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Saturday, 09/03/2022 7:29:52 PM

Saturday, September 03, 2022 7:29:52 PM

Post# of 796047
Judge Lamberth is old school. There can be no denying that. If I were Gov, I'd be afraid, very afraid of this guy.

Who is Royce Lamberth?

Alexander C. Hart
August 23, 2010

U.S. District Court Judge Royce Lamberth made headlines yesterday for ruling that President Obama’s program providing funding for embryonic-stem-cell research is illegal. Here are four things you should know:

1. He’s a long-time public servant: Lamberth got his bachelor’s and law degrees from the University of Texas and then spent the next six years in the Army JAG Corps. From 1974 to 1987, he was the Assistant U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia and led its civil division from 1978 to 1987, when President Reagan appointed him to the D.C. U.S. District Court. In 2008, he became the court’s chief judge.


2. He earned a strong reputation opposing the Clintons: In 1997, he fined the government more than $285,000 because Ira Magaziner, a top healthcare advisor, lied about the composition of a task force. The fine was overturned on appeal in 1999. Lamberth also “allowed Judicial Watch bulldog Larry Klayman to depose everyone from George Stephanopoulos to famous fundraiser John Huang in suits against the administration that most judges would probably have thrown out as frivolous,” according to Washington Monthly.


3. He doesn’t just pick on Democrats: From 1996 through 2006, Lamberth presided over a class action lawsuit by Native Americans alleging the government had mismanaged billions of dollars in trust-fund money. Lamberth “consistently sided with the Indians” and held Bush Interior Secretary Gale Norton (and Clinton-era Interior chief Bruce Babbitt) in contempt of court, the New York Times reported. In 2006, an appeals panel removed him from the case for losing his impartiality, citing, among other things, a 2005 ruling that labeled Interior “a dinosaur -- the morally and culturally oblivious hand-me-down of a disgracefully racist and imperialist government that should have been buried a century ago.”

4. He’s had a hand in many major legal opinions: He served as the top judge on the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, a classified court that makes rulings interpreting intelligence law, from 1995 to 2002. In his position on the U.S. District Court, he’s been involved in cases assessing the legality of holding various prisoners in Guantánamo Bay. And Lamberth was one of the three judges initially involved in the Citizens United case. They ruled against Citizens United, holding that their documentary about Hillary Clinton illegally violated restrictions on election advertising; on appeal, the Supreme Court ruled the restrictions unconstitutional.

https://newrepublic.com/article/77203/who-royce-lamberth








Royce Lamberth steps down from court post; outspoken on government incompetence


Outgoing Chief Judge Royce Lamberth sheds a tear during a ceremony honoring him for his service at the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia on Monday in Washington. (Ricky Carioti/The Washington Post)

By Ann E. Marimow and Carol D. Leonnig
July 16, 2013

He’s thrown D.C. corrections officials in jail, held Cabinet secretaries in contempt and threatened to cover a defendant’s mouth with duct tape. He called a federal agency a dinosaur and city officials bullheaded.

Royce C. Lamberth, a shoot-from-the-hip Texan known for taking a hard line against what he sees as government incompetence, formally stepped down Tuesday as chief judge of the District’s federal court.

Lamberth is also known as a genial giant of a public servant, a trusted adviser, and a friend to an extensive network of lawyers, judges and clerks from all corners of the city’s legal community. He plays poker with conservatives on the Supreme Court, including Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr., and he counts the District’s longtime federal public defender, A.J. Kramer, as a close friend.


And since his appointment to the bench by President Ronald Reagan in 1987, Lamberth has had a hand in a long list of cases of national significance. He oversaw the controversial Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, and he has ruled on the treatment of Guantanamo Bay detainees and the funding of human embryonic stem cell research.

Lamberth, who turned 70 on Tuesday, was required to resign because of his age. After five years as chief, he passed the gavel to U.S. District Judge Richard W. Roberts, who told Lamberth that he had “left some Texas-sized shoes to fill.”

His “low tolerance for incompetence,” as his administrative assistant Sheldon Snook put it, comes in part from the importance he places on the role of government service.


Lamberth, the valedictorian at his San Antonio high school, came to Washington during college, where he worked summer nights as a Howard Johnson’s waiter and spent his days dropping in on congressional hearings. He served in Vietnam in the Judge Advocate General’s corps and led the civil division of the District’s U.S. attorney’s office for nine years.

On the bench, he quickly developed a reputation for sending strong messages.

In the 1990s, he jailed two city prison officials after finding that they had retaliated against a female guard who had complained about sexual harassment. The officials had acted “arrogantly” and “bullheadedly,” he said.


In the waning days of President Bill Clinton’s administration, Lamberth faulted the Environmental Protection Agency, then headed by Carol Browner, for “egregious” inattention when it disregarded his order to retain records on new environmental rules.

U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson made light of Lamberth’s use of his contempt powers when she belted out a parody of the tune “My Way” at his celebration.

In recent days, as his transition approached, Lamberth has made a point to defend the FISA court, which has been criticized because it rarely rejects the government’s private requests for electronic surveillance.

“These are the kinds of things we should be doing to protect our country,” he said. “We have to rely on electronic surveillance to find out what the enemy is up to.


“No one calls me a rubber stamp for the government,” he said.

In fact, Lamberth challenged the Bush administration before his term leading the secret court expired in 2002, saying that the government misled the court dozens of times in applications for search warrants and wiretaps. He also rejected the Justice Department’s request for new powers.

Even after he left the FISA court, Lamberth’s colleagues sought his counsel. When Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly took over as chief in 2002, she was given a classified briefing on President George W. Bush’s secret and warrantless surveillance program and was instructed by the National Security Agency’s director not to discuss the program with fellow judges.


Kollar-Kotelly insisted that she be allowed to consult with Lamberth, according to two people familiar with her request. The administration agreed that she could, according to an unredacted version of the NSA inspector general’s report.

Lamberth’s straight talk has gotten him in trouble. His frustration with the Interior Department’s failure to properly account for money long owed to Native Americans prompted him to hold two Cabinet secretaries in contempt and order sanctions against agency lawyers.

He compared the department to a dinosaur and called it “the morally and culturally oblivious hand-me-down of a disgracefully racist and imperialist government.”


His language was so strong that Lamberth was taken off the case by an appeals court in 2005, after the Justice Department took the unusual step of requesting his removal.

In retrospect, Lamberth said he regrets what he described as his “intemperate” language. But he added that just because the appeals court’s decision was final, “it doesn’t mean they are right.”

At the insistence of his wife, Janis, Lamberth cleared piles of court papers from his desk in preparation for his transition to a senior judge, in which he will take a reduced caseload. He’ll also spend two months of the year hearing cases in San Antonio.

Lamberth’s sly sense of humor created a minor stir Monday when he reminded well-wishers that he was rejoining the court’s rotation for case assignments. Lamberth closed his remarks by joking about the possibility of a federal case against Mayor Vincent C. Gray (D).


“I could draw anything, including the mayor,” he said.

With the audience chuckling, Lamberth added: “Oops — I don’t know anything about that.”

At Lamberth’s celebration was U.S. Attorney Ronald C. Machen Jr., who has been investigating an alleged off-the-books shadow campaign for Gray by D.C. businessman Jeffrey E. Thompson. Neither Thompson nor Gray has been charged.

When asked to comment on Lamberth’s joke, Machen gave a smile but declined.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/royce-lamberth-steps-down-from-court-post-outspoken-on-government-incompetence/2013/07/16/831b4f2a-ee10-11e2-bed3-b9b6fe264871_story.html



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