FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
Contact: Brian McClung
September 28,
2007
(651) 296-0001
GOVERNOR PAWLENTY ANNOUNCES FINALISTS
FOR COURT OF APPEALS VACANCIES
Saint Paul
– Governor Tim Pawlenty today announced that he has
accepted the recommendations of the ad hoc screening committee that reviewed
résumés and conducted interviews for the three new judgeships on the Minnesota
Court of Appeals. These judgeships are new positions created by the 2007
Legislature (Laws of Minnesota 2007, Chapter 54, Article 1, Section
4). They are all at-large positions and become effective on January 1,
2008.
The finalists are Leonardo Castro, Francis J. Connolly, John
H. Guthmann, Matthew E. Johnson, Raymond R. Krause,
Laurie J. Miller, John R. Rodenberg, and Heidi S. Schellhas.
Castro, of White Bear Township, is the Fourth Judicial
District Chief Public Defender in Hennepin
County, a position he has
held since 2001. He has also been an adjunct professor at St. Thomas
School of Law in St. Paul since 2004, and was an
adjunct faculty at William Mitchell College of Law in St. Paul from 2002 to 2003. Castro was
the Fifth Judicial District Chief Public Defender from 1994 to 2001, an
attorney with the Riha Law Office in Owatonna from 1992 to 1993, and served in the
United States Air Force from 1981 to 1989. Castro earned his juris doctorate degree from Northern Illinois University
College of Law in DeKalb in 1992, and his bachelor of science degree from the University of Maryland
in 1988.
Connolly, of Minneapolis, is a Fourth Judicial District
trial court bench judge in Hennepin County, a position he has held since 1998,
and is currently presiding judge of the civil division. Connolly was
associate general counsel with Kraus-Anderson Realty Company from 1994 to 1998,
an attorney with Rossini, Nelson and Rossini from 1992 to 1994, an attorney
with Dorsey and Whitney from 1987 to 1992, an attorney with Popham,
Haik, Schnobrich and
Kaufman from 1986 to 1987, and was in the honors program of the U.S. Department
of Justice’s Antitrust Division in Washington, D.C. from 1984 to 1986.
Connolly earned his juris doctorate degree from Georgetown University
Law Center
in Washington, D.C.
in 1984, and his bachelor of arts degree from Columbia University
in New York
in 1980.
Guthmann, of St. Paul, is general partner of the Hansen, Dordell, Bradt, Odlaug and Bradt law firm in
Arden Hills. He has been an attorney with the firm since 1981, and his
practice is in civil litigation concentrating on natural gas explosions,
automobile negligence, product liability, workers’ compensation, insurance and
employment law. He was a law clerk to Minnesota Supreme Court Chief Justice
Robert J. Sheran from 1980 to 1981, and a law clerk
to Hennepin County District Court Judge Harold Kalina
in 1979. Guthmann earned his juris doctorate degree from William Mitchell College of Law
in St. Paul in1980, and his bachelor
of arts degree from Cornell College in Mount
Vernon, Iowa in 1976.
Johnson, of St. Paul, is an
attorney and shareholder with the Halleland, Lewis, Nilan and Johnson law firm in Minneapolis. He has been an attorney
with the firm since 2001, and his practice is in commercial and employment
litigation, including contractual disputes, business torts, trade secrets,
restrictive covenants, and employment discrimination. Johnson was an
associate attorney with the Smith Parker law firm in Minneapolis from 1995 to
2001, an associate attorney with the Popham, Haik, Schnobrich and Kaufman law
firm in Minneapolis from 1994 to 1995, a law clerk to U.S. Court of Appeals
Eighth Circuit Judge David R. Hansen from 1993 to 1994, and a law clerk for
U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Iowa Chief Judge Charles R. Wolle from 1992 to 1993. Johnson earned his juris doctorate degree from William Mitchell College of Law
in St. Paul in 1992, and his bachelor
of arts degree from St. Olaf College
in Northfield
in 1985.
Krause, of Arden Hills, is the Chief Administrative Law
Judge with the Minnesota Office of Administrative Hearings, a position he has
held since 2004. He was assistant commissioner for tax policy with the
Minnesota Department of Revenue from 2003 to 2004, a Minnesota Tax Court Judge
from 1998 through 2003, Dean and a professor of law at Hamline
University School of Law in St. Paul from 1994 to 1998, senior vice president
of government and community affairs (1989 to 1994), and director of government
relations (1984 to 1989) with the Pillsbury Company and Grand Metropolitan Inc.
in Minneapolis, manager of federal relations for TRW, Inc. from 1981 to 1984,
assistant director of government relations with Pfizer Corporation from 1979 to
1981, and a Congressional legislative assistant in Washington, D.C. from 1973
to 1978. Krause earned his juris doctorate
degree from Georgetown University Law
Center in Washington,
D.C. in 1978, and his bachelor
of science degree from Georgetown
University in 1973.
Miller, of Edina, is an attorney
and shareholder with the Fredrikson and Byron law
firm in Minneapolis.
She has been an attorney with the firm since 1989, practicing in the litigation
department, with a special interest in appellate practice, in both state and
federal courts. She was an attorney with the Dunlap and Seeger (then known as Dunlap, Keith, Finseth,
Berndt and Sandberg) law firm in Rochester from 1986 to 1989, an attorney with
the Orrick, Herrington and Sutcliffe law firm in San Francisco, California from
1983 to 1986, and a law clerk to U.S. Court of Appeals Eighth Circuit Judges
Myron H. Bright and Richard S. Arnold in St. Louis, Missouri from 1981 to
1983. Miller earned her juris doctorate degree
from Yale Law
School in New
Haven, Connecticut, in 1981, and
her bachelor of arts degree from Stanford
University in Palo Alto, California
in 1978.
Rodenberg, of New Ulm, is a Fifth Judicial District trial court bench judge
in Brown County, a position he has held since
2000. He was an attorney and partner in the New Ulm
law firm of Berens, Rodenberg,
and O’Connor from 1982 to 2000, and a staff attorney with the U.S. Social
Security Administration in Minneapolis
from 1981 to 1982. Rodenberg earned his juris doctorate degree cum laude from Hamline
University School of Law in St. Paul in 1981,
and his bachelor of arts degree cum laude from St. Olaf
College in Northfield
in 1978.
Schellhas, of Edina,
is a Fourth Judicial District trial court bench judge in Hennepin County,
a position she has held since 1996. She was an attorney and partner with
the Rode, Lucas and Schellhas law firm in Edina from 1989 to 1996, sole proprietor of the Heidi S. Schellhas Law Offices in Edina
from 1988 to 1989, and a clerk, associate attorney and partner with the law
firm of Carlsen, Greiner and Law in Minneapolis from 1979 to 1988. Schellhas earned her juris
doctorate degree from William Mitchell College of Law in St.
Paul in 1980, and her bachelor of arts
degree from the University
of Minnesota in 1975.
The Minnesota Court of Appeals has jurisdiction of appeals
from all final decisions of trial courts other than conciliation courts except
for appeals in election contests, convictions of murder in the first degree and
appeals from the Workers’ Compensation Court of Appeals and the Tax Court, which
are appealed directly to the Supreme Court. The Court of Appeals consists
of 16 judges; eight judges who serve at-large, and eight judges who are
initially appointed – one each – from the state’s eight congressional
districts. Seventy-seven people submitted their résumés for consideration
for these judgeships.
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