Posted by Ilya Somin:
Judicial Clerkships From Hell:
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2007_07_08-2007_07_14.shtml#1184181908


   University of San Diego law professor Michael Rappaport describes
   [1]his clerkship from hell with Third Circuit Court of Appeals Judge
   Dolores Sloviter. The apparently hellish experience of clerking for
   Judge Sloviter is also the subject of [2]a new thinly veiled novel by
   recent Columbia Law School grad Saira Rao, who also clerked for
   Sloviter. I don't know Judge Sloviter, but I do know Michael
   Rappaport, and can therefore testify that he's not the kind of person
   to be easily offended by minor instances of mistreatment by a boss.

   Unfortunately, Judge Sloviter is not the only federal judge who
   apparently abuses her clerks and other staff. Federal judges have
   weaker incentives to treat their employees well than most other
   employers do. They, of course, have life tenure and therefore won't
   lose income or their jobs if they alienate their clerks. It's possible
   that a reputation for mistreating clerks will reduce the quality of
   future clerks; however, there will still be enough applicants for the
   judge to get at least minimally competent help, and that is sufficient
   for the judge to be able to get the clerks to handle whatever work she
   wants to transfer to them. Judges with low-quality clerks will, on
   average, write worse opinions than judges with good ones. But an
   abusive judge may not care much about that. This raises the more
   general issue of how clerkship applicants can avoid such judges, or at
   least know what to expect if they accept clerkships with them.

   One possible way is to talk to the judge's former clerks.
   Unfortunately, however, ex-clerks have strong incentives to avoid
   saying anything negative about their judges. Even if the judge is a
   complete troll, his or her name is going to be listed on the
   ex-clerk's resume for years to come, and prospective employers are
   likely to call up the judge for a reference. It's not hard to see why
   this would create a strong disincentive against telling tales out of
   school. If, however, a judges' ex-clerks nonetheless DO say critical
   things about him - as Rappaport and Rao have done, that is a very
   strong signal that this is one judge you should avoid like the plague.

   Another potential source of information is ex-clerks for other judges
   on same court. By the time I completed my year of clerking on the
   Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, I had a pretty good idea of which
   Fifth Circuit judges treated their staffs well, which were
   indifferent, and which ones (very few, I should note) were petty
   tyrants (none as bad as Judge Sloviter seems to be). Other ex-clerks
   probably have similar knowledge about the judges on the courts where
   they served. Unlike criticizing your own judge, commenting negatively
   on another judge isn't likely to cause serious damage to an ex-clerks'
   career prospects. Therefore, you have a better chance of getting an
   honest answer.

   There are probably other ways to get information on judges' treatment
   of their staff. But I can't think of an equally promising one that is
   likely to be readily available to clerkship applicants.

References

   1. http://rightcoast.typepad.com/rightcoast/2007/07/the-clerkship-f.html
   2. 
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0802118496/ref=wl_it_dp/104-4155605-4097529?ie=UTF8&coliid=I2JM7KDDNN7ZM2&colid=2R7L364LS4LWC

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