Judicial assistant? Forum
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Anonymous posting is only appropriate when you are sharing sensitive information about clerkship applications and clerkship hiring. You may anonymously respond on topic to these threads. Unacceptable uses include: harassing another user, joking around, testing the feature, or other things that are more appropriate in the lounge.
Failure to follow these rules will get you outed, warned, or banned."
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Judicial assistant?
Has anybody filled this kind of position as a barred attorney? I'm curious as to whether it could be used as a stepping stone to a clerkship...I know it might seem ridiculous, but Im just throwing it out there for discussion
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Re: Judicial assistant?
Unless a judge is expressly looking for a 1/2 JA, 1/2 career clerk, I doubt it. These jobs are mostly filled by law firm secretaries that the judge has worked with in the past.Anonymous User wrote:Has anybody filled this kind of position as a barred attorney? I'm curious as to whether it could be used as a stepping stone to a clerkship...I know it might seem ridiculous, but Im just throwing it out there for discussion
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Re: Judicial assistant?
This depends entirely on the judge. Judges structure their chambers totally differently and have different expectations for their JAs. I am aware of two judges on different circuits who have attorneys work as JAs. One position is permanent; the other is a term clerk (and is officially a term clerk for resume purposes). They spend most of their time on secretarial duties and pitch in on substantive work.
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Re: Judicial assistant?
I've seen people start as a JA, then go to law school and clerk for the same judge they previously JA'd for. I would not call it a well-trodden path though.
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Re: Judicial assistant?
Also my experience w/my judge.These jobs are mostly filled by law firm secretaries that the judge has worked with in the past.
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Re: Judicial assistant?
Yes, I agree with the above. I’ve seen judges have lawyers as JAs where the position has been half-time clerk, half-time JA. Unless that’s how the position is advertised, a JA position is not going to be a way to get a clerkship. And frankly unless you’ve worked as a JA before, I don’t think most judges would want to hire you for the job, as it’s pretty different from clerking
(I also know a judge who has a lawyer as their courtroom deputy/clerk. However that’s a permanent position, completely separate from the term law clerks, and I think most of the lawyers I know think it’s a bit odd.)
(I also know a judge who has a lawyer as their courtroom deputy/clerk. However that’s a permanent position, completely separate from the term law clerks, and I think most of the lawyers I know think it’s a bit odd.)
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