Last weekend, the Senate confirmed Eunice Lee to a judgeship on the U.S. Second Circuit Court of Appeals.
When asked by the Senate Judiciary Committee for “your typical clients and the areas at each period of your legal career, if any, in which you have specialized,” Lee’s response was as rote as it was remarkable.
The Biden administration appears to be placing a priority on chipping away at this imbalance.
“For the entirety of my legal career, my clients in both state and federal court have been poor and working-class people convicted of felony offenses. In state court, my cases included many theft, drug-related, and violent offenses,” she responded. “My federal practice likewise has included many theft and gun-related offenses.”
Lee’s confirmation is remarkable for one due the fact that the judicial landscape is completely unrepresentative of the legal profession — and has been for a very long time. Her confirmation is a single, but important, effort to confront this imbalance.
If that sounds dramatic, just look at the number of judges with backgrounds as prosecutors. As things stand, they overwhelmingly outnumber those with backgrounds as public defenders. That imbalance is even more dramatic if you’re looking more broadly at whether the judge’s experience before taking the bench was in representing the government in any role or opposing it.
That experience imbalance, in turn, leads to those judges all too often interpreting the law in a way that ultimately makes it a stranger to many of the people whose lives it controls. No, experience isn’t everything, and there are exceptions, but the exceptions — and the law the prosecutor-heavy judiciary has advanced — prove the dangers of this imbalance. That’s not good in a system where respect for “the rule of law” is essential to keeping everything in society moving forward — and is one of the reasons why attention to demographic diversity in the judiciary is so important. That same attention has not been given to professional, or experiential, diversity.
Lee is a career public defender, first for more than 20 years with the Office of the Appellate Defender in New York, and then for Federal Defenders of New York since 2019. Her job is not unusual; thousands of lawyers in every state spend their career working in criminal defense, with many of them serving as public defenders.
In Biden’s first six months in office, he pushed as many nominees with significant public defender experience for the appellate bench as Obama did in eight years.
Their role is an essential one: More than 50 years ago, the U.S. Supreme Court held, in Gideon v. Wainwright, that every state was required to provide a lawyer for indigent defendants. The Constitution required so as a matter of “fundamental fairness.” Although the specifics of how to do so have been left predominantly to the states, leading to extremely divergent levels of defense, the requirement means that Lee and others like her help to balance out those metaphorical scales of justice to craft a justice system worthy of its name.
And yet, more than 50 years later, within the ranks of those who decide cases — within the state and federal judiciary — the scale is so unbalanced it can hardly even be considered a scale.
A recent study of federal judges by the conservative Cato Institute backs up that disparity with data. “Former prosecutors outnumber former defense lawyers by a ratio of 4‐to‐1, with those representing government in criminal or civil proceedings outnumbering those litigating against the government by a ratio of 7‐to‐1,” Clark Neily and Devi Rao, of Cato and MacArthur Justice Center respectively, wrote in summary. Lee, in fact, is the first federal defender to serve on the Second Circuit.
While President Barack Obama placed a heavy emphasis on addressing demographic diversity in his administration’s judicial nominations, there was far less attention paid to this question of experiential diversity. One 2014 study from the liberal Alliance for Justice found that Obama had nominated more than two times as many former prosecutors as former defenders to the bench. The Trump administration was far worse, nominating — among judicial picks with criminal law backgrounds — almost exclusively those with prosecutorial experience (a 10-to-1 imbalance, Cato’s study found).
Before President Joe Biden took office, only one current federal appellate judge in the country, Judge Jane Kelly (who Obama nominated to the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals in 2013), had a similar background to Lee’s. Two others, Judges L. Felipe Restrepo and Robert Wilkins, had significant public defender experience, but Wilkins spent a decade before his judicial nomination working for a corporate law firm and Restrepo spent a decade in practice at his own criminal defense and civil rights firm. The last Supreme Court justice to have any significant criminal defense experience was Thurgood Marshall — who left the high court 30 years ago this fall.
The Biden administration appears to be placing a priority on chipping away at this imbalance. Lee was Biden’s second appellate nominee with significant public defender experience to be confirmed by the Senate; another is awaiting a final Senate vote. In other words, in Biden’s first six months in office, he pushed as many nominees with significant public defender experience for the appellate bench as Obama did in eight years.








