[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 138 (Monday, October 7, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Pages S7260-S7261]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
STIRLING AND ELLIS NOMINATIONS
Mr. DURBIN. I rise to speak in support of two individuals whose
nominations will be voted on at 5 p.m. We haven't set any records in
the Senate in the last 5 weeks for productivity. We passed one major
piece of legislation, which the Senator from Oregon brought before us
relative to the issue of our helium reserve. It was great work. It is
one of the few bipartisan actions we have accomplished in 5 weeks,
maybe the only bipartisan one. At 5 p.m. we have a chance to improve
our record.
These are two nominees for Federal district court judges in Illinois
that I commend to the Members of the Senate.
I wish to say at the outset it isn't only this Senator on this side
of the aisle making this recommendation, Senator Mark Kirk and I worked
on a bipartisan basis to come up with these nominees and get them
approved by our nomination committees. They are then approved by us, by
the White House, by the Judiciary Committee, and brought to the floor.
Since Senator Kirk has been elected, we have done this in lockstep,
together every step of the way. By tradition, the President's party
Senator, in this case myself, has three appointments. Senator Kirk has
the fourth, but each of us has the veto power over the other's choices.
We have a working relationship and a good one. Senator Kirk has
endorsed these two nominees: Colin Bruce, who has been nominated to
serve in the Central District of Illinois, and Sara Ellis, nominated to
serve in the Northern District of Illinois. They have the experience,
qualifications, and integrity to be excellent Federal judges. Both
appeared before the Senate Judiciary Committee for a hearing on June
19, and both were reported out of the committee by a unanimous voice
vote.
I would like briefly to discuss their backgrounds and qualifications.
Colin Bruce has been nominated to fill the judicial vacancy that
opened in Urbana when Judge Michael McCuskey took senior status.
Michael McCuskey is also one of my appointments, an outstanding Federal
judge. I am sorry he is going into senior status, but he felt, and I
did too, that Colin Bruce would be an excellent replacement to succeed
him in that position.
Mr. Bruce has worked in the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Central
District of Illinois since 1989. He currently serves as the first
assistant U.S. attorney, a position he has held since 2010.
Colin Bruce applied for the position of U.S. attorney. He didn't get
it. But the man who did, the man I selected, Jim Lewis, hired him as
his first assistant. So it was a few months ago that Jim Lewis, the
U.S. District Attorney, came by my office with Colin Bruce. We talked
about a number of things, and he said: Incidentally, I don't know what
I would do without Colin Bruce. He is such an extraordinary first
assistant. When he finished his presentation, I said: Jim, would you
stick around for a minute; Colin, go outside, if you would. I said:
Jim, I have an opening for a judgeship, and I know Colin is a person
who would fill that
[[Page S7261]]
bill. He has already gone through all the vetting. He would be an
extraordinary judge, but you would lose him as your first assistant. He
said: I can't stand in his way. I couldn't think of a better choice to
be a judge in this district.
Colin Bruce was born in Urbana, IL. He got his undergraduate and law
degrees from the University of Illinois and went straight to the U.S.
Attorney's Office out of law school. He has handled criminal, civil
cases, and bankruptcy and tort claims filed against the government. He
then shifted to prosecuting complex criminal matters, drug fraud and
cyber crime cases. In 2007, he was appointed branch chief of the Urbana
division of the U.S. Attorney's Office, and in 2010 he was named first
assistant U.S. attorney, which is the No. 2 position, as I mentioned.
In his current capacity, he oversees the day-to-day operations of the
U.S. Attorney's Office, supervises all the Federal criminal
investigations, prosecutions, and appeals in the district, as well as
civil defensive and affirmative litigation in the district in which the
United States is a party.
He has received numerous recognitions, including certifications of
appreciation from the Justice Department, the FBI, and the DEA, as well
as awards from the Illinois State Police and the Metropolitan
Enforcement Group and Task Force.
He has a record of giving back to the Urbana community through his
association with charities, such as the Central Illinois Chapter of the
American Red Cross and Imagine No Malaria, a charity that purchases
mosquito nets for families in Africa.
He is an outstanding nominee for the Federal bench, and has a great
family whom he brought to the hearing. I certainly urge my colleagues
to join Senator Kirk and me in supporting his nomination.
The second nominee is Sara Ellis. She has been nominated for a
Chicago-based judgeship that was formerly occupied by the distinguished
Judge Joan Gottschall. Ms. Ellis currently works at the prestigious law
firm of Schiff Hardin in Chicago, where her practice involves white-
collar criminal matters, complex civil litigation, and corporate
counseling.
She was born in Ontario, Canada, to parents who had emigrated from
Jamaica. She moved to the United States and became a citizen at the age
of 15. Her undergraduate degree is from Indiana University and her law
degree is from the Loyola University Chicago School of Law.
After law school, Ms. Ellis joined the Federal Defender Program in
Chicago, where she served for 6 years as a staff attorney. In this
capacity she represented indigent criminal defendants in all aspects of
criminal litigation, preliminary hearings, trials, sentencing hearings,
and appeals. She then worked in private practice for several years
before joining the City of Chicago Department of Law in 2004, where she
served as assistant corporation counsel for 4 years, primarily handling
section 1983 cases.
In 2008, Ms. Ellis joined Schiff Hardin, where she handles criminal
and civil matters. She has served as an adjunct professor at Loyola
University Chicago School of Law, teaching Federal criminal practice
and legal writing.
She has a distinguished record of pro bono work and community
service. Among her endeavors she has taught reading and legal skills to
children living in juvenile detention and she has provided legal advice
and guidance to the Warren Park Youth Baseball League.
She is also actively involved with St. Gertrude Catholic Parish in
Chicago and is on the board of the parish school, Northside Catholic
Academy.
Ms. Ellis is an excellent nominee for a Federal judge. She too is a
person with great family and children backing her up, and I am happy
Senator Kirk and I can commend her as well to the Senate for this
nomination.
I hope my colleagues will join me in voting to confirm these two
nominees who have bipartisan support and will be outstanding Federal
judges.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Oregon.
____________________