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11 Pass It On: Newsl. Gov't & Pub. Sector Law. Div. 1 (2001-2002)

handle is hein.journals/passit11 and id is 1 raw text is: MI
Fa~l2001Volue 11 Numer

IIIIIII
G P S L D
Government and Public Sector Lawyers Division

-PASS

THE NEWSLETTER OF THE AMERICAN BAR ASSOCIATION'S GOVERNMENT AND PUBLIC SECTOR LAWYERS DIVISION
Judicial Law Clerk: The Legal Experience of a Lifetime
By Adam S. Lude

A judicial clerkship presents a young
lawyer with the opportunity to work
one-on-one with an accomplished and re-
spected jurist, to hone writing and decision-
making skills, to gain an inside perspective
on the court system, and often, to make a
trusted friend and mentor. Law clerks not
only make up a large segment of govern-
ment lawyers, but many state and federal
government public servants and leaders
are attorneys who began their careers as
judicial law clerks. Indeed, several United
States senators including Michael Crapo of
Idaho, Paul Sarbanes of Maryland, Richard
Shelby of Alabama, Gordon Smith of Ore-
gon, and John Warner of Virginia are for-
mer judicial clerks.
Most federal and state judges select
first-year attorneys to serve as their law
clerks for one or two year terms. Each year,
a judge may receive hundreds of applica-
tions for a clerkship opening but can only
hire from one to four law clerks, depending
upon the court. For example, a federal dis-
trict court judge may typically hire two law
clerks, whereas a judge who sits on a feder-
al court of appeals may hire four. Similarly,
a state trial court judge may typically hire
one law clerk, while a state appellate court
judge may hire two.
A law clerk's experience varies from
court to court and from judge to judge. This
article profiles several law clerks who
clerked in different courts and uses their
stories to illustrate the clerkship experience.
A Special Relationship
Growing up, Bill Agee had a close friend-
ship with the son of Chief Judge Levin H.
Campbell of the U.S. Court of Appeals for
the First Circuit in Boston. When Agee was
a teenager, Judge Campbell would invite his
law clerks and Agee to the Campbells' sum-
mer home in Maine. There, Agee would

talk to the law clerks about their work and
observed the unique relationship Judge
Campbell shared with his clerks. Seeing
that relationship, Agee decided he wanted
to serve as a law clerk.
Agee, who is now Assistant General
Counsel for the Massachusetts Department
of Telecommunications and Energy, ap-
plied for a clerkship during his second year
of law school. That year, he received sever-
al interviews, including one with federal
district court judge Clarence C. Newcomer
in Philadelphia, but did not receive any of-
fers. Agee was determined though, and he
applied again during his third year of law
school, this time for a clerkship to begin as
a second year attorney. He interviewed
with Judge Newcomer again, and Judge
Newcomer offered Agee the clerkship.
Agee had a problem though, he had al-
ready accepted an offer to join the Philadel-
phia law firm Wolf, Block, Schorr and
Solis-Cohen as a first year associate, and if
he clerked, he would have to leave the firm
after only one year. When asked how he
dealt with the situation, Agee said that he
'was not going to let the Holy Grail slip
through [his] fingers. The Chairman of
Wolf Block, Mark L. Alderman, met with
Agee the afternoon that he received the

offer and Alderman strongly supported
Agee's desire to clerk for Judge Newcomer.
Alderman had himself served as a law
clerk and found the experience to be an ex-
traordinary one. After joining Wolf Block
for the first year, Agee went on to clerk for
Judge Newcomer.
As a law clerk, Agee prepared drafts of
opinions and jury instructions and dis-
cussed cases daily with Judge Newcomer.
Since his clerkship, Agee has continued in
public service: as Assistant Legal Counsel
to former New Jersey GovernorJamesJ.
continued on page 2

Fall 2001

Volume 11, Number I

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