Greg Munno — şÚÁϲ»´ňěČ Wed, 07 Dec 2016 21:43:16 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 TRAC Research Shows Federal Senior Judges Carry a Growing Workload /blog/2015/07/13/trac-research-shows-federal-senior-judges-carry-a-growing-workload-33048/ Mon, 13 Jul 2015 17:46:37 +0000 /?p=82630 Nearly a quarter of all civil and criminal cases closed in the nation’s federal district courts last year were handled by senior judges who had retired but decided to keep on working, according to a by the Transactional Record Access Clearinghouse (TRAC).

Moreover, the size of the workload carried by senior judges last year was almost twice what it was two decades ago. In 1996, senior judges “terminated” 41,323 cases, or 14 percent of all civil and criminal matters. By 2014, the counts had jumped to 79,121 cases, 24 percent of the total.

The TRAC study found that while there is considerable year-to-year fluctuation, senior judge activity is up by nearly every metric: their numbers overall, the percentage of the judicial workforce they comprise and the average number of cases they are closing. In 1996, the 247 senior judges closed an average of 150 cases and made up 31 percent of all judges hearing cases. In 2014, there were 386 senior judges (38 percent of the total) who, on average, closed 205 cases during the year.

The core explanation for this change is simple: While the number of cases being funneled annually into the nation’s district courts has been steadily growing, Congress has for many years been reluctant to support the additional judgeships that have been regularly recommended by Chief Justice John Roberts and Chief Justice William Rehnquist before him. As far back as January 2003, Rehnquist cited “rising caseloads, too many judicial vacancies and too few authorized judgeships” as problems facing the courts.

The result of this gridlock is that the role of the senior judges in the basic operation of the courts has grown considerably.

In another finding from the TRAC analysis, there is considerable variation in the utilization of senior judges among the nation’s judicial districts. At the higher end, for example, there were 24 courts in which the senior judges processed more than a third of all the civil and criminal matters. The records also showed, however, there were 10 jurisdictions where senior judges dealt with 5 percent or less of the workload. This in large part reflects the fact that the number and percentage of senior judges serving in each district also varies considerably.

For court administrators, the growing role of senior judges is a nagging and well-recognized phenomenon. For example, David Sellers, a long-time public affairs person in the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts, was recently asked whether the availability of senior judges had helped meet the challenge of the growing caseloads.

“Congress has not enacted an omnibus judgeship bill since 1990,” Sellers observed. “Courts that need additional judgeships and/or suffer from long-term unfilled judicial vacancies particularly benefit from the contribution of senior judges.”

The lingering nature of the concerns can be seen in the September 2013 testimony of Judge Timothy M. Tymkovich, chair of the Judicial Resources Committee of the Judicial Conference Committee. “To enable the judiciary to continue serving litigants efficiently and effectively, the judicial work force must be expanded.”

Thus the contribution of the growing number of senior judges in helping an overburdened system achieve its core goals is a genuine benefit. But their expanding role in the operation of the courts also highlights important questions and concerns, including whether growing politicization of the judicial confirmation process is affecting the basic operation of the federal courts. The basic nature of this continuing problem becomes clear when it is considered that while the Democrat-controlled White House does the nominating, the Republican-controlled Congress must approve those nominees. Congress also must approve new judgeships and the funds needed to fill them.

Where Are the Senior Judges?

Because of the complex mix of many factors—including judge ages, years of service and the character of district caseloads—the workloads that senior judges carry differ dramatically across judicial districts.

Ranking at the top in the 2014 list was the Western District of Kentucky, where three quarters (75.1 percent) of its civil closures and defendant sentencing were handled by senior judges. Other districts where senior judges played a significant role were Vermont (63.7 percent of closures), Washington East (52.8 percent) and Utah (50.8 percent).

In his interview with TRAC, Chief Judge McKinley of Western Kentucky was asked what it was like managing a court with such a large percentage of senior judges.

“Well, it’s interesting to be the chief judge to three former chief judges in the same district,” McKinley said, also noting that he was the only non-senior judge in his district for much of 2014. “That’s just a little bit different, but we make it work.”

Judge McKinley said that at national judicial conferences, concerns have been expressed “about the cost of providing space and staff to senior judges.” But he said those comments were often followed by remarks from judges in other districts “who say the seniors are essential to the management of the district’s caseload.”

Meanwhile, at the opposite end of the spectrum, there are three courts where the senior judges played no role—Delaware, Wyoming and North Dakota[4].

 

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TRAC Shines Light on Worst FOIL Offenders /blog/2015/03/12/trac-shines-light-on-worst-foil-offenders-62756/ Thu, 12 Mar 2015 14:25:49 +0000 /?p=77888 TRAC

Help the identify the worst violations of the by casting your vote for a case of withholding worthy of this dishonor.

In honor of , the FOIA Project invited six prominent experts—Charlie Savage of The New York Times, Jason Leopold of VICE News, Anne Weismann of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, David Sobel of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, Nate Jones of the National Security Archive and Chris Farrell of Justice Watch—to nominate a FOIA case they feel represents a particularly egregious example of improper withholding. They nominated cases in which government agencies either ignored or declined requests for documents on some of the most interesting and controversial topics of our time: the use of drones by the FBI in domestic surveillance, the Obama Administration’s targeted killing of American citizens abroad, the Edward Snowden leaks and others.

Which would you vote for? Check out all the case summaries and vote at . The voting opens today, on the eve of National FOI Day, and ends on the last day of Sunshine Week, Friday, March 20, when the FOIA Project will announce the “winner.” Follow the project on Twitter at #foiafail and #sunshineweek.

The FOIA Project is administered by the (TRAC), a joint research center of the and the . The project gives the public free access to information about every case in which government has been sued under the FOIA since Oct. 1, 1997—more than 27,000 documents from 8,600 district and appellate court cases. It’s updated daily, and searchable by plaintiff, defendant, location and date of suit, as well as other factors.

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TRAC Co-Founder’s Groundbreaking Investigative Books Now Available Digitally /blog/2015/01/14/trac-co-founders-groundbreaking-investigative-books-now-available-digitally-86427/ Wed, 14 Jan 2015 19:22:41 +0000 /?p=75587

More than three decades ago, Random House published “The Rise of the Computer State,” ’s prescient book that predicted how computers would soon dominate politics, economics, law enforcement and the basic thinking of the American people. Long before the revelations of Edward Snowden, the book included a chapter on the National Security Agency that Burnham described as “the ultimate computer bureaucracy.”

The cover of David Burnham's book, "The Rise of the Computer State"

The cover of David Burnham’s book, “The Rise of the Computer State”

This groundbreaking book, and two others by Burnham, have now been released in digital versions, and are available through and , as well in Apple’s ibookstore, on Google Play and on Kobo Books. Print-on-demand versions will be available starting April 7.

Burnham is the co-founder and co-director of the , a research professor at the Newhouse School and a former investigative reporter with The New York Times who served on President Lyndon Johnson’s Crime Commission.

All three books received excellent reviews when first published. The Washington Post said that in “The Rise of the Computer State,” Burnham had applied his reportorial skills “to produce a perceptive examination of the machine that is more than any other changing the nature of the world in which we live, moving us with breathtaking speed in unpredictable and not always beneficial directions.”

The book was written as a warning about the dangers of computers to privacy and freedom, as well as a call for enhanced oversight. Because this call has been largely ignored, the book still serves as a rallying cry as well as a sad history.

Burnham’s two other books now available digitally are his detailed 1991 expose of the Internal Revenue Service, “A Law Unto Itself: Power, Politics and the IRS,” and his 1996 book, “Above the Law,” which explores the “secret deals, political fixes and other misadventures” of the Justice Department.

For the IRS book, Burnham used data furnished to him by , who had collected voluminous records on the IRS as part of her research and as a result of a lengthy Freedom of Information struggle with the agency. It was the beginning of the relationship that would lead Long, a professor of managerial statistics at the , and Burnham to co-found TRAC more than 25 years ago.

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