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Malcolm Wilkey

From Ballotpedia
Malcolm Wilkey
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Nonpartisan
Prior offices:
United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit
Years in office: 1984 - 1985

Years in office: 1970 - 1984
Education
Bachelor's
Harvard University, 1940
Law
Harvard Law School, 1948
Personal
Birthplace
Murfreesboro, TN


Malcolm Richard Wilkey was afederal judge on theUnited States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit from 1970 to 1985. He retired from the federal judiciary in 1985 to take up a position as U.S. Ambassador to Uruguay.[1]

Wilkey was nominated by PresidentRichard Nixon on February 16, 1970, to a seat vacated by JudgeWarren Burger. He was confirmed by the Senate on February 24, 1970, and received commission thenext day. He assumedsenior status onDecember 6, 1984, and served in that capacity until his retirement onNovember 8, 1985.

OnAugust 15, 2009, Wilkey died at age 90 from a battle with prostate cancer.[2]

Education

  • Harvard University, A.B., 1940
  • Harvard Law School, LL.B., 1948

Military service

Wilkey served in the United States Army from 1941 to 1953. From 1941 to 1945, he was a Major, and from 1946 to 1953, a Lieutenant Colonel.

Professional career

  • 1989: Chairman, Commission on Federal Ethics Law Reform
  • 1985-1990: Ambassador to Uruguay
  • 1963-1970: General counsel and secretary, Kennecott Copper Corporation
  • 1961-1963: Attorney in private practice
  • 1959-1961: Assistant attorney general, Criminal Division,United States Department of Justice
  • 1958-1959: Assistant attorney general, Office of Legal Affairs, U.S. Department of Justice
  • 1954-1958: U.S. Attorney,Southern District of Texas
  • 1949-1954: Instructor, University of Houston School of Law
  • 1948-1954: Attorney in private practice[3]

Publications

Wilkey published a memoir,As the Twig is Bent, in 2004. A review of the book describes it as the story of how Wilkey "rose from a depression-era southern boyhood to the battles of World War II, high offices in Washington, the U.S. ambassadorship to Uruguay, and now an active retirement, still serving his country, in Chile. A delightful, informed, opinionated recounting of landmarks in the history of a nation and in the life of a patriotic American."[4]

House banking scandal

In 1992, Wilkey was appointed to conduct a special Justice Department investigation of the 329 members of the U.S. House of Representatives who had overdrafts in the bank during a 39-month period that ended in October 1991. Wilkey's report on the House banking scandal concluded that there was possible criminal conduct by a small number of members and resulted in the immediate establishment of a special prosecution unit in the Justice Department to conduct a more complete investigation.[5]

Henry Gonzalez, a Democratic member of the U.S. Congress, petitioned Chief JusticeWilliam Rehnquist, without success, to halt Wilkey's invesigation.[6] Then U.S. House Speaker Tom Foley also resisted the release of records to Wilkey, without success.[7]

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)  •  


Richard Nixon
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Federal judges nominated byRichard Nixon
1969

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1970

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1971

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Young
1972

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1973

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1974

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