- Source: United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois
The United States district" target="_blank">District Court for the Northern district" target="_blank">District of Illinois (in case citations, N.D. Ill.) is the federal trial court with jurisdiction over the northern counties of Illinois. It is one of the busiest federal trial courts in the United States, with famous cases including those of Al Capone and the Chicago Eight.
Appeals from the Northern district" target="_blank">District of Illinois are taken to the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit (except for patent claims and claims against the U.S. government under the Tucker Act, which are appealed to the Federal Circuit).
The acting United States attorney for the district" target="_blank">district, representing the United States in litigation in the court, is Morris Pasqual since March 12, 2023.
Organization
The court's jurisdiction is split into an eastern division, including Cook, DuPage, McHenry, Grundy, Kane, Kendall, LaSalle, Lake, and Will counties, with its sessions held in Chicago and Wheaton; and a western division, including Boone, Carroll, DeKalb, Jo Daviess, Lee, Ogle, Stephenson, Whiteside, and Winnebago counties, with its sessions held in Freeport and Rockford.
History
The United States district" target="_blank">District Court for the district" target="_blank">District of Illinois was established by a statute passed by the United States Congress on March 3, 1819, 3 Stat. 502. The act established a single office for a judge to preside over the court. Initially, the court was not within any existing judicial circuit, and appeals from the court were taken directly to the United States Supreme Court. In 1837, Congress created the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, placing it in Chicago, Illinois and giving it jurisdiction over the district" target="_blank">District of Illinois, 5 Stat. 176.
The Northern district" target="_blank">District itself was created by a statute passed on February 13, 1855, 10 Stat. 606, which subdivided the district" target="_blank">District of Illinois into the Northern and the Southern Districts. The boundaries of the district" target="_blank">District and the seats of the courts were set forth in the statute:
The counties of Hancock, McDonough, Peoria, Woodford, Livingston, and Iroquois, and all the counties in the said State north of them, shall compose one district" target="_blank">district, to be called the northern district" target="_blank">district of Illinois, and courts shall be held for the said district" target="_blank">district at the city of Chicago; and the residue of the counties of the said State shall compose another district" target="_blank">district, to be called the southern district" target="_blank">district of Illinois, and courts shall be held for the same at the city of Springfield.
The district" target="_blank">district has since been re-organized several times. The United States district" target="_blank">District Court for the Eastern district" target="_blank">District of Illinois was created on March 3, 1905, by 33 Stat. 992, by splitting counties out of the Northern and Southern Districts. It was later eliminated in a reorganization on October 2, 1978, which replaced it with a Central district" target="_blank">District, 92 Stat. 883, formed primarily from parts of the Southern district" target="_blank">District, and returning some counties to the Northern district" target="_blank">District.
The Northern district" target="_blank">District of Illinois, which contains the entire Chicago metropolitan area, accounts for 1,531 of the 1,828 public corruption convictions in the state between 1976 and 2012, almost 84%, also making it the federal district" target="_blank">district with the most public corruption convictions in the nation between 1976 and 2012.
Current judges
As of November 20, 2024:
Former judges
Chief judges
Chief judges have administrative responsibilities with respect to their district" target="_blank">district court. Unlike the Supreme Court, where one justice is specifically nominated to be chief, the office of chief judge rotates among the district" target="_blank">district court judges. To be chief, a judge must have been in active service on the court for at least one year, be under the age of 65, and have not previously served as chief judge.
A vacancy is filled by the judge highest in seniority among the group of qualified judges. The chief judge serves for a term of seven years, or until age 70, whichever occurs first. The age restrictions are waived if no members of the court would otherwise be qualified for the position.
When the office was created in 1948, the chief judge was the longest-serving judge who had not elected to retire, on what has since 1958 been known as senior status, or declined to serve as chief judge. After August 6, 1959, judges could not become or remain chief after turning 70 years old. The current rules have been in operation since October 1, 1982.
Succession of seats
List of U.S. attorneys since 1857
Augustus M. Herrington, 1857–1858
Henry S. Fitch, 1858–1861
Edwin C. Larned, 1861
Joseph O. Glover, 1869
Mark Bangs, 1875–1879
Joseph B. Seake, 1879–1884
Richard S. Tuthill, 1884–1886
William G. Ewing, 1886–1890
Thomas E. Milchrist, 1891–1893
Sherwood Dixon, 1893–1894
John C. Black, 1895–1899
Solomon H. Bethea, 1899–1905
Charles B. Morrison, 1905–1906
Edwin W. Sims, 1906–1911
James Herbert Wilkerson, 1911–1914
Charles F. Clyne, 1914–1922
Edwin A. Olson, 1922–1927
George E. Q. Johnson, 1927–1931
Dwight H. Green, 1931–1935
Michael L. Igoe, 1935–1938
William Joseph Campbell, 1938–1940
J. Albert Woll, 1940–1947
Otto Kerner Jr., 1947–1954
Irwin N. Cohen, 1954
Robert Tieken, 1954–1961
James P. O'Brien, 1961–1963
Frank E. McDonald, 1963–1964
Edward Hanrahan, 1964–1968
Tom Foran, 1968–1970
William J. Bauer, 1970–1971
James R. Thompson, 1971–1975
Samuel K. Skinner, 1975–1977
Thomas P. Sullivan, 1977–1981
Gregory C. Jones, 1981
Dan K. Webb, 1981–1985
Anton R. Valukas, 1985–1989
Ira A. Raphaelson, 1989–1990
Fred Foreman, 1990–1993
Michael J. Shepard, 1993
Jim Burns, 1993–1997
Scott R. Lassar, 1997–2001
Patrick Fitzgerald, 2001–2012
Gary S. Shapiro, 2012–2013
Zachary T. Fardon, 2013–2017
Joel R. Levin, 2017
John R. Lausch Jr., 2017–2023
Morris Pasqual, 2023–present
See also
Courts of Illinois
List of current United States district" target="_blank">district judges
List of United States federal courthouses in Illinois
References
External links
Media related to United States district" target="_blank">District Court for the Northern district" target="_blank">District of Illinois at Wikimedia Commons
Official website
United States Attorney for the Northern district" target="_blank">District of Illinois Official Website
Office of Special Counsel, Northern district" target="_blank">District of Illinois
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