COLUMBIA - Federal judges in South
Carolina say they need more help to handle a high caseload, and the
judges could get it under a bill that has been approved by a U.S.
Senate Judiciary Committee.
U.S. District Judge Cameron Currie of Columbia says she has heard
cases every weekday without a break since Feb. 27.
Of the 94 federal district courts in the nation, South Carolina
ranked 18th in terms of its caseload.
"We certainly can use another [judge]," said South Carolina's
Chief U.S. District Judge Joe Anderson. "It's not just a political
plum" that U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham wants to create, Anderson said.
"We qualify for another one based on our judges' caseload."
Graham, R-S.C., tried to add state seats to the U.S. district
court as a congressman but failed. He amended this bill, approved by
the committee last week, to include South Carolina.
"We desperately need another judge," Graham said. "It's the
caseload. And we've got judges about to retire."
Of South Carolina's district court judges, two are close to
retirement and hear a reduced caseload. Judge Matthew Perry of
Columbia handles 50 percent of the typical caseload, and Judge Sol
Blatt Jr. of Charleston handles 30 percent.
South Carolina has 11 federal judges, but Circuit Judge Henry
Floyd has been nominated for the seat vacated by U.S. District Judge
Dennis Shedd, who was been promoted to the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals in Richmond, Va.
U.S. district court judges are nominated by the president and
handle criminal and civil federal cases. They sit below federal
appeals court judges and are appointed for life.
Anderson hopes it will be easier to add judges this year because
the same political party controls the White House and Congress. When
there's a split, he said, Congress can be reluctant to add
judgeships that will be filled by the president's nominees.
Another amendment to the bill would add 36 bankruptcy judges
across the nation, including one in South Carolina, which now has
two.