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Judith Rogers

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Judith Rogers
United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit
Tenure
2022 - Present
Years in position
3
Prior offices:
United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit
Years in office: 1994 - 2022
Predecessor:Clarence Thomas (Nonpartisan)
Successor:Bradley Garcia (Nonpartisan)
Education
Bachelor's
Radcliffe College, 1961
Law
Harvard Law, 1964
Graduate
University of Virginia School of Law, 1988
Personal
Birthplace
New York, NY

Judith Ann Wilson Rogers is a judge onsenior status with theUnited States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. She joined the Court in 1994 after being nominated by former President Bill Clinton (D). Rogers assumedsenior status on September 1, 2022.[1]

Bradley Garcia was nominated by PresidentJoe Biden to replace Rogers on theUnited States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.

Biography

Education

Rogers graduated from Radcliffe College with her bachelor's degree in 1961 and later received aBachelor of Laws from Harvard Law School in 1964. Rogers received herMaster of Laws degree from the University of Virginia School of Law in 1988.[2]

Professional career

Judicial career

D.C. Circuit

On the recommendation of the at-large Congressional delegation for the District of Columbia, Rogers was nominated to theUnited States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit by former PresidentBill Clinton on November 17, 1993, to a seat vacated byClarence Thomas. Thomas had been appointed to serve as an associate justice of theSupreme Court of the United States. Rogers was confirmed by theSenate on March 10, 1994, on a Senate voice vote and received her commission on March 11, 1994.[3]

Noteworthy cases

SCOTUS to hear case challengingChevron deference (2023)

The U.S. Supreme Court on May 1, 2023, agreed to hearLoper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo—a case that could clarify the court’s approach toChevron deference.[4]

Commercial fishermen in the case appealed an August 2022 ruling from a divided panel of theUnited States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit that appliedChevron deference to uphold the National Marine Fisheries Service’s (NMFS) interpretation of a federal fishery law allowing the use of compliance monitors on certain fishing boats. While the federal law is silent on who must pay for the use of such monitors, the judges deferred to the NMFS’ interpretation of the statute requiring fishermen to pay costs for the use of compliance monitors. “Although the Act may not unambiguously resolve whether the Service can require industry-funded monitoring,” wrote Judge Judith Rogers in the opinion, “the Service's interpretation of the Act as allowing it to do so is reasonable.”[4][5]

The fisherman appealed the ruling to the U.S. Supreme Court, arguing that the D.C. Circuit’s decision “perceives ambiguity in statutory silence, where the logical explanation for the statutory silence is that Congress did not intend to grant the agency such a dangerous and uncabined authority.” The fishermen further urged the U.S. Supreme Court to reconsider its approach toChevron deference, stating, “Whether by clarifying Chevron or overruling it, this Court should grant review and reverse the clear agency overreach at issue here.”[6]

Affordable Care Act enactment process was constitutional (2014)

In late July 2014, theD.C. Circuit dismissed a case challenging Affordable Care Act based on how it was enacted. The plaintiffs,Pacific Legal Foundation, made their challenge based on the constitutional requirement that all revenue bills originate in theU.S. House of Representatives. In the case of theAffordable Care Act, theSenate took a House bill, kept its number, but removed everything else and inserted its own bill.

The three-judge panel, consisting of Judges Rogers,Robert Leon Wilkins, andCornelia T. L. Pillard, decided that, at its heart, the law is not intended to be a tax, but instead was meant to promote the purchase of health insurance and decrease the number of uninsured people in the nation. The judges noted that while there was a tax penalty for not obtaining health insurance, the panel held that the penalty was secondary to the true intent of the law.

Articles:

See also

External links

Footnotes


US-CourtOfAppeals-DCCircuit-Seal.png
v  e
Federal judges who have served theU.S. Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit
Active judges

Chief JudgeSrikanth Srinivasan  •  Karen Henderson  •  J. Michelle Childs  •  Florence Pan  •  Robert Leon Wilkins  •  Patricia Ann Millett  •  Cornelia T. L. Pillard  •  Greg Katsas  •  Neomi Rao  •  Justin Walker (U.S. Court of Appeals)  •  Bradley Garcia

Senior judges

David Sentelle  •  Douglas Ginsburg  •  David Tatel  •  Harry Edwards  •  Arthur Randolph  •  

Former judgesWilliam Cranch  •  James Markham Marshall  •  Allen Bowie Duckett  •  Nicholas Battalle Fitzhugh  •  William Kilty  •  James Sewall Morsell  •  Buckner Thruston  •  James Dunlop  •  William Matthew Merrick  •  Richard Henry Alvey  •  Martin Ferdinand Morris  •  Seth Shepard  •  Louis Emory McComas  •  Charles Holland Duell  •  Charles Henry Robb  •  Josiah Alexander Van Orsdel  •  William Hitz  •  Constantine Joseph Smyth  •  Duncan Groner  •  George Ewing Martin  •  James McPherson Proctor (Federal judge)  •  Harold Montelle Stephens  •  Henry Edgerton  •  Justin Miller (D.C. Circuit)  •  Stephen F. Williams  •  Janice Rogers Brown  •  Merrick Garland  •  Thomas Griffith  •  Brett Kavanaugh  •  Laurence Silberman  •  Walter Bastian  •  Edward Tamm  •  Spottswood Robinson  •  Thurman Arnold  •  Bennett Clark  •  Wilbur Miller  •  David Bazelon  •  Robert Bork  •  John Danaher  •  Charles Fahy  •  George MacKinnon  •  Carl McGowan  •  Abner Mikva  •  Elijah Prettyman  •  Roger Robb  •  Kenneth Starr  •  Patricia Wald  •  George Thomas Washington (Federal judge)  •  Malcolm Wilkey  •  George Edward MacKinnon  •  Ketanji Brown Jackson  •  James Wright (Louisiana)  •  
Former Chief judges

William Cranch  •  Richard Henry Alvey  •  Seth Shepard  •  Constantine Joseph Smyth  •  Duncan Groner  •  George Ewing Martin  •  Harold Montelle Stephens  •  Henry Edgerton  •  David Sentelle  •  Merrick Garland  •  Douglas Ginsburg  •  Harry Edwards  •  Spottswood Robinson  •  Wilbur Miller  •  David Bazelon  •  Carl McGowan  •  Abner Mikva  •  Elijah Prettyman  •  Patricia Wald  •  James Wright (Louisiana)  •  


Bill Clinton
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Federal judges nominated byBill Clinton
1993

AdamsAmbroseBarnesBrinkemaBucklewChasanowCoffmanDaughtreyFergusonGinsburgHagenJacksonLancasterLevalLindsayMessitteMichaelPiersolSarisSchwartzSeybertShanahanShawStearnsTragerVazquezWilkenWilson

1994

BaerBarkettBattsBeatyBenavidesBennettBerriganBieryBlockBormanBreyerBrionesBrysonBuckloBurgessBurrageCabranesCalabresiCarrCasellasCastilloChatignyChinCindrichCoarCollinsCooperCoteCurrieDavisDominguezDownesDuvalFriedmanFurgesonGarciaGertnerGettlemanGillmorGilmoreGleesonHaggertyHamiltonHannahHawkinsHenryHolmesHoodHullHurleyJackJonesJonesKaplanKatzKernKesslerKoeltlLisiManningMcKeeMcLaughlinMelanconMiles-LaGrangeMooreMotzMurphyO'MalleyO'MearaOliverPaezB. ParkerF. ParkerR. ParkerPerryPonsorPoolerPorteousRendell • Riley •RobertsonRogersRossRussellSandsSarokinScheindlinSilverSquatritoStewartSullivanTatelThompsonTimlinUrbinaVanaskieVanceWallsWellsWilliams

1995

ArtertonAtlasBlackBlakeBriscoeTena CampbellTodd CampbellChesneyColeCollierDanielDavisDennisDlottDonaldDuffyEconomusEvansFallonFolsomGaughanGoodwinHeartfieldHuntIllstonJonesKingKornmannLawsonLenardLuceroLynchMcKinleyMoodyMooreMoskowitzMurphyMurthaNugentO'TooleOrlofskyPogueSessionsC. SmithO. SmithSteinThornburgTunheimWallachWardlawWebberWhaleyWinmill

Wood
1996

BroadwaterClevertFennerGershonGottschallGreenawayHinkleJonesKahnLaughreyLemmonMartenMillerMolloyMontgomeryPregersonRakoffSargusTashimaThomasZapata

1997

AdelmanBataillonBreyerCaputoCaseyChambersClayDamrellDroneyFriedmanGajarsaGarlandGilmanGoldGwinHallHaydenHullIshiiJenkinsKauffmanKennedyKimballKollar-KotellyLazzaraMarbleyMarcusMiddlebrooksMillerMoonPrattRendellSippelSiragusaSnyderThrash

1998

AikenBarbierBarzilayBermanButtramCarterCollinsDawsonDimitrouleasFletcherFogelFrankGraberHellersteinHerndonJamesJohnsonKaneKellyG. KingR. KingLasnikLeeLemelleLindsayLipezManellaMatzMcCuskeyMcKeownMcMahonMickleMollwayMordueMorenoMorrowMunleyMurphyPallmeyerPauleyPolsterPoolerRawlinsonRidgwayR. RobertsV. RobertsSackScottSeitzSeymourSheaSilvermanSleetSotomayorSteehStoryStraubTagleTarnowTraugerTraxlerTysonWardlawWhelanYoung

1999

AlsupBarryBrownBuchwaldCooperEatonEllisonFeessFisherGouldGuzmanHaynesHibblerHochbergHurdHuvelleJordanKatzmannKennellyLinnLorenzLynnMarreroMurguiaPannellPechmanPepperPhillipsSchreierStewartUnderhillWardWilliamsWilson

2000

AmbroAntoonBattaniBerzonBoltonBradyByeCavanaughDanielsDarrahDawsonDykFuentesGaraufisGarcia-GregoryHamiltonHuckHuntLawsonLefkowLynchMartinMcLaughlinMoodyMurguiaPaezPisanoPresnellRawlinsonReaganSchillerSingalSteeleSurrickSwainTallmanTeilborgTuckerWhittemore

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[Category:Judge on senior status, DC Circuit]]