United States District Court for the District of Vermont

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Template:Short description Template:Coord Template:Infobox U.S. federal court

The United States District Court for the District of Vermont (in case citations, D. Vt.) is the federal district court whose jurisdiction is the federal district of Vermont. The court has locations in Brattleboro, Burlington, and Rutland. The court was created by a March 2, 1791 amendment (1 Stat. 197) to the Judiciary Act of 1789 and assigned to the eastern circuit. Under the Midnight Judges Act, the Circuits were reorganized and this court was assigned to the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit where it has remained since. Originally created with one judgeship, in 1966 a second judgeship was added.

Appeals from the District of Vermont are taken to the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit (except for patent claims and claims against the U.S. government under the Tucker Act, which are appealed to the Federal Circuit).

The United States Attorney's Office for the District of Vermont represents the United States in civil and criminal litigation in the court. Template:As of the United States attorney is Nikolas P. Kerest.[1]

Current judges

Template:As of:

# Title Judge Duty station Born Term of service Appointed by
Active Chief Senior
19 Chief Judge Christina Reiss Burlington 1962 2009–present 2010–2017
2024–present
Obama
21 District Judge Mary Kay Lanthier Rutland 1971 2024–present Biden
17 Senior Judge John Garvan Murtha inactive 1941 1995–2009 1995–2002 2009–present Clinton
18 Senior Judge William K. Sessions III Burlington 1947 1995–2014 2002–2010 2014–present Clinton
20 Senior Judge Geoffrey W. Crawford Burlington 1954 2014–2024 2017–2024 2024–present Obama

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Former judges

# Judge State Born–died Active service Chief Judge Senior status Appointed by Reason for
termination
1 Template:Sortname VT 1752–1843 1791–1793 Template:Sortname resignation
2 Template:Sortname VT 1755–1813 1793–1801[Note 1] Template:Sortname elevation to 2d Cir.
3 Template:Sortname VT 1757–1842 1801–1842 Template:Sortname resignation
4 Template:Sortname VT 1782–1857 1842–1857 Template:Sortname death
5 Template:Sortname VT 1809–1877 1857–1877 Template:Sortname death
6 Template:Sortname VT 1833–1906 1877–1906 Template:Sortname retirement
7 Template:Sortname VT 1846–1915 1906–1915[Note 2] Template:Sortname death
8 Template:Sortname VT 1873–1946 1915–1940 1940–1945 Template:Sortname retirement
9 Template:Sortname VT 1892–1949 1940–1949 Template:Sortname death
10 Template:Sortname VT 1901–1969 1949–1969 1966–1969 Template:Sortname death
11 Template:Sortname VT 1910–1972 1966–1972 1969–1972 Template:Sortname death
12 Template:Sortname VT 1924–2007 1970–1971 Template:Sortname elevation to 2d Cir.
13 Template:Sortname VT 1914–1996 1971–1984 1972–1983 1984–1996 Template:Sortname death
14 Template:Sortname VT 1919–1993 1972–1989 1983–1988 1989–1993 Template:Sortname death
15 Template:Sortname VT 1922–2014 1984–1994 1988–1991 1994–2014 Reagan death
16 Template:Sortname VT 1938–2003 1990–1994 1991–1994 Template:Sortname elevation to 2d Cir.

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Template:Reflist

Chief judges

Chief Judge
Gibson 1966–1969
Leddy 1969–1972
Holden 1972–1983
Coffrin 1983–1988
Billings 1988–1991
Parker 1991–1994
Murtha 1995–2002
Sessions 2002–2010
Reiss 2010–2017
Crawford 2017–2024
Reiss 2024–present

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Template:ChiefJudgeDC

Succession of seats

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U.S. attorneys

U.S. attorneys for Vermont since it attained statehood in 1791 include:[2][3]


U.S. Attorney Term started Term ended Presidents served under
Stephen Jacob File:No image.svg 1791 1794 George Washington
Amos Marsh File:No image.svg 1794 1796 George Washington
Charles Marsh File:Charles Marsh.jpg 1797 1801 John Adams
David Fay File:No image.svg 1801 1809 Thomas Jefferson
Cornelius P. Van Ness File:Cornelius P Van Ness.jpg 1810 1813 James Madison
Titus Hutchinson File:Titus Hutchinson (Vermont Supreme Court Justice).jpg 1813 1821 James Madison, James Monroe
William A. Griswold File:No image.svg 1821 1829 James Monroe, and John Quincy Adams
Daniel Kellogg File:Daniel Kellogg.jpg 1829 1841 Andrew Jackson, Martin Van Buren, and William Henry Harrison
Charles Davis 1841 1845 John Tyler
Charles Linsley File:Charles Linsley (United States Attorney for Vermont).jpg 1845 1849 James K. Polk
Abel Underwood File:No image.svg 1849 1853 Zachary Taylor and Millard Fillmore
Lucius B. Peck File:Lucius B. Peck.jpg 1853 1857 Franklin Pierce
Henry E. Stoughton File:Henry Evander Stoughton.jpg 1857 1860 James Buchanan
George Howe File:No image.svg 1861 1864 Abraham Lincoln
Dudley C. Denison File:Dudley Chase Denison.jpg 1864 1869 Abraham Lincoln and Andrew Johnson
Benjamin F. Fifield File:Benjamin F. Fifield (Vermont lawyer).jpg 1869 1880 Ulysses S. Grant and Rutherford B. Hayes
Kittredge Haskins File:Kittredge Haskins.jpg 1880 1887 Rutherford B. Hayes, James Garfield, Chester A. Arthur, and Grover Cleveland
Clarence H. Pitkin File:Clarence H. Pitkin.jpg 1887 1889 Grover Cleveland
Frank Plumley File:Frank Plumley.jpg 1889 1894 Benjamin Harrison and Grover Cleveland
John H. Senter File:John H. Senter (US Attorney for Vermont).jpg 1894 1898 Grover Cleveland and William McKinley
James L. Martin File:James Loren Martin.jpg 1898 1906 William McKinley, and Theodore Roosevelt
Alexander Dunnett File:Alexander Dunnett 2 (US Attorney for Vermont).jpg 1906 1915 Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, and Woodrow Wilson
Vernon A. Bullard 1915 1923 Woodrow Wilson and Warren Harding
Harry B. Amey File:Harry B. Amey.jpg 1923 1933 Calvin Coolidge and Herbert Hoover
Joseph A. McNamara File:Joseph A. McNamara (US Attorney for Vermont).jpg 1933 1953 Franklin D. Roosevelt and Harry Truman
Louis G. Whitcomb File:No image.svg 1953 1961 Dwight D. Eisenhower
Joseph F. Radigan File:No image.svg 1961 1969 John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson
George Cook File:No image.svg 1969 1977 Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford
William B. Gray 1977 1981 Jimmy Carter
Jerome O'Neill File:No image.svg 1981 1981 Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan
George Cook File:No image.svg 1981 1987 Ronald Reagan
George J. Terwilliger III File:George J. Terwilliger III.jpg 1987 1991 Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush
Charles Caruso 1991 1993 George H. W. Bush and Bill Clinton
Charles Tetzlaff File:No image.svg 1993 2001 Bill Clinton and George W. Bush
Peter Hall File:Peter Hall (cropped).jpg 2001 2004 George W. Bush
David Kirby File:No image.svg 2005 2006 George W. Bush
Tom Anderson File:No image.svg 2006 2009 George W. Bush
Tristram J. Coffin File:No image.svg 2009 2015 Barack Obama
Eric Miller File:No image.svg 2015 2017 Barack Obama and Donald Trump
Christina Nolan File:Christina E. Nolan official photo.jpg 2017 2021 Donald Trump
Nikolas P. Kerest
File:Nikolas Kerest, U.S. Attorney.jpg
2021 present Joe Biden

Template:Notelist

U.S. marshals

Duties and responsibilities

The United States Marshal for the District of Vermont oversees all Marshals Service operations in Vermont.[4] The Vermont district maintains offices in Burlington and Rutland, enabling the Marshals Service to carry out its role with respect to public safety in Vermont.[4] The U.S. Marshal for Vermont is responsible for federal law enforcement activities within the state, including apprehending fugitives and sex offenders, managing transport of federal prisoners, and protecting federal courthouses.[4]

History

The offices of U.S. Marshal and Deputy Marshal were created by the 1st U.S. Congress when it passed the Judiciary Act of 1789.[5] Marshals were presidential appointees and their duties included supporting the federal courts within their districts and executing the orders of the president, Congress and federal judges.[5] Support of the courts included serving subpoenas, summonses, writs, and warrants, making arrests, and handling prisoners.[5] Marshals were also responsible for the finances and administration of the courts, including paying fees, expenses, and salaries for court clerks, U.S. Attorneys, jurors, and witnesses.[5] Marshals serve at the pleasure of the president, and when the positions were created, Congress created a time limit on Marshals' service.[6] Marshals are limited to four-year, renewable terms that expire unless they are reappointed.[6]

In the country's early years, Marshals rented courtroom and jail space, and hired and supervised bailiffs, criers, and janitors.[5] They also handled the day-to-day activities of court proceedings, including ensuring that defendants were present, jurors were available, and witnesses appeared as required.[5] Marshals were also called upon to carry out federal death sentences and investigate counterfeiting.[7] Because they were paid on a fee system, the positions were lucrative and highly sought after.[7]

Marshals also filled a gap in the federal government as it was originally designed, executing numerous tasks because no other agency was available to do them.[5] These duties included taking the national census every 10 years until 1870, distributing Presidential proclamations, collecting statistical data for use by federal agencies, and supplying data on federal employees for including in a national register, deporting foreigners who entered the country illegally, and capturing fugitive slaves.[5]

Over time, the duties of Marshals grew to include activities such as enforcement of the Eighteenth Amendment, the prohibition of the sale and transport of alcoholic beverages.[7] In the modern era, the duties and responsibilities of U.S. Marshals include witness protection and apprehension of federal fugitives.[7]

U.S. marshals and dates of appointment

Vermont's U.S. marshals have included:[8][9][10]

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See also

References

Template:Reflist

External links

Template:United States 2nd Circuit district judges Template:United States 2nd Circuit senior district judges Template:USDistCourts Template:Authority control

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