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68 Dep't of Just. J. Fed. L. & Prac. 47 (2020)
A View from the Bench: What a Judge Expects

handle is hein.journals/usab68 and id is 626 raw text is: 




A   View from the Bench: What a

Judge Expects
Michael H. Simon
United States District Judge
District of Oregon
  Almost 40 years have gone by in an instant. My first job after law
school was as a trial attorney for the U.S. Department of Justice
(Department), Antitrust Division. I began in September 1981. I also
served as a Special Assistant United States Attorney (SAUSA) in the
Eastern District of Virginia in Alexandria. My first jury trial as a
SAUSA  resulted in a conviction for armed bank robbery. My second
jury trial, where I served as second chair, led to a conviction on all 13
counts of white-collar fraud. In 1986, my wife and I moved to
Portland, Oregon, where I spent the next 25 years at a private law
firm, handling civil cases and trying a fair number of them. In June
2011, I began my current position as a United States District Judge.
One of the most memorable days during this entire time (after my
wedding 35 years ago and the birth of my two children) was the first
time I stood in a federal courtroom, stated my name, and announced,
representing the United States of America. Another special day was
taking the oath of office as a federal district judge.
  In reflecting on the question, What does a federal judge expect from
an Assistant United States Attorney (AUSA), I answer that by saying
that we expect you to know 10 things: (1) know your client; (2) know
your audience; (3) know the standards to which you will be held;
(4) know how to advocate; (5) know the law; (6) know at least a little
about every other discipline; (7) know how to be a professional;
(8) know yourself; (9) know what is right (and do it); and (10) know
the other. Here is a mnemonic device to help you remember them:
Casa le Pyro.
  Think of a burning house, or a house of the fire, or a casa (house,
in Spanish or Italian), le (the, in French), and pyro (fire, in Greek).
(The of' is silent.) An AUSA is much like the heroic firefighter
rushing into a burning house: well-trained, skillful, brave, selfless,
and having a passion to serve others. Think of the house of the fire,
and you will think, Casa le Pyro. From there, it is easy to remember
the 10 things an AUSA needs to know: Client, Audience, Standards,
Advocacy, Law, Everything else, Professionalism, Yourself, Right,


DOJ  Journal of Federal Law and Practice


September 2020


47

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