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Message: WAITING FOR RULING BY UTAH NEWEST FEDERAL JUDGE "WADDOUPS" DIGECOR vs e.DIGITAL

May 17, 2009 06:11AM

WAITING FOR RULING BY UTAH NEWEST FEDERAL JUDGE "WADDOUPS" DIGECOR vs e.DIGITAL

posted on May 17, 2009 01:31PM

FROM DOC 370

12. TRIAL SETTING: The case is set for a trial without a jury on Wednesday, May 6, 2009 at 10:30 a.m. in the Courtroom of Judge Clark Waddoups, 350 South Main Street, Salt Lake City, Utah.
13. POSSIBILITY OF SETTLEMENT: Unlikely.
DATED May 5, 2009

Clark Waddoups

11/06/2008

Clark Waddoups Sworn in as Federal Judge

Parr Waddoups is now Parr Brown

Clark Waddoups, who has been a named partner of the law firm of Parr Waddoups Brown Gee & Loveless, will be sworn in today as a federal judge for the District of Utah. Waddoups is the fifth lawyer from the firm who has gone on to serve a judicial position. The other former firm attorneys who have gone onto the bench are:

· Judge Dale A. Kimball (federal judge in Utah)

· Judge Matthew Durrant (Utah Supreme Court Justice)

· Judge Jill Parrish (Utah Supreme Court Justice)

· Judge Carolyn B. McHugh (Utah Court of Appeals)

As a result of this appointment, and the ethical requirements that require a name change, the thirty-three year old law firm will now be known as Parr Brown Gee & Loveless. In addition to the change in name, “Parr Brown” has also updated its visual identity to one that better represents the firm’s growth and innovative spirit.

Sen. Orrin Hatch [R-UT]: Mr. President, I rise to express my pleasure at the confirmation today of Clark Waddoups to the U.S. district court in Utah and my thanks to all those, in particular the chairman of the Judiciary Committee, Senator Leahy, who facilitated this result.

Clark Waddoups will be a truly outstanding judge.

He graduated from the University of Utah law school where he was president of the Utah Law Review and has been practicing law in Utah for nearly 35 years, a majority of it in Federal court.

More than that, he has participated in the life of the law in our State, serving on the board of visitors of the law school at Brigham Young University and for 17 years on the Advisory Committee to the Utah Supreme Court on the Rules of Evidence.

Not surprisingly, the Utah chapter of the Federal Bar Association has recognized Clark as Utah's outstanding lawyer and the American Bar Association unanimously gave him its highest well qualified rating to serve as a Federal judge.

Not only is Clark Waddoups an outstanding lawyer, but he is a good man.

He is active in his church and for many years served on and led the board of the Family Support Center of Utah.

Federal courts across America are very busy today, and no more so than in Utah.

Utah has just five U.S. district court seats and our population has increased by more than 50 percent since the last one was created in 1990.

Because this vacancy occurred when Judge Paul Cassell resigned to go back to teaching, there was no senior judge available to help out.

So the service of such an outstanding judge will be welcome indeed.

My colleague and friend from Utah, Senator Bennett, and I worked together to recommend the very best candidate to replace Judge Cassell.

Clark Waddoups stood out from the many qualified and experienced lawyers we considered.

He is known and respected through the legal community and will be a fair and wise jurist who will live up to the highest standards of the American legal system.

As everyone knows, the confirmation process, especially for judicial nominees, has its share, perhaps more than its share, of tension and controversy.

As a former chairman of the Judiciary Committee, I know there are many competing demands and expectations.

But Chairman Leahy nonetheless scheduled not one but two hearings this month to consider a total of 10 additional nominees to the U.S. district court.

And he made sure that they got on the Judiciary Committee agenda, reported to the floor yesterday, and confirmed today.

So I am deeply grateful to President Bush for nominating Clark Waddoups and to Chairman Leahy for facilitating his progress through the confirmation process.

Clark Waddoups, (born 1946 in Arco, Idaho), was confirmed as a judge for United States District Court for the District of Utah by the U.S. Senate on September 26, 2008.[1]

Judge Waddoups received his undergraduate degree from Brigham Young University in 1970 and his juris doctorate from the University of Utah's law school in 1973. He was most recently a partner in the law firm of Parr, Waddoups, Brown, Gee & Loveless where he was a trial lawyer specializing in commercial litigation, including antitrust, securities, labor/employment, banking, construction, environmental and insurance claims.

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