Judge Kevin Thomas Duffy was a Bronx born Irish Catholic of immigrant parents, who would scale the heights of the legal profession and serve with integrity as an Assistant U.S. Attorney, practicing lawyer, adjunct law professor, director of the New York regional office of the Securities and Exchange Commission, and a federal district court judge on the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York. Lawyers who knew him shared with me glimpses of his life as a judge and as a person
It is only natural that different people (clerks, colleagues, court reporters, lawyers, marshals, pa...
This issue of the Saint Louis University Law Journal is dedicated to a great man – Judge Theodore Mc...
Justice Murphy would have observed his tenth anniversary on the Supreme Court on February 5, 1950. J...
Judge Kevin Thomas Duffy was a Bronx born Irish Catholic of immigrant parents, who would scale the h...
When I think about my revered late colleague, which is often, I recognize that in my ninety-two year...
Imagine sitting as a law clerk to a great judge watching him preside at trial. Any young lawyer in t...
I first met Judge Kevin Duffy in 1957 when we were both sworn in as Assistant United States Attorney...
I had the privilege to serve as the first law clerk to The Honorable Kevin Thomas Duffy—known foreve...
The following “judicial profile” was published in the March 2016 issue of The Federal Lawyer, about ...
Where to begin . . . Clerking for KTD was my first job after graduating from Fordham Law. I was a ki...
In his forty-four years on the bench, Judge Duffy had sixty-five law clerks, each with their own sto...
Judge Duffy’s clerks benefitted from invaluable legal lessons. In my case, I was lucky enough to hel...
How can one (or in this case many) properly honor the memory of an iconic figure as compelling, comp...
It is a joy and an honor to write a few words about our beloved former colleague, Judge Kevin Thomas...
It has been nearly thirty years since I clerked for Judge Duffy, and still when an important topic c...
It is only natural that different people (clerks, colleagues, court reporters, lawyers, marshals, pa...
This issue of the Saint Louis University Law Journal is dedicated to a great man – Judge Theodore Mc...
Justice Murphy would have observed his tenth anniversary on the Supreme Court on February 5, 1950. J...
Judge Kevin Thomas Duffy was a Bronx born Irish Catholic of immigrant parents, who would scale the h...
When I think about my revered late colleague, which is often, I recognize that in my ninety-two year...
Imagine sitting as a law clerk to a great judge watching him preside at trial. Any young lawyer in t...
I first met Judge Kevin Duffy in 1957 when we were both sworn in as Assistant United States Attorney...
I had the privilege to serve as the first law clerk to The Honorable Kevin Thomas Duffy—known foreve...
The following “judicial profile” was published in the March 2016 issue of The Federal Lawyer, about ...
Where to begin . . . Clerking for KTD was my first job after graduating from Fordham Law. I was a ki...
In his forty-four years on the bench, Judge Duffy had sixty-five law clerks, each with their own sto...
Judge Duffy’s clerks benefitted from invaluable legal lessons. In my case, I was lucky enough to hel...
How can one (or in this case many) properly honor the memory of an iconic figure as compelling, comp...
It is a joy and an honor to write a few words about our beloved former colleague, Judge Kevin Thomas...
It has been nearly thirty years since I clerked for Judge Duffy, and still when an important topic c...
It is only natural that different people (clerks, colleagues, court reporters, lawyers, marshals, pa...
This issue of the Saint Louis University Law Journal is dedicated to a great man – Judge Theodore Mc...
Justice Murphy would have observed his tenth anniversary on the Supreme Court on February 5, 1950. J...