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D. Brooks Smith
Smith in 2017
Senior Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit
Assumed office
December 4, 2021
Chief Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit
In office
October 1, 2016 – December 4, 2021
Preceded byTheodore McKee
Succeeded byMichael Chagares
Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit
In office
August 2, 2002 – December 4, 2021
Appointed byGeorge W. Bush
Preceded byTimothy K. Lewis
Succeeded byCindy K. Chung
Chief Judge of the United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania
In office
October 1, 2001 – September 23, 2002
Preceded byDonald Emil Ziegler
Succeeded byDonetta Ambrose
Judge of the United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania
In office
October 17, 1988 – September 23, 2002
Appointed byRonald Reagan
Preceded byCarol Los Mansmann
Succeeded byKim R. Gibson
Personal details
Born
David Brookman Smith

(1951-12-04) December 4, 1951 (age 72)
Altoona, Pennsylvania, U.S.
EducationFranklin & Marshall College (BA)
Dickinson School of Law (JD)

David Brookman "Brooks" Smith (born December 4, 1951)[1] is a senior judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit. He was previously Chief Judge of both the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit and the United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania, and is the only judge in the history of the Third Circuit to have served as both a chief district judge and chief of the Court of Appeals.[citation needed]

Legal career

Smith was born in Altoona, Pennsylvania. After graduating from Dickinson School of Law, Smith began his legal career in Altoona, eventually becoming managing partner of Jubelirer, Carothers, Krier, Halpern and Smith.[2] From 1977 to 1979, Smith served as an Assistant District Attorney for Blair County, Pennsylvania. Smith was later named as a special prosecutor, conducting a grand jury investigation from 1981 to 1983 into organized criminal activity in central Pennsylvania. He became Blair County's District Attorney in 1983, and in December 1984, Pennsylvania Governor Dick Thornburgh appointed Smith to a judgeship on the Court of Common Pleas of Blair County. The following year, Smith received the nominations of both the Republican and Democratic Parties for a ten-year term as judge on the same court. In 1987, Chief Justice of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court Robert N. C. Nix Jr. appointed Smith Administrative Judge of the Blair County Courts, charging him with responsibility to address that court's chronic backlog.

Federal judicial service

District court service

In 1988, President Ronald Reagan, with the advice of Senators Arlen Specter and H. John Heinz III, nominated Smith to the United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania.[3] He was confirmed by the Senate on October 14, 1988, and received his commission on October 17, 1988. He served as Chief Judge of that court from 2001 to 2002. His service as a district court judge ended on September 23, 2002 when he was elevated to the court of appeals.[4]

Court of appeals service

Smith was nominated to the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit by President George W. Bush on September 10, 2001.[5] Having been unanimously rated "well qualified" by the Standing Committee of the American Bar Association, his nomination was confirmed by the U.S. Senate on July 31, 2002. He received his commission on August 2, 2002.[4] He served as chief judge of the Third Circuit from October 1, 2016 to December 4, 2021.[6] Smith assumed senior status on December 4, 2021.[4]

Professional affiliations and activities

During his years on the federal bench, Judge Smith has served, by appointment of the Chief Justice of the United States, on five committees of the Judicial Conference of the United States, the federal judiciary's policy-making body. During his term as Chief Judge of the Third Circuit, he sat on the Conference's eight-member Executive Committee.[7] In 2013, Chief Justice John Roberts appointed Judge Smith to chair the Committee on Space and Facilities. In that capacity, he led a national space reduction initiative which was the federal judiciary's major cost containment measure. Smith was a member of the Space and Facilities Committee from 2006 until 2016. During his time on the District Court, he served for six years on the Criminal Rules Advisory Committee of the Judicial Conference, beginning in 1993. And in early 2020, Smith became one of four federal judges who were members of the Federal Judiciary's COVID-19 Task Force.[8]

After taking senior status in December 2021, Judge Smith was appointed to membership on both the Committee on Judicial Conduct and Disability and the Committee on Rules of Practice and Procedure.

He maintains membership in the American Law Institute, the Federal Judges Association and the Allegheny Bar Association.

International rule-of-law efforts

Judge Smith has assisted in efforts to enhance the rule of law in the judicial systems of Central and Eastern Europe.[9][10] He has taught in judicial training sessions in Russia for the Department of State and with the American Bar Association’s Central and Eastern European Legal Initiative; in Bulgaria, Latvia and Albania with the United States Agency for International Development (USAID); in Kosovo with the International Development Law Organization; and in Bosnia and Macedonia with the U.S. Justice Department’s Office of Overseas Prosecutorial Development, Assistance and Training.[10] In 2007, he assisted USAID with an assessment of the legal system in the Republic of the Philippines as part of that Agency’s Commercial Law and Institutional Reform initiative; participated in seven judicial ethics trainings for the USAID Judicial Development Project in Chisinau, Moldova; and addressed an International Conference “On the Impact of the European Convention on Human Rights to the Development of the Azerbaijani Legal System,” in Baku, Azerbaijan.[10] In October 2008, Judge Smith returned to Moldova to speak on “The New Judicial Ethics Code: Interpretation and Application.”[10] In 2014, as part of a USAID project in Serbia, Judge Smith delivered two training sessions for over 100 judges and judicial assistants of the Belgrade Misdemeanor Court and the Appellate Misdemeanor Court on the role of judges in a modern, independent judiciary.[11]

Judge Smith’s rule-of-law seminars and lectures in several former Soviet republics led him to conclude both that the public perception of corruption there “probably outruns the reality” but also that corruption is a serious problem. For example, high-ranking judges in one such republic invited Judge Smith into their private offices where he observed the signs of “telephone justice,” in which a powerful politician calls a judge with instructions on how to dispose of a particular case. As Judge Smith put it, “[n]o judge needs three or more telephones in his private office.”[12] The independence and public reputation of judges in developing countries also suffer, he has observed, from many judges’ practice of “speak[ing] to the media, perhaps even commenting on how a prosecutor is handling a particular case,” and from the fact that—in war-torn regions like Kosovo—autocrats may remove sitting judges and replace them with favored officials as patronage.[12]

Noteworthy rulings

Review by Supreme Court

Academic

From 2008 to 2022, Smith was an adjunct professor at Penn State Law, teaching class actions and complex litigation. In addition, he has been a speaker or a faculty member in academic programs offered by foreign law schools. He also served as a trustee for more than a decade at Saint Francis University and then for a five-year period at Mount Aloysius College.

Awards

This section of a biography of a living person does not include any references or sources. Please help by adding reliable sources. Contentious material about living people that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately.Find sources: "D. Brooks Smith" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (April 2020) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

Members of the public who enter the Weis Federal Courthouse in downtown Pittsburgh pass through the “Judge D. Brooks Smith Lobby.” [13] A special session of Court which was attended by judges of the Third Circuit and the Western District of Pennsylvania was held in Pittsburgh on April 21, 2022, to officially name the lobby.

Mount Aloysius College conferred upon Smith an honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters in 2012. In 2022, Waynesburg University awarded Smith an Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree at a commencement ceremony during which he delivered the main address.[14]

Pennsylvanians for Modern Courts presented Judge Smith with its Judge Justin Johnson Award in 2023. That award bears the name of a distinguished Pittsburgh legal practitioner who, in 1980 became only the second African American to be appointed to Pennsylvania’s Superior Court. [15]

Smith has been named an Alumni Fellow by the Penn State Alumni Association, and in 2017 was given the Distinguished Alumni Award, the highest honor bestowed by Penn State on an alumnus. [16] Penn State Law presented Judge Smith its first ever Leadership Award in 2016. And in 1996, the Blair and Bedford County Central Labor Council named Smith its person of the year.

For his work as one of a two-prosecutor team investigating organized crime in Central Pennsylvania in the early 1980s, Smith received a commendation from the Commissioner of the Pennsylvania State Police which called him the investigation's "legal shepherd."

References

  1. ^ Confirmation Hearings on Federal Appointments: Hearings before the Committee on the Judiciary, United States Senate, One Hundredth Congress, First Session, Part 9. U.S. Government Printing Office. 1989. p. 530.
  2. ^ "Judge D. Brooks Smith '76 celebrates 25 years on the bench". Penn State Law. October 30, 2013. Retrieved 27 August 2021.
  3. ^ Pres. Nom. 1,260, 100th Cong. (1988).
  4. ^ a b c D. Brooks Smith at the Biographical Directory of Federal Judges, a publication of the Federal Judicial Center.
  5. ^ Pres. Nom. 1,005, 107th Cong. (2002).
  6. ^ "Press Release: "JUDGE SMITH TO SUCCEED CHIEF JUDGE McKEE AS CHIEF JUDGE OF THE THIRD CIRCUIT", United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, September 30, 2016" (PDF).
  7. ^ "Judicial Conference of the United States" (PDF). Washington, D.C.: Judicial Conference of the United States. February 2021. Retrieved March 4, 2021.
  8. ^ COVID-19 (coronavirus) Judiciary Task Force Composition, COVID-19 Judiciary Task Force Hub (last updated 2020-03-17), https://covid-19-judiciary-tf-aousc.hub.arcgis.com/pages/judiciary-task-force
  9. ^ Judge D. Brooks Smith '76 celebrates 25 years on the bench, Penn State Law (Oct. 30, 2013), https://pennstatelaw.psu.edu/news/judge-d-brooks-smith-76-celebrates-25-years-bench
  10. ^ a b c d Judge D. Brooks Smith, "An Independent Judiciary: If You Can Keep It, University of Chicago Law School (May 29, 2013), https://www.law.uchicago.edu/recordings/judge-d-brooks-smith-independent-judiciary-if-you-can-keep-it
  11. ^ USAID, Judicial Reform and Government Accountability Project, Annual Report – Year 3 at p.42, https://pdf.usaid.gov/pdf_docs/PA00K2MV.pdf
  12. ^ a b D. Brooks Smith, Promoting the Rule of law and Respecting the Separation of Powers: The Legitimate Role of the American Judiciary Abroad, 7 Ave Maria L. Rev. 1, 10 (2008)
  13. ^ https://www.altoonamirror.com/znewsletter-sunday/2021/12/lobby-to-be-named-for-smith-2/ (Dec. 26, 2021).
  14. ^ https://www.waynesburg.edu/news/smith-west-ziemba-honored-waynesburg-u-commencement (last visited December 5, 2023).
  15. ^ See https://www.pmconline.org/resources/spring-action-benefit-2022#:~text+{%3CC%20presented%20the%Judge%Justin,%20October%20%202016%20and%20and%20December%202021 (last visited December 5, 2023).
  16. ^ https://pennstatelaw.psu.edu/news/penn-state-names-smith-distinguished-alumnus (last visited December 5, 2023).