[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 108 (Tuesday, July 19, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Page S4673]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO JUDGE WILLIAM F. DOWNES
Mr. BARRASSO. Mr. President. On July 24, 2011, Chief U.S. District
Judge William F. Downes will retire after 17 years on the Federal bench
in Wyoming.
Judge Downes has long recognized that for our democracy to survive, a
strong judicial branch is necessary. As he acknowledged during his
Senate Judiciary nomination hearing in 1994, the strength of the
judiciary is not determined by activist judges and changing the law to
achieve a desired outcome. Rather, a strong judiciary consists of
judges who uphold the Constitution, are thorough in their decisions,
have not formulated an opinion prior to a case being heard, and treat
people with respect and decency. This was the standard that Judge
Downes set for himself in 1994. By all accounts he achieved that
standard in his courtroom.
Judge Downes, the grandson of Irish immigrants, has enjoyed the
opportunity to welcome new citizens to our nation by performing
Naturalization ceremonies. Cited as one of the highlights of his
career, he has always said a Naturalization ceremony is one of the few
times people come to the courthouse happy and leave even happier.
He began his public service early in life when he served in the U.S.
Marine Corps from 1968 to 1971. Though he did not make military service
his career, his career in the law has been profoundly affected by his
military service.
In an article that appeared in the 2007 June edition of the Wyoming
Lawyer, Judge Downes discusses the important role played by the citizen
jury system in our government. He quotes from a letter sent by Thomas
Jefferson to Thomas Paine:
I consider trial by jury as the only anchor yet devised by
man by which the government can be held to the principles of
the Constitution.
In the same article, he describes two photos he keeps under the glass
top of his desk. One photo is of his family on Easter Sunday in 1985.
The other photo, from the spring of 2003, is of a 6-year-old boy named
Tony, clutching a teddy bear, walking out of a church, wiping tears
from his eyes. He had just attended the funeral of his father, MAJ
Kevin G. Nave, USMC, who died on March 26, 2003, in the early stages of
the Iraq war.
Judge Downes writes:
Kevin Nave died so that we might have the opportunity to
live under a Constitution which guarantees us the opportunity
of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
He ends his article with the following:
Thomas Jefferson and the other founding fathers of this
Nation expected that we citizens would participate in the
governance of our nation and, by our efforts, make it a more
perfect union. If we judges and lawyers do our utmost to
uphold the constitutional right to trial by jury, we will
achieve the highest aspiration of our profession. For Tony's
sake, and for all our children, we can do no less.
Judge Downes achieved the highest aspiration of his profession. He
has contributed to the governance of our Nation with distinction.
Mr. President, I ask my colleagues to join me in thanking Judge
Downes, a true American Patriot, for his service to Wyoming and to our
Nation.
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