Fifty years after Gideon v. Wainwright, a woman who dedicated her career to the federal public defender’s office, and likely passed on many more lucrative paths, has just been unanimously confirmed to the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals. According to the Gazette, she is just the second woman and first public defender to serve in the history of the 122-year-old court.

Instead, after a brief stint teaching at the University of Illinois College of Law, she helped found the Cedar Rapids Federal Public Defender’s Office in 1994. She has held the position of supervising attorney at that office since 1999.

In honor of her appointment, the Des Moines Register republished a profile they did of her in 2004, when she was the unanimous recipient of the John Adams Award from the Iowa Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers and Drake University Law School. Judge Michael Melloy, who she’ll be replacing, spoke at the award ceremony and called her “a consummate professional” who “puts her heart and soul into every case.”

During her acceptance speech, she joked that she couldn’t remember a time when she didn’t know how to make meth. Lets hope that sense of humor carries over into her court opinions.

Related Resources:

  • Jane Kelly (Judgepedia)
  • 9th Circuit: Final L.A. Dist. Court Vacancy Filled by O’Connell (Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals)
  • Gregory Phillips Up for 10th Cir: the Power of Law School Friends (Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals)

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