Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) told reporters Thursday that he still hopes to confirm someone to lead the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel. His comments came after Dawn Johnsen withdrew her nomination to the post last week after it had been stalled in the Senate for more than a year.

Patrick Leahy (Getty Images)
Leahy said he was surprised by Johnsen’s withdrawal, which came after more than a year of criticism from Republicans because of her pro-abortion rights stance and her opposition to Bush administration national security policies.
He said the Senate should have held a floor vote on her nomination. And he said the Senate should confirm President Barack Obama’s next nominee for the elite office that assesses the constitutionality and legality of government actions.
“We darn well better [confirm someone] because it is one of the most important positions in government,” Leahy said.
The Office of Legal Counsel has not had a Senate-confirmed head since Jack Goldsmith left it in 2004. He was replaced with an acting head until President George W. Bush nominated Steven G. Bradbury to the post in June 2005. The Senate Judiciary Committee approved his nomination, but the full Senate never brought up his nomination for a floor vote. Bradbury continued to serve as acting head until the end of the Bush administration. David J. Barron is currently the acting head of the office.
Johnsen was initially nominated to head the office on Feb. 11, 2009. The Senate Judiciary Committee endorsed her on an 11-7 vote on March, 19, 2009, with then-Republican Sen. Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania voting “pass.” Her nomination languished in the Senate for more than nine months before it was returned to the White House in December. Obama re-nominated her in January of 2010 and the Judiciary panel once again sent the nomination to the Senate floor by a 12-7 party-line tally on March 4. There were no overt moves to bring the nomination to a vote.
“People have to put their lives on hold during this nomination process,” Leahy said. “And when the nomination process takes forever, at some point they will say it’s not worth it.”
The OLC came under fire during the Bush administration for authorizing the use of harsh interrogation techniques against terrorism suspects.
A DOJ Office of Professional Responsibility report released in February cleared former OLC officials John Yoo and Jay Bybee of any misconduct in authoring the memos on the techniques. DOJ veteran David Margolis said in the report that they only showed “poor judgment.”
“I would like to bring somebody in there who can restore the credibility of [OLC],” Leahy said.
President Barack Obama’s Justice Department Office of Legal Counsel nominee Dawn Johnsen withdrew her nomination Friday.
Here is the full statement from Marge Baker, executive vice president at People For the American Way, a liberal advocacy group.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: Drew Courtney or Josh Glasstetter
Dawn Johnsen Nomination Withdrawn
Dawn Johnsen, President Obama’s pick to lead the Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) withdrew her nomination for the position today. Professor Johnsen was nominated more than a year ago and was twice approved by the Senate Judiciary Committee, but never received a vote by the full Senate.
Marge Baker, Executive Vice President at People For the American Way, issued the following statement.
“This is deeply disappointing and a clear defeat for the rule of law. Dawn Johnsen is eminently qualified to lead the Office of Legal Counsel, and would have served the nation well.
“Professor Johnsen received support from across the ideological spectrum, including endorsements from officials representing every Presidential administration since Gerald Ford’s. She had the bipartisan support from her home state senators, and even served as acting head of the OLC under President Clinton, but Republicans were able to block her nomination simply by declaring it to be controversial.
“Dawn Johnsen’s only offenses were to stand up against illegal torture under the Bush administration and to defend a woman’s right to choose. Her criticisms of the Bush-era OLC have been echoed by legal scholars of both parties and by the Justice Department’s own internal investigations. And a belief in the Constitutional right to reproductive freedom isn’t just mainstream: it’s the law of the land.
“There was never any serious question that Professor Johnsen had the intellect, the experience and the integrity for this position. Especially when nominees face the kind of baseless attacks that were leveled at Dawn Johnsen, it’s important for the Administration to set the record straight. Make no mistake about it; this is the result of the unchecked, reckless obstruction of the GOP.”
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President Barack Obama’s Justice Department Office of Legal Counsel nominee Dawn Johnsen withdrew her nomination Friday.
Here is the full statement from Sen. Jeff Sessions of Alabama, the ranking Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee.
April 9, 2010
For Immediate Release
Contact: Stephen Miller or Stephen Boyd
Sessions Responds to the Withdrawal of Controversial DOJ Nominee Dawn Johnsen
WASHINGTON—U.S. Senator Jeff Sessions (R-AL), Ranking Member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, made the following comments today after it was announced that the nomination of Dawn Johnson, President Obama’s controversial pick to be the Assistant Attorney General for the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel, would be withdrawn:
“I am pleased that the President has heeded the concerns raised by many who care deeply about the Department of Justice regarding the nomination of Dawn Johnsen. Ms. Johnsen’s record of partisanship and her long history of extreme views and troubling activism relating to issues such as abortion and national security made her an unacceptable choice to fill this crucial role in the Department of Justice. It is not surprising that the Democrat-controlled Senate never made an effort to bring her nomination to a vote on the floor:. Had they done so, the nomination certainly would have faced bipartisan opposition. The Office of Legal Counsel has a significant legal role in the war on terror, and it is my sincere hope that the President will nominate someone who is prepared to vigorously defend the military’s legitimate actions in the fight against terrorism.”
[Note: To view a January 13 letter, sent by all seven Judiciary Committee Republicans, asking for a new hearing in light of Ms. Johnson’s troubling record on national security, please click here. To view comments from all committee Republicans, dated March 4, detailing their concerns after Dawn Johnsen was reported out of the Judiciary Committee, please click here.]
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President Barack Obama’s Justice Department Office of Legal Counsel nominee Dawn Johnsen withdrew her nomination Friday.
Here are statements issued on Friday by Johnsen and White House spokesman Ben LaBolt.
Statement from Johnsen:
“I am deeply honored that President Obama, the Attorney General and a strong majority of the U.S. Senate have demonstrated faith and confidence in my ability to lead the Office of Legal Counsel. OLC plays a critical role in upholding the rule of law and must provide advice unvarnished by politics or partisan ambition. That was my guiding principle when I had the privilege to lead OLC in a past administration. Restoring OLC to its best nonpartisan traditions was my primary objective for my anticipated service in this administration. Unfortunately, my nomination has met with lengthy delays and political opposition that threaten that objective and prevent OLC from functioning at full strength. I hope that the withdrawal of my nomination will allow this important office to be filled promptly.”
Statement from LaBolt:
“The President accepted Professor Johnsen’s request today to withdraw her nomination. In selecting Dawn Johnsen, the President nominated a highly-respected constitutional scholar who previously served for 5 years at the Office of Legal Counsel. Her credentials are exemplary and her commitment to the rule of law has been proven time and again, but it is now clear that Senate Republicans will not allow her to be confirmed. After years of politicization of the Office during the previous administration, the President believes it is time for the Senate to move beyond politics and allow the Office of Legal Counsel to serve the role it was intended to – to provide impartial legal advice and constitutional analysis to the executive branch. He will work now to identify a replacement and call on the Senate to move swiftly to confirm that nominee in order to achieve those goals.”
President Barack Obama’s nominee to head the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel withdrew her nomination Friday.

Dawn Johnsen (Getty Images)
Dawn Johnsen has faced immense criticism from Republicans because of her pro-abortion rights stance and her opposition to Bush administration national security policies.
“Restoring OLC to its best nonpartisan traditions was my primary objective for my anticipated service in this administration,” Johnsen said in a statement. “Unfortunately, my nomination has met with lengthy delays and political opposition that threaten that objective and prevent OLC from functioning at full strength. I hope that the withdrawal of my nomination will allow this important office to be filled promptly.”
White House spokesman Ben LaBolt praised Johnsen for her credentials as a law professor at University of Indiana and her time spent in the OLC during the Clinton administration. But he said it was “clear that Senate Republicans will not allow her to be confirmed.”
“After years of politicization of the Office during the previous administration, the President believes it is time for the Senate to move beyond politics and allow the Office of Legal Counsel to serve the role it was intended to – to provide impartial legal advice and constitutional analysis to the executive branch,” LaBolt said in a statement. “He will work now to identify a replacement and call on the Senate to move swiftly to confirm that nominee in order to achieve those goals.”
Johnsen’s nomination was sent to the Senate floor by the Judiciary Committee on March 4 along a party-line vote.
It was the second time she was reported out of committee on a party-line vote. The panel first moved her out of committee by an 11-7 vote on March 19, 2009, with then-Republican Sen. Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania voting “pass.” Her nomination languished in the Senate for more than nine months before it was returned to the White House in December. Obama re-nominated her in January.
“It is not surprising that the Democrat-controlled Senate never made an effort to bring her nomination to a vote on the floor,” Sen. Jeff Sessions of Alabama, the ranking Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee, said in a statement. “Had they done so, the nomination certainly would have faced bipartisan opposition.”
Sen. Charles Grassley (R-Iowa), a Senate Judiciary Committee member, wrote on Twitter Friday that Johnsen’s ideology was “far out” on the left.
“Thankfully the President has finally seen wisdom of withdrawing Dawn Johnson nomination for DOJ,” Grassley wrote.
Marge Baker, executive vice president at People For the American Way, a liberal advocacy group, said Johnsen’s withdrawal was a “clear defeat for the rule of law.”
“There was never any serious question that Professor Johnsen had the intellect, the experience and the integrity for this position,” Baker said in a statement. She added: “Make no mistake about it; this is the result of the unchecked, reckless obstruction of the GOP.”
The OLC is the elite DOJ office that assesses the constitutionality and legality of government actions. The office came under fire during the Bush administration for authorizing the use of harsh interrogation techniques against terrorism suspects.
A DOJ report released in February cleared former OLC officials John Yoo and Jay Bybee of any misconduct in authoring the “torture” memos on the techniques. DOJ veteran David Margolis said in the report that they only showed “poor judgment.”
UPDATED: 10:40 p.m.
Fox News Channel’s conservative pundit Sean Hannity has included Justice Department Office of Legal Counsel nominee Dawn Johnsen in his list of President Barack “Obama’s New Radical Friends,” found in the second chapter of his new book.

Dawn Johnsen (Indiana University)
Johnsen is the final “friend” named on the 15-person list included in Hannity’s book “Conservative Victory: Defeating Obama’s Radical Agenda,” which was released Tuesday. Hannity, like other conservatives, is unhappy with Johnsen’s pro-abortion views and her opposition to Bush administration terrorism policies.
The OLC nominee’s compatriots on the Hannity list include such Obama associates as advisers Valerie Jarrett and David Axelrod. See the full list here from U.S. News and World Report’s Washington Whispers blog, which also reviewed the book.
“The truth about him and his inner circle is stranger than fiction,” Hannity wrote in his book. “He couldn’t be more of a Manchurian candidate if he were auditioning for a role in the movie. This stuff is just too bizarre for most Americans to process: An actual Marxist in the White House who has surrounded himself with like-minded miscreants.”
Johnsen’s nomination was sent to the Senate floor by the Judiciary Committee on March 4 along a party-line vote.
It was the second time she was reported out of committee on a party-line vote. The panel first moved her out of committee by a 11-7 vote on March 19, 2009, with then-Republican Sen. Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania voting “pass.” Her nomination languished in the Senate for more than nine months before it was returned to the White House in December. Obama re-nominated her in January.
Former Justice Department Office of Legal Counsel official John Yoo told The Los Angeles Times in a report published Monday that he relishes being a conservative law professor in “the People’s Republic of Berkeley.”

John Yoo (Getty Images)
Yoo, who is a tenured professor at University of California, Berkeley, teaches a constitutional law course and seminar at the predominantly liberal university. He has often been the target of protests around campus for his role in drafting the George W. Bush administration’s so-called “torture memos,” which authorized harsh interrogation methods against terrorism suspects.
“I think of myself as being West Berlin during the Cold War, a shining beacon of capitalism and democracy surrounded by a sea of Marxism,” Yoo told the newspaper.
A Justice Department report released last month cleared Yoo of any misconduct in authoring the memos. DOJ veteran David Margolis said in the report that Yoo only showed “poor judgment.”
Christopher Edley, the law school’s dean, has faced pressure from Yoo’s critics to fire the tenured professor ever since the memos were released last year. The dean dismissed the possibility of taking action against Yoo after the DOJ report was released last month.
“I hope these new developments will end the arguments about faculty sanctions, but we should and will continue to argue about what is right or wrong, legal or illegal, in combating terrorism. That’s why we are here,” Edley said in a statement, according to the L.A. Times.
Although Yoo told the newspaper he might be tempted to return to public service if a Republican becomes president, he said he likes working at a college campus and bringing a new perspective into the discussion.
“Then [my law students] can always say, ‘I’ve met a conservative.’ They can tell their family and friends,” Yoo told the L.A. Times.
Justice Department Office of Legal Counsel nominee Dawn Johnsen played a role in the hiring of political appointees to the office, according to Attorney General Eric Holder’s written responses to questions posed by senators. The questions were sent by members of the Senate Judiciary Committee after a Nov. 18, 2009, oversight hearing with Holder and his responses were released Monday.

Dawn Johnsen (Indiana University)
In a question about Johnsen, Sen. Jeff Sessions of Alabama, the panel’s ranking Republican, said he thought Johnsen’s involvement in personnel decisions was “inappropriate” because she has not been confirmed by the Senate. Holder disagreed.
“Professor Johnsen’s participation in this process has been appropriate and consistent with the past practice of presidential nominees of both parties,” Holder wrote in response to Sessions. (Holder’s comments on Johnsen can be found on page 35 of the 120-page document.)
Johnsen, an Indiana University law professor, was engaged in the review of political appointees who would be her deputies if she were confirmed, Holder said. But she was not closely involved in the hiring of career attorneys, only occasionally forwarding resumes to the appropriate DOJ officials and sometimes including comments on those applicants, he said. The OLC nominee did not take part in the interviews of candidates for career positions, nor was she involved in the final hiring decisions on those applicants, according to Holder.
Holder said either he or the acting Attorney General ultimately made the OLC political appointments. OLC acting Assistant Attorney General David Barron made the final decisions on career hires in the office.
Johnsen’s involvement in the selection of her deputies seems to indicate that DOJ officials were confident at the time that Johnsen would eventually be confirmed.
Richard Manning, a spokesman for the right-leaning think-tank Americans for Limited Government, told Main Justice that the decision to allow Johnsen to play a role in personnel decisions raises a “strong constitutional concern.” By allowing an un-appointed nominee to have a role in DOJ decisions, Manning said the Obama administration might not be adhering to the advise and consent role of the Senate.
In October, Americans for Limited Government filed a Freedom of Information Act request for information on Johnsen’s involvement in OLC personnel decisions. The DOJ has yet to furnish the think tank with the documents it requested, despite a plea from Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa), who opposes Johnsen because of her abortion rights views.
Johnsen was reported out of the Senate Judiciary Committee on March 4 along a party line vote. It was the second time she was reported out of committee along a party-line vote.
The panel first moved her out of committee on a 11-7 vote on March 19, 2009, with then-Republican Sen. Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania voting “pass.” Her nomination languished in the Senate for more than nine months before it was returned to the White House in December. President Barack Obama re-nominated her in January.
Republicans have sharply criticized her opposition to the President George W. Bush’s national security policies and her past work for an abortion rights group.
The Senate Judiciary Committee today endorsed Justice Department Office of Legal Counsel nominee Dawn Johnsen along a party-line vote after a tense debate over her views.

Dawn Johnsen (Indiana University)
The panel voted to report Johnsen out of committee by a 12-7 vote. “I have to admit that [my] decision was not even a close call,” Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) said today at the panel’s business meeting before he voted against her.
Republicans sharply criticized her vocal opposition to the President George W. Bush’s national security policies and her past work for an abortion rights group.
“Her advocacy and policy work with liberal organizations suggests that she is an aggressive partisan who will work to invoke her political views through the Office of Legal Counsel,” said Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa). “I’m concerned such extreme advocacy will undermine the objectivity that this important office ought to have.”
Democrats touted her qualifications, noting her service in the OLC during the Clinton administration and her current job as a law professor at Indiana University. Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) said Johnsen’s opinions should not disqualify her from leading the OLC and she would be able to be effective in the office.
“To [Johnsen's liberal leanings] I say, ’so what?’” Feinstein said. “It doesn’t mean that she cannot make the change.”
This is the second time she was reported out of committee along a party-line vote. The committee first moved her out of committee on a 11-7 vote on March 19, 2009, with then-Republican Sen. Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania voting “pass.” Her nomination then languished in the Senate for more than nine months before it was returned to the White House. President Obama re-nominated her last January.
Johnsen had sat on the panel’s agenda since Jan. 28. She was held over the first time at the request of panel Republicans. The committee was then forced to hold her over twice more because the panel lost its quorum and its ability to conduct business. Last week, the panel held her over again because of Obama’s health care summit, which several committee members attended, was scheduled for the same time as the panel’s meeting.
Senate Judiciary Committee chairman Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) blamed Republicans for the delays on Johnsen’s confirmation. But Republicans have insisted that the Democrats could have brought her nomination up for a vote last year.
“It has been more than a year since President Obama first nominated Dawn Johnsen to lead the Justice Department Office of Legal Counsel,” Leahy said. “Yet that critical office charged with providing legal advice to the president and the executive branch still remains without its Senate-confirmed leader.”
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More than 400 law professors are urging the Senate to vote on Justice Department Office of Legal Counsel nominee Dawn Johnsen at the “earliest possible date.”

Dawn Johnsen (Indiana University)
The professors wrote in a Feb. 1 letter to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) that delays on Johnsen’s confirmation are “extraordinary.” Johnsen’s nomination was initially submitted in February 2009 and was returned to the White House in December. She was re-nominated in January, but has been held over four times in the Senate Judiciary Committee.
Conservative senators have voiced concerns about Johnsen’s opposition to President George W. Bush’s national security policies and her past work for an abortion rights group.
“This level of obstruction is simply unacceptable,” the law professors wrote in the letter, which was posted on the panel’s Web site this week. “It frustrates the ability of executive branch agencies and departments to serve critical public needs. And it defies the deference traditionally provided Presidents in shaping their administrations, particularly with respect to sub-Cabinet level positions.”
They added: “Professor Johnsen has the experience, the integrity, and the intellect to head this critical office.”
One of the signatories, Catholic University law professor Victor Williams, submitted an additional letter to the committee, which included the editorial he wrote here.
Here are all the signatories:
Harry Hopkins
University of Alabama School of Law
Paul Bender
Arizona State University Sandra Day O’Connor College
of Law
Michael O’Connor
Phoenix School of Law
Kenneth Salzberg
California Western School of Law
Francine Lipman
Chapman University School of Law
Robert Calhoun
Golden Gate University School of Law
Drucilla Ramey
Golden Gate University School of Law
Rachel Van Cleave
Golden Gate University School of Law
John Schick
Humphreys College Laurence Drivon School of Law
Bridgit Lawley
John F. Kennedy University School of Law
Gary Williams
Loyola Law School Los Angelos
Donald Polden
Santa Clara University School of Law
Margaret Russell
Santa Clara University School of Law
David Sloss
Santa Clara University School of Law
Beth Van Schaack
Santa Clara University School of Law
Stephanie Wildman
Santa Clara University School of Law
Eric Wright
Santa Clara University School of Law
Patricia Cain
Santa Clara University School of Law
Marina Hsieh
Santa Clara University School of Law
Christopher Cameron
Southwestern Law School
Craig Christensen
Southwestern Law School
Janet Cooper Alexander
Stanford Law School
Thomas C. Grey
Stanford Law School
Pamela Karlan
Stanford Law School
Mark A. Lemley
Stanford Law School
Miguel Mendez
Stanford Law School
Michael Wald
Stanford Law School
Kathryn Abrams
UC Berkeley School of Law
Maria Blanco
UC Berkeley School of Law
Carolyn Blum
UC Berkeley School of Law
Christopher Edley
UC Berkeley School of Law
David Oppenheimer
UC Berkeley School of Law
Paul Schwartz
UC Berkeley School of Law
David Sklansky
UC Berkeley School of Law
Floyd Feeney
UC Davis School of Law
Lisa C. Ikemoto
UC Davis School of Law
Carlton F.W. Larson
UC Davis School of Law
Carter C. White
UC Davis School of Law
Mark Aaronson
UC Hastings College of the Law
Naomi Roht-Arriaza
UC Hastings College of the Law
Carrie Hempel
UC Irvine School of Law
Richard Abel
UCLA School of Law
Grace Blumberg
UCLA School of Law
Robert Goldstein
UCLA School of Law
Clyde Spillenger
UCLA School of Law
John M. Adler
University of San Francisco School of Law
Peter Jan Honigsberg
University of San Francisco School of Law
Michael Iglesias
University of San Francisco School of Law
Rebecca Brown
University of Southern California Gould School of Law
Kim S. Buchanan
University of Southern California Gould School of Law
Mary Dudziak
University of Southern California Gould School of Law
Niels Frenzen
University of Southern California Gould School of Law
Ariela J. Gross
University of Southern California Gould School of Law
Daria Roithmayr
University of Southern California Gould School of Law
Thomas Griffith
University of Southern California Gould School of Law
Gregory Keating
University of Southern California Gould School of Law
Lawrence Levine
University of the Pacific, McGeorge School of Law
John Sims
University of the Pacific, McGeorge School of Law
Melissa Hart
University of Colorado Law School
Scott Moss
University of Colorado Law School
Alan Chen
University of Denver Sturm College of Law
Nancy Ehrenreich
University of Denver Sturm College of Law
Justin Marceau
University of Denver Sturm College of Law
Paula Rhodes
University of Denver Sturm College of Law
Howard Rosenberg
University of Denver Sturm College of Law
Ann Scales
University of Denver Sturm College of Law
Kris Miccio
University of Denver Sturm College of Law
Melanie Abbott
Quinnipiac University School of Law
Jennifer Brown
Quinnipiac University School of Law
Sara Bronin
University of Connecticut School of Law
Timothy Everett
University of Connecticut School of Law
Richard Michael Fischl
University of Connecticut School of Law
Bruce Ackerman
Yale Law School
Lea Brilmayer
Yale Law School
Denny Curtis
Yale Law School
Robert Gordon
Yale Law School
Judith Resnik
Yale Law School
Reva Siegel
Yale Law School
Stephen Wizner
Yale Law School
Nancy Abramowitz
American University Washington College of Law
Susan Carle
American University Washington College of Law
Angela Davis
American University Washington College of Law
Sean Flynn
American University Washington College of Law
Amanda Frost
American University Washington College of Law
Egon Guttman
American University Washington College of Law
Peter Jaszi
American University Washington College of Law
Elliott Milstein
American University Washington College of Law
Corrine Parver
American University Washington College of Law
Nancy Polikoff
American University Washington College of Law
Mary Schwartz
American University Washington College of Law
Herman Schwartz
American University Washington College of Law
Ann Shalleck
American University Washington College of Law
Robert Goldman
American University Washington College of Law
Jeffrey Lubbers
American University Washington College of Law
Juan E. Mendez
American University Washington College of Law
Binny Miller
American University Washington College of Law
Catherine Klein
Catholic University of America Columbus School of Law
Victor Williams
Catholic University of America Columbus School of Law
Neil H. Buchanan
George Washington University Law School
Phyllis Goldfarb
George Washington University Law School
Jane Aiken
Georgetown University Law Center
Peter Edelman
Georgetown University Law Center
David Luban
Georgetown University Law Center
Mari Matsuda
Georgetown University Law Center
Carrie Menkel-Meadow
Georgetown University Law Center
Naomi Mezey
Georgetown University Law Center
Cornelia T.L. Pillard
Georgetown University Law Center
Abbe Smith
Georgetown University Law Center
William L. Taylor
Georgetown University Law Center
Frank Wu
Howard University School of Law
Stephen B. Pershing
University of California Washington Center
Laurie A Morin
University of District of Columbia, David A. Clark
School of Law
Francis Catania
Widener University School of Law
Jules Epstein
Widener University School of Law
Michael Slinger
Widener University School of Law
Andrew Strauss
Widener University School of Law
Barbara Bernier
Florida A&M University College of Law
Nancy Hogshead-Makar
Florida Coastal School of Law
Thomas Hornsby
Florida Coastal School of Law
Christopher J. Roederer
Florida Coastal School of Law
Ediberto Roman
Florida International University College of Law
Leonard Strickman
Florida International University College of Law
Larry Krieger
Florida State University College of Law
Marilyn Cane
NOVA Southeastern University Law Center
Danaya Wright
University of Florida, Levin College of Law
David Abraham
University of Miami School of Law
Robert Schapiro
Emory University School of Law
William Edmundson
Georgia State University College of Law
Georgia L. Lynn Hogue
Georgia State University College of Law
Mary Radford
Georgia State University College of Law
Jason Solomon
University of Georgia School of Law
Jon Van Dyke
University of Hawaii at Manoa William S. Richardson
School of Law
Robert Hunter
Drake University Law School
Suzanne Levitt
Drake University Law School
Patrick Bauer
University of Iowa College of Law
Lois Cox
University of Iowa College of Law
Margaret Raymond
University of Iowa College of Law
Barbara Schwartz
University of Iowa College of Law
Joan Steinman
Chicago-Kent Coll of Law
Natalie Brouwer Potts
Chicago-Kent College of Law
Steven Heyman
Chicago-Kent College of Law
Nicole Martinez
Chicago-Kent College of Law
Christopher Seaman
Chicago-Kent College of Law
Carolyn Shapiro
Chicago-Kent College of Law
Margaret Stewart
Chicago-Kent College of Law
Dan Tarlockj
Chicago-Kent College of Law
Susan Bandes
DePaul University College of Law
Patty Gerstenblith
DePaul University College of Law
Steven Greenberger
DePaul University College of Law
L. Song Richardson
DePaul University College of Law
Walter Kendall
John Marshall Law School
Allen Shoenberger
Loyola University Chicago School of Law
Albert Alschuler
Northwestern University School of Law
Mary Anne Case
University of Chicago Law School
Craig Futterman
University of Chicago Law School
Richard McAdams
University of Chicago Law School
Geoffrey R. Stone
University of Chicago Law School
Kevin Brown
Indiana University Maurer School of Law
Fred Aman
Indiana University Maurer School of Law
James Francis Bailey
Indiana University Maurer School of Law
Patrick Baude
Indiana University Maurer School of Law
Jeannine Bell
Indiana University Maurer School of Law
Kenneth Dau-Schmidt
Indiana University Maurer School of Law
Ann Gellis
Indiana University Maurer School of Law
Charles Geyh
Indiana University Maurer School of Law
Sophia Goodman
Indiana University Maurer School of Law
Betsy Levin
Indiana University Maurer School of Law
Ajay Mehrotra
Indiana University Maurer School of Law
Aviva Orenstein
Indiana University Maurer School of Law
Cynthia Reichard
Indiana University Maurer School of Law
Lauren K. Robel
Indiana University Maurer School of Law
John Scanlan
Indiana University Maurer School of Law
Carwina Weng
Indiana University Maurer School of Law
Leandra Lederman
Indiana University Maurer School of Law
Shawn Boyne
Indiana University School of Law – Indianapolis
Jeffrey O. Cooper
Indiana University School of Law – Indianapolis
George Edwards
Indiana University School of Law – Indianapolis
Robert Katz
Indiana University School of Law – Indianapolis
Eleanor Kinney
Indiana University School of Law – Indianapolis
Norman Lefstein
Indiana University School of Law – Indianapolis
William Marsh
Indiana University School of Law – Indianapolis
David Orentlicher
Indiana University School of Law – Indianapolis
Fran Quigley
Indiana University School of Law – Indianapolis
Florence Wagman Roisman
Indiana University School of Law – Indianapolis
Joseph Bauer
Notre Dame Law School
Kent Hull
Notre Dame Law School
Jeanne Jourdan
Notre Dame Law School
Penelope Andrews
Valparaiso University School of Law
Bruce Berner
Valparaiso University School of Law
Ivan Bodensteiner
Valparaiso University School of Law
Paul Brietzke
Valparaiso University School of Law
Dan Gioia
Valparaiso University School of Law
Rosalie Levinson
Valparaiso University School of Law
D. A. Jeremy Telman
Valparaiso University School of Law
David Gottlieb
University of Kansas School of Law
Alvin Goldman
University of Kentucky College of Law
Samuel Marcosson
University of Louisville Brandeis School of Law
Cedric Powell
University of Louisville Brandeis School of Law
Robert Lancaster
Louisiana State University Law Center
Ken Murchison
Louisiana State University Law Center
Mitchell Crusto
Loyola University New Orleans College of Law
James Klebba
Loyola University New Orleans College of Law
M. Isabel Medina
Loyola University New Orleans College of Law
Kent Greenfield
Boston College Law School
Elizabeth Bartholet
Harvard Law School
Carol Steiker
Harvard Law School
Frank Michelman
Harvard Law School
Curtis Nyquist
New England School of Law
Elizabeth Spahn
New England School of Law
Peter D. Enrich
Northeastern University School of Law
Hope Lewis
Northeastern University School of Law
James Rowan
Northeastern University School of Law
Michael Avery
Suffolk University Law School
Karen Blum
Suffolk University Law School
Eric Blumenson
Suffolk University Law School
Matthew H. Charity
Western New England College School of Law
William Childs
Western New England College School of Law
Anne Goldstein
Western New England College School of Law
Sudha Setty
Western New England College School of Law
Garrett Epps
University of Baltimore School of Law
Christopher Peters
University of Baltimore School of Law
Elizabeth J. Samuels
University of Baltimore School of Law
Clinton Bamberger
University of Maryland School of Law
Douglas Colbert
University of Maryland School of Law
Martha Ertman
University of Maryland School of Law
Mark A. Graber
University of Maryland School of Law
Susan Hankin
University of Maryland School of Law
Deborah Hellman
University of Maryland School of Law
Sherrilyn Ifill
University of Maryland School of Law
Susan Leviton
University of Maryland School of Law
Barbara Olshansky
University of Maryland School of Law
Jana B. Singer
University of Maryland School of Law
Rena Steinzor
University of Maryland School of Law
Katherine L. Vaughns
University of Maryland School of Law
Marley S. Weiss
University of Maryland School of Law
Roger Wolf
University of Maryland School of Law
Gordon G. Young
University of Maryland School of Law
Orlando Delogu
University of Maine School of Law
Catherine Grosso
Michigan State University College of Law
Kimberly O’Leary
Thomas M. Cooley Law School
Joan Mahoney
Wayne State University School of Law
Tom Romero II
Hamline University School of Law
Carol Chomsky
University of Minnesota Law School
Jennifer Green
University of Minnesota Law School
Heidi Kitrosser
University of Minnesota Law School
Gregory Shaffer
University of Minnesota Law School
Christina Kunz
William Mitchell College of Law
Denise Roy
William Mitchell College of Law
Daniel R. Mandelker
Washington University School of Law
Matthew Hall
University of Mississippi School of Law
H. Jefferson Powell
Duke Divinity School
Neil Siegel
Duke Divinity School
Diane Alarcon
Duke University School of Law
Carolyn McAllaster
Duke University School of Law
Thomas Rowe
Duke University School of Law
Eric M. Fink
Elon University School of Law
Fred Williams
North Carolina Central University School of Law
Michael Gerhardt
University of North Carolina School of Law
Bill Marshall
University of North Carolina School of Law
Gene Nichol
University of North Carolina School of Law
Kathryn Sabbeth
University of North Carolina School of Law
J. Wilson Parker
Wake Forest University School of Law
Marvin Ammori
University of Nebraska – Lincoln College of Law
Eric Berger
University of Nebraska – Lincoln College of Law
Ann Freedman
Rutgers School of Law – Camden
Sarah Ricks
Rutgers School of Law – Camden
James Pope
Rutgers School of Law – Newark
Peter Simmons
Rutgers School of Law – Newark
Frank Askin
Rutgers School of Law- Newark
Solangel Maldonado
Seton Hall University School of Law
Marc Poirier
Seton Hall University School of Law
Jon Romberg
Seton Hall University School of Law
Sedillo Lopez Antoinette
University of New Mexico School of Law
Lynne Henderson
William S. Boyd School of Law, University of Nevada,
Las Vegas
Jeffrey W. Stempel
William S. Boyd School of Law, University of Nevada,
Las Vegas
Lazos Sylvia
William S. Boyd School of Law, University of Nevada,Las Vegas
Anthony Farley
Albany Law School
Nancy Ota
Albany Law School
Laurie A. Shanks
Albany Law School
Anita Bernstein
Brooklyn Law School
Susan Herman
Brooklyn Law School
Bailey Kuklin
Brooklyn Law School
Michael Madow
Brooklyn Law School
Elizabeth M. Schneider
Brooklyn Law School
Caitlin E. Borgmann
City University of New York School of Law
Rebecca Bratspies
City University of New York School of Law
Susan J. Bryant
City University of New York School of Law
Frank Deale
City University of New York School of Law
Julie Goldscheid
City University of New York School of Law
Natalie Gomez-Velez
City University of New York School of Law
Franklin Siegel
City University of New York School of Law
Vivian Berger
Columbia Law School
Barbara Black
Columbia Law School
Ellen P. Chapnick
Columbia Law School
Katherine Franke
Columbia Law School
Jack Greenberg
Columbia Law School
Jamal Greene
Columbia Law School
Elizabeth Scott
Columbia Law School
Jane M. Spinak
Columbia Law School
Kendall Thomas
Columbia Law School
Cynthia Grant Bowman
Cornell University Law School
Bernadette Meyler
Cornell University Law School
Steven Shiffrin
Cornell University Law School
George Conk
Fordham University School of Law
Elizabeth Cooper
Fordham University School of Law
Sheila Foster
Fordham University School of Law
Abner Greene
Fordham University School of Law
James Kainen
Fordham University School of Law
Robin Lenhardt
Fordham University School of Law
Russell G. Pearce
Fordham University School of Law
Martin Flaherty
Fordham University School of Law
Rachel Vorsan
Fordham University School of Law
Eric M. Freedman
Hofstra University Law School
Monroe Freedman
Hofstra University Law School
Carlin Meyer
New York Law School
Sylvia Law
New York University School of Law
Burt Neuborne
New York University School of Law
Kenji Yoshino
New York University School of Law
Derrick Bell
New York University School of Law
Sarah Burns
New York University School of Law
Norman Dorsen
New York University School of Law
Deborah Ellis
New York University School of Law
Barbara Atwell
Pace University School of Law
Steven Goldberg
Pace University School of Law
Vanessa Merton
Pace University School of Law
Richard Ottinger
Pace University School of Law
Hazel Weiser
Society of American Law Teachers
Charles Bobis
St. John’s University School of Law
Marie Ashe
Suffolk University Law School
Leslie Bender
Syracuse University College of Law
Howard Glickstein
Touro Law Center
Eileen Kaufman
Touro Law Center
Marjorie Silver
Touro Law Center
Martha McCluskey
University at Buffalo Law School
Rolf Olsen Jr.
University at Buffalo Law School
Melvyn Durchslag
Case Western Reserve University Franklin Thomas
Backus School of Law
Kenneth Ledford
Case Western Reserve University Franklin Thomas
Backus School of Law
Gary Simson
Case Western Reserve University Franklin Thomas
Backus School of Law
Robert Strassfeld
Case Western Reserve University Franklin Thomas
Backus School of Law
Peter Shane
Ohio State University Moritz College of Law
William Jordan
University of Akron School of Law
Margery Koosed
University of Akron School of Law
Christopher Bryant
University of Cincinnati College of Law
Ann Hubbard
University of Cincinnati College of Law
Bert Lockwood
University of Cincinnati College of Law
Benjamin G. Davis
University of Toledo College of Law
Rebecca Zietlow
University of Toledo College of Law
Lyn Entzeroth
University of Tulsa College of Law
Michael Blumm
Lewis and Clark Law School
Mark Peterson
Lewis and Clark Law School
Gilbert Carrasco
Willamette University College of Law
David Cohen
Drexel University Earle Mack School of Law
Anil Kalhan
Drexel University Earle Mack School of Law
Scott Burris
Temple University Beasley School of Law
Burton Caine
Temple University Beasley School of Law
Theresa Glennon
Temple University Beasley School of Law
David Kairys
Temple University Beasley School of Law
Muriel Morisey
Temple University Beasley School of Law
Jan Ting
Temple University Beasley School of Law
Mark Anderson
Temple University Beasley School of Law
Margaret deGuzman
Temple University Beasley School of Law
Susan DeJarnatt
Temple University Beasley School of Law
Mark Rahdert
Temple University Beasley School of Law
Henry Richardson
Temple University Beasley School of Law
David Sonenshein
Temple University Beasley School of Law
Edwin Baker
University of Pennsylvania Law School
Robert Gorman
University of Pennsylvania Law School
Anne Kringel
University of Pennsylvania Law School
Sarah Paoletti
University of Pennsylvania Law School
Jules Lobel
University of Pittsburgh Law School
John Simpkins
Charleston School of Law
Thomas Crocker
University of South Carolina School of Law
Patrice Kunesh
University of South Dakota School of Law
Fran Ansley
University of Tennessee College of Law
Maroney Terry
Vanderbilt University Law School
Richard Carlson
South Texas College of Law
Emily Hartigan
St. Mary’s University School of Law
Reynaldo Valencia
St. Mary’s University School of Law
Peter Linzer
University of Houston Law Center
Jim Perdue
University of Houston Law Center
Norma Cantu
University of Texas at Austin School of Law
Kristine Huskey
University of Texas at Austin School of Law
Sanford Levinson
University of Texas at Austin School of Law
Frederick Mark Gedicks
Brigham Young University Law School
Laura Kessler
University of Utah S.J. Quinney College of Law
Darryl Brown
University of Virginia School of Law
George Rutherglen
University of Virginia School of Law
Timothy Jost
Washington and Lee University School of Law
Hari Osofsky
Washington and Lee University School of Law
Liz Ryan Cole
Vermont Law School
Stephanie Farrior
Vermont Law School
Joan Vogel
Vermont Law School
Tayyab Mahmud
Seattle University School of Law
John A. Strait
Seattle University School of Law
Kali Murray
Marquette University Law School
Paul Secunda
Marquette University Law School
R. Alta Charo
University of Wisconsin Law School
Marc Galanter
University of Wisconsin Law School
Linda Greene
University of Wisconsin Law School
Caprice Roberts
West Virginia University College of Law
Michael Duff
University of Wyoming College of Law
Charleston School of Law
Thomas Crocker
University of South Carolina School of Law
Patrice Kunesh
University of South Dakota School of Law
Fran Ansley
University of Tennessee College of Law
Maroney Terry
Vanderbilt University Law School
Richard Carlson
South Texas College of Law
Emily Hartigan
St. Mary’s University School of Law
Reynaldo Valencia
St. Mary’s University School of Law
Peter Linzer
University of Houston Law Center
Jim Perdue
University of Houston Law Center
Norma Cantu
University of Texas at Austin School of Law
Kristine Huskey
University of Texas at Austin School of Law
Sanford Levinson
University of Texas at Austin School of Law
Frederick Mark Gedicks
Brigham Young University Law School
Laura Kessler
University of Utah S.J. Quinney College of Law
Darryl Brown
University of Virginia School of Law
George Rutherglen
University of Virginia School of Law
Timothy Jost
Washington and Lee University School of Law
Hari Osofsky
Washington and Lee University School of Law
Liz Ryan Cole
Vermont Law School
Stephanie Farrior
Vermont Law School
Joan Vogel
Vermont Law School
Tayyab Mahmud
Seattle University School of Law
John A. Strait
Seattle University School of Law
Kali Murray
Marquette University Law School
Paul Secunda
Marquette University Law School
R. Alta Charo
University of Wisconsin Law School
Marc Galanter
University of Wisconsin Law School
Linda Greene
University of Wisconsin Law School
Caprice Roberts
West Virginia University College of Law
Michael Duff
University of Wyoming College of Law








