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Atsushi Wallace Tashima

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A. Wallace Tashima

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United States Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit (senior status)

Tenure

2004 - Present

Years in position

20

Prior offices

United States District Court for the Central District of California


United States Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit


Education

Personal


Atsushi Wallace Tashima is a federal judge on senior status with the United States Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit. He joined the court in 1996 after being nominated by President Bill Clinton. Judge Tashima was the first Japanese-American in the history of the United States to be appointed to a United States Court of Appeals.[1][2]

Early life and education

A native of Santa Maria, California, as a child during World War II, Judge Tashima spent three years with his family in an American internment camp for the Japanese in Poston, Ariz.[1] Tashima graduated from the University of California, Los Angeles, with his bachelor's degree in 1958, and from Harvard Law School with his LL.M. in 1961.[2]

Military career

Tashima served as a sergeant in the U.S. Marine Corps from 1953 to 1956.[2]

Professional career

  • 1972-1977: General attorney and vice president
  • 1968-1972: Attorney, Spreckles Sugar Division

Judicial nominations and appointments

Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals

Nomination Tracker

Fedbadgesmall.png

Nominee Information
Name: A. Wallace Tashima
Court: United States Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit
Progress
Confirmed 271 days after nomination.
ApprovedNominated: April 6, 1995
ApprovedABA Rating: Unanimously Well Qualified
Questionnaire:
ApprovedHearing: July 18, 1995
QFRs: (Hover over QFRs to read more)
ApprovedReported: July 28, 1995 
ApprovedConfirmed: January 2, 1996
ApprovedVote: Voice vote

Tashima was nominated by President Bill Clinton on April 6, 1995, to a seat on the Ninth Circuit vacated by Arthur Alarcon. The American Bar Association rated Tashima Unanimously Well Qualified for the nomination.[3] Hearings on Tashima's nomination were held before the United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary on July 18, 1995, and his nomination was reported by U.S. Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) on July 28, 1995. Tashima was confirmed on a voice vote of the U.S. Senate on January 2, 1996, and he received his commission on January 4, 1996. Tashima assumed senior status on June 30, 2004.[2][4] He was succeeded in this position by Judge Milan Smith.

Central District of California

Tashima was nominated by President Jimmy Carter on May 9, 1980, to a seat on the United States District Court for the Central District of California vacated by Warren J. Ferguson. Tashima was confirmed by the U.S. Senate on June 26, 1980, and he received his commission on June 30, 1980. Tashima resigned from the district court on January 8, 1996, upon his elevation to the Ninth Circuit.[2] Tashima was succeeded in this position by Judge Dean Pregerson.

Awards and associations

  • Trial Jurist of the Year, Los Angeles County Bar Association (1995-96)
  • Former member, U.S. Judicial Conference Committee on the Rules of Practice and Procedure[5]

Noteworthy cases

Judges go to court over salaries (2009-2013)

See also: United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (Peter H. Beer, et al., v. United States, 09-CV-037)

Judge Tashima was one of six judges who sued the government on a claim that Congress violated the Constitution's compensation clause and the Ethics Reform Act of 1989 by failing to honor promised judicial salary increases in five separate years. Earlier reports of the case indicated Judges Thomas Hogan and James Robertson were part of the suit, though they were not named parties in the final opinions and orders.[6]

The Ethics Reform Act requires automatic adjustment of judicial salaries every year based on the Employment Cost Index--which measures inflation of wages and benefits--unless severe economic conditions make the raise inappropriate. The U.S. Congress claimed its withholding of salary adjustments for federal judges were due to a lack of funds.[7]

On October 16, 2009, a federal claims court judge dismissed the lawsuit, citing a precedential decision titled Williams v. United States. It was held in that case that Congress could decide not to grant the cost of living adjustments so long as they did so in the fiscal year prior to that in which the increase would be payable. The judges expected and acknowledged the decision based on the precedent, but said that their hope was to overturn the Williams decision, and planned an immediate appeal to the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit.[6]

On October 5, 2012, the Federal Circuit ruled in favor of the judges, overturning the 11-year old Williams precedent, and finding that Congress' withholding of the cost-of-living salary raises were illegal. The en banc opinion was written by Judge Randall Rader, who quoted Alexander Hamilton, saying, "next to permanency in office, nothing can contribute more to the independence of the judges than a fixed provision for their support."[7] The judges commented that members of their profession should not have to fear that their livelihood will be subject to reprisals from other branches of government, and that as the "weakest of the three branches of government," the judiciary "must...not place its will within the reach of political whim."[7]

The panel decided that "all sitting federal judges are entitled to expect that their real salary will not diminish due to inflation or the action or inaction of the other branches of government," and ordered the Court of Federal Claims to calculate the judges' damages and additional compensation they were entitled to.[7]

Judges Timothy Dyk and William Bryson dissented. They wrote that although the decision seemed just in consideration "to the nation's underpaid Article III judges," the overturning of the Supreme Court's clear interpretation of the law in Williams, as well as a previous refusal to re-hear the issue by the highest court, indicates that the majority overstepped its authority.[7]

In June of 2013, the judge Eric G. Bruggink ruled that each of the judges could recover about $150,000 of back-pay from the government. He also ordered the government to pay interest on the pre-tax amount of the judgment.[8]

See also

External links

Footnotes

Political offices
Preceded by:
Warren Ferguson
Central District of California
1980–1995
Seat #6
Succeeded by:
Dean Pregerson
Preceded by:
Arthur Lawrence Alarcon
Ninth Circuit
1996–2004
Succeeded by:
Milan Smith

US-CourtOfAppeals-9thCircuit-Seal.svg

v  e

Federal judges who have served the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Active judges

Chief JudgeMary Murguia   •  Mark Bennett (Hawaii)  •  Kim McLane Wardlaw  •  Morgan Christen  •  Ronald Gould  •  Johnnie Rawlinson  •  Consuelo Maria Callahan  •  Milan Smith  •  Sandra Ikuta  •  Jacqueline Nguyen  •  Lucy H. Koh  •  Sal Mendoza, Jr.  •  John B. Owens  •  Michelle T. Friedland  •  Lawrence VanDyke  •  Bridget S. Bade  •  Danielle Forrest  •  Ryan Nelson (Idaho)  •  Eric Miller (Washington)  •  Patrick Bumatay  •  Daniel Collins (California)  •  Kenneth Kiyul Lee  •  Ana de Alba  •  Gabriel Sanchez (California)  •  Holly Thomas  •  Daniel Bress  •  Jennifer Sung  •  Roopali Desai  •  Anthony Johnstone

Senior judges

Mary Schroeder  •  Andrew Hurwitz  •  Diarmuid O'Scannlain  •  Andrew Kleinfeld  •  Sidney Thomas  •  Barry Silverman  •  Susan Graber  •  Margaret McKeown (California)  •  William Fletcher (California)  •  Richard Paez  •  Marsha Berzon  •  Richard Tallman  •  Richard Clifton  •  Jay Bybee  •  Carlos Bea  •  Randy Smith (Federal appeals judge)  •  John Clifford Wallace  •  Dorothy Wright Nelson  •  William Canby  •  Stephen Trott  •  Ferdinand Francis Fernandez  •  Michael D. Hawkins  •  Atsushi Wallace Tashima  •  

Former judges Anthony Kennedy  •  Lorenzo Sawyer  •  Joseph McKenna (Supreme Court)  •  William Ball Gilbert  •  Erskine Mayo Ross  •  William Henry Hunt (U.S. 9th Circuit Court)  •  Wallace McCamant  •  Frank Sigel Dietrich  •  William Henry Sawtelle  •  Francis Arthur Garrecht  •  William Denman  •  Clifton Mathews  •  Bert Emory Haney  •  William Healy  •  Homer Bone  •  William Edwin Orr  •  Walter Pope  •  Dal Lemmon  •  Richard Harvey Chambers  •  Stanley Nelson Barnes  •  Oliver Hamlin  •  Gilbert Jertberg  •  Charles Merton Merrill  •  Montgomery Koelsch  •  Benjamin Duniway  •  Walter Raleigh Ely, Jr.  •  James Marshall Carter  •  Shirley Hufstedler  •  Eugene Allen Wright  •  John Francis Kilkenny  •  Ozell Trask  •  Herbert Choy  •  J. Blaine Anderson  •  Thomas Tang  •  Cecil Poole  •  William Albert Norris  •  Charles Edward Wiggins  •  Frederick Hamley  •  Alex Kozinski  •  Matthew Hall McAllister  •  William Morrow  •  Frank Rudkin  •  Harry Pregerson  •  Stephen Reinhardt  •  Pamela Rymer  •  Raymond Fisher  •  James R. Browning  •  Alfred Goodwin  •  Joseph Sneed  •  Procter Hug  •  Betty Binns Fletcher  •  Otto Skopil  •  Joseph Farris  •  Arthur Alarcon  •  Warren Ferguson  •  Robert Boochever  •  Cynthia Holcomb Hall  •  Robert Beezer  •  Melvin Brunetti  •  Edward Leavy  •  David R. Thompson (Federal judge)  •  Thomas G. Nelson (Federal judge)  •  Curtis Dwight Wilbur  •  Albert Lee Stephens, Sr.  •  Albert Lee Stephens, Jr.  •  William Orr (9th Circuit)  •  John Kilkenny  •  Paul Watford  •  
Former Chief judges

William Denman  •  Walter Pope  •  Richard Harvey Chambers  •  Mary Schroeder  •  Sidney Thomas  •  James R. Browning  •  Alfred Goodwin  •  John Clifford Wallace  •  Procter Hug  •  Albert Lee Stephens, Sr.  •  

Flag of California.svg

v  e

Federal judges who have served the United States District Court for the Central District of California
Active judges

Chief JudgeDolly Gee   •  John Walter (California)  •  Otis Wright  •  Percy Anderson  •  David Carter (California)  •  Robert Klausner  •  Stephen V. Wilson  •  Fernando Olguin  •  Stanley Blumenfeld  •  Josephine Staton  •  Michael Fitzgerald (California)  •  Michelle Williams Court  •  Jesus Bernal  •  Sunshine S. Sykes  •  Fred W. Slaughter  •  Serena R. Murillo  •  André Birotte, Jr.  •  Sherilyn P. Garnett  •  Kenly Kiya Kato  •  Maame Ewusi-Mensah Frimpong  •  Fernando Aenlle-Rocha  •  Wesley Hsu  •  Mark Scarsi  •  Anne Hwang  •  John Holcomb (California)  •  Hernán D. Vera  •  Mónica Ramírez Almadani  •  Cynthia Valenzuela

Senior judges

James Selna  •  Dean Pregerson  •  George Wu  •  Valerie Baker Fairbank  •  Dale Fischer  •  Terry Hatter  •  William Duffy Keller  •  Virginia Phillips  •  Ronald Lew  •  Consuelo Marshall  •  Christina Snyder  •  John A. Kronstadt  •  

Magistrate judges Charles F. Eick  •  Paul Abrams  •  Jacqueline Chooljian  •  Alicia Rosenberg  •  Sheri Pym  •  John McDermott (California)  •  Jean Rosenbluth  •  Michael Wilner  •  Douglas McCormick  •  Alka Sagar  •  Kenly Kiya Kato  •  Louise A. LaMothe  •  Steve Kim (California)  •  Karen Stevenson  •  Karen Scott  •  John Early  •  Alexander MacKinnon  •  Rozella Oliver  •  Gail Standish  •  Maria Audero  •  Pedro Castillo  •  Shashi Kewalramani  •  Autumn Spaeth  •  Margo Rocconi  •  Patricia Donahue  •  
Former Article III judges

Gilbert Jertberg  •  Carlos Moreno  •  Kim McLane Wardlaw  •  Alicemarie Stotler  •  Cormac Carney  •  Audrey Collins  •  Florence-Marie Cooper  •  Gary Feess  •  Andrew Guilford  •  Philip Gutierrez  •  Robert Kelleher  •  Stephen Larson  •  Spencer Letts  •  Howard Matz  •  Mariana Pfaelzer  •  S. James Otero  •  Manuel Real  •  George Schiavelli  •  Robert Takasugi  •  Harry Pregerson  •  Pamela Rymer  •  Richard Paez  •  Warren Ferguson  •  Cynthia Holcomb Hall  •  Ferdinand Francis Fernandez  •  Leon Rene Yankwich  •  Albert Lee Stephens, Jr.  •  Margaret Morrow  •  Lourdes Baird  •  Robert Bonner  •  William Byrne, Jr.  •  William Byrne, Sr.  •  Charles Carr  •  Thurmond Clarke  •  Elisha Crary  •  Jesse Curtis  •  John Davies  •  Robert Firth  •  Richard Gadbois  •  William Gray (California)  •  Peirson Hall  •  Andrew Hauk  •  Irving Hill  •  Harry Hupp  •  James Ideman  •  David Kenyon  •  Malcolm Lucas  •  Lawrence Lydick  •  Linda McLaughlin  •  Edward Rafeedie  •  William Rea  •  Gary L. Taylor  •  Dickran Tevrizian  •  Laughlin Waters  •  Francis Whelan  •  David Williams (California federal judge)  •  Jacqueline Nguyen  •  Beverly Reid O'Connell  •  Atsushi Wallace Tashima  •  

Former Chief judges

Alicemarie Stotler  •  Cormac Carney  •  Philip Gutierrez  •  Terry Hatter  •  Virginia Phillips  •  George King (California)  •  Consuelo Marshall  •  Manuel Real  •  Albert Lee Stephens, Jr.  •  William Byrne, Jr.  •  Thurmond Clarke  •  Andrew Hauk  •  Irving Hill  •  

Jimmy Carter

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Federal judges nominated by Jimmy Carter
1977

BallantineBownesBoyleBuaCarrClarkCowanDalyFilippineHigginbothamHoevelerHugJohnstoneKaneKeithLevalLoganMacLaughlinMcKayMeltonMerrittMurphyNickersonOberdorferRoszkowskiRoyRubinSiftonTangVanceVeron

1978

ArnoldBakerBoyleBurnsCamposClaiborneCollinsCookDevineDiamondDuplantierEdenfieldFriedmanGonzalezGreeneJenkinsLoweMazzoneMcMillianO'BrienPfaelzerPhillipsPollakSandShapiroSimmonsSmithSweetTannerWisemanZiegler

1979

AckermanAlarconAndersonArceneauxArnoldAspenBeattyBeerBelewBertelsmanBilbyN. BlackS. BlackBlochBowenBrettBrooksBrownBuchmeyerBuntonBurciagaCabranesCarrCarriganCastagnaCireClarkCohnConaboyCordovaCrabbCudahyDavisDeAndaDebevoiseEdwardsEgintonEllisonEnslenO. EvansT. EvansFarrisFergusonFletcherFryeGarciaGarzaB. GibsonH. GibsonGierbolini-OrtizGilesGilliamGreenHallHastingsHatchettHatfieldHatterHawkinsHendersonHigbyHillmanHouckHowardHudspethHungateF. JohnsonS. JohnsonN. JonesS. JonesKarltonKazenKearseKeetonKehoeKennedyKiddKingKravitchLoughlinMartinMcCurnMcDonaldMcNaughtMcNicholsMikvaMitchellMoranMurnaghanMurphyD. NelsonD.W. NelsonNewblattNewmanOvertonPainePannerJ. ParkerR. ParkerPennPerez-GimenezPerryPolitzPoolePorterPregersonPriceRamboRamirezReavleyReddenE. ReedS. ReedReinhardtRennerRobinsonRothsteinSachsSaffelsSandersSarokinSchroederSchwartzSeaySenterSeymourShannonShawShoobSkopilSloviterSofaerSpellmanSprouseStakerTateTaylorThompsonTidwellUnthankVietorViningWaldWardWeinshienkWestWickerWilliamsWinderWoodsWright

Zobel
1980

AguilarAldrichAndersonBoocheverBreyerBrittCahillCanbyCarrollCerezoClemonS. ErvinR. ErwinGetzendannerGilmoreGinsburgHaltomHardyHendersonHobbsHolschuhHortonHowardJohnsonKeepKellyKenyonKocorasMarquezMarshallMichaelNixonNorrisPatelPolozolaPropstQuackenbushRamseyRiceShadurSpiegelTashimaThompsonVelaWhiteWilliams

1981

Heen

Bill Clinton

v  e

Federal judges nominated by Bill Clinton
1993

AdamsAmbroseBarnesBrinkemaBucklewChasanowCoffmanDaughtreyFergusonGinsburgHagenJacksonLancasterLevalLindsayMessitteMichaelPiersolSarisSchwartzSeybertShanahanShawStearnsTragerVazquezWilkenWilson

1994

BaerBarkettBattsBeatyBenavidesBennettBerriganBieryBlockBormanBreyerBrionesBrysonBuckloBurgessBurrageCabranesCalabresiCarrCasellasCastilloChatignyChinCindrichCoarCollinsCooperCoteCurrieDavisDominguezDownesDuvalFriedmanFurgesonGarciaGertnerGettlemanGillmorGilmoreGleesonHaggertyHamiltonHannahHawkinsHenryHolmesHoodHullHurleyJackJonesJonesKaplanKatzKernKesslerKoeltlLisiManningMcKeeMcLaughlinMelanconMiles-LaGrangeMooreMotzMurphyO'MalleyO'MearaOliverPaezB. ParkerF. ParkerR. ParkerPerryPonsorPoolerPorteousRendell • Riley • RobertsonRogersRossRussellSandsSarokinScheindlinSilverSquatritoStewartSullivanTatelThompsonTimlinUrbinaVanaskieVanceWallsWellsWilliams

1995

ArtertonAtlasBlackBlakeBriscoeTena CampbellTodd CampbellChesneyColeCollierDanielDavisDennisDlottDonaldDuffyEconomusEvansFallonFolsomGaughanGoodwinHeartfieldHuntIllstonJonesKingKornmannLawsonLenardLuceroLynchMcKinleyMoodyMooreMoskowitzMurphyMurthaNugentO'TooleOrlofskyPogueSessionsC. SmithO. SmithSteinThornburgTunheimWallachWardlawWebberWhaleyWinmill

Wood
1996

BroadwaterClevertFennerGershonGottschallGreenawayHinkleJonesKahnLaughreyLemmonMartenMillerMolloyMontgomeryPregersonRakoffSargusTashimaThomasZapata

1997

AdelmanBataillonBreyerCaputoCaseyChambersClayDamrellDroneyFriedmanGajarsaGarlandGilmanGoldGwinHallHaydenHullIshiiJenkinsKauffmanKennedyKimballKollar-KotellyLazzaraMarbleyMarcusMiddlebrooksMillerMoonPrattRendellSippelSiragusaSnyderThrash

1998

AikenBarbierBarzilayBermanButtramCarterCollinsDawsonDimitrouleasFletcherFogelFrankGraberHellersteinHerndonJamesJohnsonKaneKellyG. KingR. KingLasnikLeeLemelleLindsayLipezManellaMatzMcCuskeyMcKeownMcMahonMickleMollwayMordueMorenoMorrowMunleyMurphyPallmeyerPauleyPolsterPoolerRawlinsonRidgwayR. RobertsV. RobertsSackScottSeitzSeymourSheaSilvermanSleetSotomayorSteehStoryStraubTagleTarnowTraugerTraxlerTysonWardlawWhelanYoung

1999

AlsupBarryBrownBuchwaldCooperEatonEllisonFeessFisherGouldGuzmanHaynesHibblerHochbergHurdHuvelleJordanKatzmannKennellyLinnLorenzLynnMarreroMurguiaPannellPechmanPepperPhillipsSchreierStewartUnderhillWardWilliamsWilson

2000

AmbroAntoonBattaniBerzonBoltonBradyByeCavanaughDanielsDarrahDawsonDykFuentesGaraufisGarcia-GregoryHamiltonHuckHuntLawsonLefkowLynchMartinMcLaughlinMoodyMurguiaPaezPisanoPresnellRawlinsonReaganSchillerSingalSteeleSurrickSwainTallmanTeilborgTuckerWhittemore