), 1994β1999
- Charles Randolph Butler Jr. (S.D. Ala.), 1999β2003
- J. Owen Forrester (N.D. Ga.), 2003β2005
- Robert L. Hinkle (N.D. Fla.), 2006β2007
- Myron H. Thompson (M.D. Ala.), 2007β2011
- W. Louis Sands (M.D. Ga.), 2011β2015
- Federico A. Moreno (S.D. Fla.), 2015β2020
- L. Scott Coogler (N.D. Ala.), 2020β2024
- Lisa Godbey Wood (S.D. Ga.), 2024βpresent
- Duncan Lawrence Groner, 1938β1947
- Harold Montelle Stephens, 1948β1955
- Henry White Edgerton, 1955β1958
- E. Barrett Prettyman, 1959β1960
- Wilbur Kingsbury Miller, 1961β1962
- David L. Bazelon, 1963β1977
- J. Skelly Wright, 1978β1980
- Carl McGowan, 1981
- Spottswood W. Robinson III, 1981β1986
- Patricia M. Wald, 1986β1990
- Abner Mikva, 1991β1994
- Harry T. Edwards, 1994β2001
- Douglas H. Ginsburg, 2001β2008
- David B. Sentelle, 2008β2013
- Merrick B. Garland, 2013β2020
- Sri Srinivasan, 2020βpresent
- D.C. Circuit District Judges
- Bolitha Laws (D.D.C.), 1958
- David Andrew Pine (D.D.C.), 1959β1961
- Matthew F. McGuire (D.D.C.), 1961β1967
- Edward M. Curran (D.D.C.), 1968β1971
- John J. Sirica (D.D.C.), 1971β1974
- George L. Hart (D.D.C.), 1974β1975
- William Blakely Jones (D.D.C.), 1975β1977
- William B. Bryant (D.D.C.), 1977β1981
- John Lewis Smith (D.D.C.), 1981β1982
- Aubrey E. Robinson Jr. (D.D.C.), 1982β1992
- John Garrett Penn (D.D.C.), 1992β1997
- Norma Holloway Johnson (D.D.C.), 1997β2001
- Thomas F. Hogan (D.D.C.), 2001β2008
- Royce C. Lamberth (D.D.C.), 2008β2013
- Richard W. Roberts (D.D.C.), 2013β2016
- Beryl A. Howell (D.D.C.), 2016β2023
- James Boasberg (D.D.C.), 2023βpresent
- Howard T. Markey, 1983β1990
- Helen W. Nies, 1990β1994
- Glenn L. Archer Jr., 1994β1997
- Haldane Robert Mayer, 1998β2004
- Paul R. Michel, 2004β2010
- Randall R. Rader, 2010β2014
- Sharon Prost, 2014β2021
- Kimberly A. Moore, 2021βpresent
(prior to merger of the appellate division into the Federal Circuit)
- Marvin Jones, 1956β1964
- Wilson Cowen, 1964β1976
- Oscar H. Davis, 1977β1978
- Daniel M. Friedman, 1978β1982
(prior to merger into the Federal Circuit)
- Eugene Worley, 1961β1972
- Howard T. Markey, 1972β1982
- Edward D. Re, 1990β1991
- Gregory Carman, 1991
- Dominick L. DiCarlo, 1992β1996
- Gregory W. Carman, 1997β2003
- Jane A. Restani, 2003β2010
- Donald C. Pogue, 2010β2014
- Timothy C. Stanceu, 2014β2021
- Mark A. Barnett, 2021βpresent
See also
- Judicial Council of California
- New York State Commission on Judicial Conduct
- Canadian Judicial Council
- Council of the judiciary (for similar bodies in other jurisdictions)
- Judicial Council (disambiguation page)
References
- β United States Courts page on Judicial Conference membership Archived 2013-02-24 at the Wayback Machine.[full citation needed]
- β Jump up to: 2.0 2.1 Federal Judicial Center, Judicial Conference of the United States, 1922β Archived 2015-09-24 at the Wayback Machine.
- β Jump up to: 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Federal Judicial Center, Members of the Judicial Conference of the United States (formerly the Conference of Senior Circuit Judges) Archived 2015-09-24 at the Wayback Machine.
- β "Judicial Conference of the United States: Committees (Alphabetical)" Federal Judicial Center. Retrieved September 15, 2024.
- β 28 U.S.C. Β§ 332
- β Jump up to: 6.0 6.1 Judicial Discipline Process: An Overview, Congressional Research Service, http://fas.org/sgp/crs/misc/R41758.pdf, retrieved 14 August 2014
- β 28 U.S.C. Β§ 332(g)
- β 28 U.S.C. Β§ 332(a)(1)
- β "Judicial Conference of the United States". Washington, D.C.: Judicial Conference of the United States. October 2024. https://www.uscourts.gov/sites/default/files/jcus_members_2024-oct.pdf.
- β Material in this section is transcribed from the corresponding page Archived 2012-10-10 at the Wayback Machine on the website of the Federal Judicial Center, a publication of the United States federal government in the public domain.
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