From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Timothy S. Driscoll
Justice, Supreme Court of New York, Nassau County (first elected in 2007 and re-elected in 2021)
Assumed office
2007
Personal details
EducationHofstra University (summa cum laude 1988), Harvard Law School (cum laude 1991)

Timothy Sean Driscoll is an American judge, serving as a justice in the trial level Supreme Court of Nassau County, New York. He has served in that court's specialized Commercial Division from 2009 to the present (as of July 2024). He is a leader among New York judges in the Commercial Division, and in the national community of specialized business court judges. Before becoming a judge, he served in the executive branch of county government, served as both a federal and local prosecutor in criminal matters, and held a prestigious judicial clerkship in the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit.

Judicial service

In 2007, Driscoll was elected to the Supreme Court of Nassau County, New York for a 14-year term, and re-elected in 2021. [1] Nassau County's Supreme Court is a trial court of broad jurisdiction, though many criminal matters are heard outside its jurisdiction. [2] From May 2008 through April 2009, Driscoll was assigned as a justice in the court's Matrimonial Center. [3]

Driscoll has been serving in Nassau County's Commercial Division since May 2009 (as of July 2024). [3] New York's Commercial Division is a specialized business court docket within New York's Supreme Court, with a jurisdiction limited to disputes of a business and commercial nature. Commercial Division judges preside over an assigned case from beginning to end. "The caseload of the Division is ... very demanding, requiring of the court scholarship in commercial law, experience in the management of complex cases, and a wealth of energy." [4] [5] Driscoll has issued over 500 legal opinions as a Commercial Division judge over the last 15 years. [6]

In 2013, Driscoll was one of Chief Judge Jonathan Lippman's original appointments to the New York Commercial Division Advisory Council, created to advise the chief justice on "an ongoing basis about all matters involving and surrounding the Commercial Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York." [7] Driscoll has written extensively for national audiences on developments and practices in New York's Commercial Division. [8] [9] [10]

Driscoll also has played a prominent role nationally among U.S. business court judges, concerning business courts more generally. He is a past president of the American College of Business Court Judges. [11] He was a Business Court Representative to the American Bar Association's Business Law Section. [12] Driscoll is a co-author of The Business Courts Benchbook. [13] He has provided judicial education to business court judges in states other than New York. [14]

Driscoll has also served on the Appellate Term for the 9th and 10th Judicial Districts [15] in New York. [16] [17]

Government service

Driscoll served as Deputy Nassau County Executive for Law Enforcement and Public Safety from July 2004 to December 2007. [18]

From November 1992 to July 1996, Driscoll was an associate attorney with the law firm Williams & Connolly, located in Washington, D.C. From September 1996 through November 2000, Driscoll served as an assistant district attorney in Nassau County, New York. From November 2000 to July 2004, Driscoll served as an assistant United States Attorney in the United States Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of New York. [18] As an assistant U.S. Attorney, he prosecuted a range of criminal matters, including, among other things, violent crimes, drug trafficking, and white collar crimes such as mail, wire, and health care fraud, with his work recognized by federal and local law enforcement agencies. [19]

Judicial clerkship

After graduating law school in 1991, and into 1992, Driscoll was a law clerk to the Honorable Joseph M. McLaughlin of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. [18] [20]

Education and as an academic

Driscoll received his undergraduate degree, summa cum laude, from Hofstra University in 1988, and his juris doctor degree, cum laude, from Harvard Law School in 1991. He graduated from Holy Trinity High School in Hicksville, New York. [18]

Driscoll has been an adjunct professor at Brooklyn Law School since 1998, as well as at Nassau Community College. He has been a teaching team member at the Harvard Law School's Trial Advocacy Workshop since 2003. [18] [16] [21]

Author

Driscoll has been an author or co-author of the following publications, among others:

• Co-authored the chapters on discovery management, electronic discovery, and trials in The Business Courts Benchbook. [13]

• Authored the chapter on motion practice in the treatise, Commercial Litigation in New York State Courts (Haig. ed. 2020). [22]

• The Time Has Come (Accompanied by Affidavits): A Method for More Expeditious Trials in Commercial Cases. [8]

• Keeping Current: The New York State Supreme Court Commercial Division: Past, Present, and Future (Part 2). [9]

• Keeping Current: The New York State Supreme Court Commercial Division: Past, Present, and Future (Part 1). [10] [23]

Positions and memberships

• President, American College of Business Court Judges. [11]

• Co-chair, New York Chief Administrative Judge's working group on electronic discovery. [18]

• Member, appointed by Chief Judge Jonathan Lippman as an original member of the New York Commercial Division Advisory Council. [7] [18]

• Co-chair of the Subcommittee on Alternative Dispute Resolution, within the New York Chief Judge's Advisory Council on Commercial Litigation in New York State. [18]

• Co-chair of the Real Estate and Land Use Litigation Subcommittee of the ABA Business Law Section's Business and Corporate Litigation Committee. [24]

• Business Court Representative to the American Bar Association's Business Law Section. [12]

• Served as president of the Catholic Lawyers Guild of Nassau County. [25]

Awards and honors

• In 2018, Driscoll received the Judge of the Year from the Long Beach Lawyers Association. "The award is presented each year to a member of the judiciary who, through actions and deeds, has consistently demonstrated extraordinary leadership, fairness and integrity." [26]

Summa cum laude graduate Hofstra University. [18]

Cum laude graduate of Harvard Law School. [18]

• Driscoll was among the first group of Nassau Community College adjunct faculty to receive the New York State Education Chancellor’s Award for Excellence in Adjunct Teaching. [16]

• Driscoll was inducted into the Holy Trinity High School Hall of Fame in 2005. [18]

References

  1. ^ "Timothy S. Driscoll, New York State Board of Elections".
  2. ^ "New York State Unified Court System, 10th Judicial District, Nassau County Supreme Court".
  3. ^ a b "Biography of Justice Timothy S. Driscoll, New York State Unified Court System, Commercial Division, Nassau County".
  4. ^ "History, Commercial Division - New York Supreme Court, New York State Unified Court System".
  5. ^ "PART 202. Uniform Civil Rules For The Supreme Court And The County Court | NYCOURTS.GOV". ww2.nycourts.gov. Archived from the original on 2019-03-11. Retrieved 2019-03-02.
  6. ^ "Search New York Slip Decisions".
  7. ^ a b Prudenti, Chief Administrative Judge A. Gail (March 26, 2013). "Chief Judge Names Members of Commercial Division Advisory Council, Press Release" (PDF).
  8. ^ a b Driscoll, Hon. Timothy S. (2017-07-15). "A Method for More Expeditious Trials in Commercial Cases | blt". Business Law Today from ABA. Retrieved 2024-07-21.
  9. ^ a b Driscoll, Hon. Timothy S. (July 2015). "Keeping Current: Recent Developments in the Commercial Division of the New York State Supreme Court (Part Two)". Business Law Today.
  10. ^ a b Driscoll, Hon. Timothy S. (October 2014). "Keeping Current: The New York State Supreme Court Commercial Division: Past, Present, and Future (Part 1)". Business Law Today.
  11. ^ a b "American College of Business Court Judges – Law & Economics Center". masonlec.org. Retrieved 2024-07-21.
  12. ^ a b "Business Court Representatives, American Bar Association, Business Law Section".
  13. ^ a b Tiradentes, Vanessa R. (2019). The Business Courts Benchbook. American Bar Association. ISBN  978-1-64105-540-6.
  14. ^ "Maryland Business and Technology (B&T) Judicial Bootcamp" (PDF). 2023.
  15. ^ "New York's Appellate Terms, A Manual for Practitioners" (PDF). July 2014.
  16. ^ a b c "A Discussion with Judge Timothy Driscoll". americanbar.org. April 18, 2023.
  17. ^ "Appellate Division - Second Judicial Department". nycourts.gov. Retrieved 2024-07-21.
  18. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Hon. Timothy S. Driscoll, New York State Supreme Court, Mineola, New York State Bar Association" (PDF).
  19. ^ "Biography of Justice Timothy S. Driscoll, New York State Unified Court System, Commercial Division - Nassau County".
  20. ^ Driscoll, Hon. Timothy S. (February 26, 2024). "The Enduring Bond Between Clerks and Judges". New York Law Journal. Retrieved 2024-07-21.
  21. ^ "Brooklyn Law School - Driscoll Timothy". www.brooklaw.edu. Retrieved 2024-07-21.
  22. ^ McEntee, John P. (April 2022). "Focus: Book Review" (PDF). Nassau Lawyer, The Journal of the Nassau County Bar Association. 71 (8): 5.
  23. ^ Driscoll, Hon. Timothy H. (October 22, 2014). "Keeping Current: The New York State Supreme Court Commercial Division: Past, Present, And Future, in Corporate Counsel Business Journal".
  24. ^ "Business and Corporate Litigation Section Subcommittees, American Bar Association Business Law Section".
  25. ^ "Timothy S. Driscoll". Retrieved 2024-07-21.
  26. ^ "Timothy Driscoll Awarded 'Judge of the Year' by Long Beach Lawyers Association". New York Law Journal. Retrieved 2024-07-21.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Timothy S. Driscoll
Justice, Supreme Court of New York, Nassau County (first elected in 2007 and re-elected in 2021)
Assumed office
2007
Personal details
EducationHofstra University (summa cum laude 1988), Harvard Law School (cum laude 1991)

Timothy Sean Driscoll is an American judge, serving as a justice in the trial level Supreme Court of Nassau County, New York. He has served in that court's specialized Commercial Division from 2009 to the present (as of July 2024). He is a leader among New York judges in the Commercial Division, and in the national community of specialized business court judges. Before becoming a judge, he served in the executive branch of county government, served as both a federal and local prosecutor in criminal matters, and held a prestigious judicial clerkship in the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit.

Judicial service

In 2007, Driscoll was elected to the Supreme Court of Nassau County, New York for a 14-year term, and re-elected in 2021. [1] Nassau County's Supreme Court is a trial court of broad jurisdiction, though many criminal matters are heard outside its jurisdiction. [2] From May 2008 through April 2009, Driscoll was assigned as a justice in the court's Matrimonial Center. [3]

Driscoll has been serving in Nassau County's Commercial Division since May 2009 (as of July 2024). [3] New York's Commercial Division is a specialized business court docket within New York's Supreme Court, with a jurisdiction limited to disputes of a business and commercial nature. Commercial Division judges preside over an assigned case from beginning to end. "The caseload of the Division is ... very demanding, requiring of the court scholarship in commercial law, experience in the management of complex cases, and a wealth of energy." [4] [5] Driscoll has issued over 500 legal opinions as a Commercial Division judge over the last 15 years. [6]

In 2013, Driscoll was one of Chief Judge Jonathan Lippman's original appointments to the New York Commercial Division Advisory Council, created to advise the chief justice on "an ongoing basis about all matters involving and surrounding the Commercial Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York." [7] Driscoll has written extensively for national audiences on developments and practices in New York's Commercial Division. [8] [9] [10]

Driscoll also has played a prominent role nationally among U.S. business court judges, concerning business courts more generally. He is a past president of the American College of Business Court Judges. [11] He was a Business Court Representative to the American Bar Association's Business Law Section. [12] Driscoll is a co-author of The Business Courts Benchbook. [13] He has provided judicial education to business court judges in states other than New York. [14]

Driscoll has also served on the Appellate Term for the 9th and 10th Judicial Districts [15] in New York. [16] [17]

Government service

Driscoll served as Deputy Nassau County Executive for Law Enforcement and Public Safety from July 2004 to December 2007. [18]

From November 1992 to July 1996, Driscoll was an associate attorney with the law firm Williams & Connolly, located in Washington, D.C. From September 1996 through November 2000, Driscoll served as an assistant district attorney in Nassau County, New York. From November 2000 to July 2004, Driscoll served as an assistant United States Attorney in the United States Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of New York. [18] As an assistant U.S. Attorney, he prosecuted a range of criminal matters, including, among other things, violent crimes, drug trafficking, and white collar crimes such as mail, wire, and health care fraud, with his work recognized by federal and local law enforcement agencies. [19]

Judicial clerkship

After graduating law school in 1991, and into 1992, Driscoll was a law clerk to the Honorable Joseph M. McLaughlin of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. [18] [20]

Education and as an academic

Driscoll received his undergraduate degree, summa cum laude, from Hofstra University in 1988, and his juris doctor degree, cum laude, from Harvard Law School in 1991. He graduated from Holy Trinity High School in Hicksville, New York. [18]

Driscoll has been an adjunct professor at Brooklyn Law School since 1998, as well as at Nassau Community College. He has been a teaching team member at the Harvard Law School's Trial Advocacy Workshop since 2003. [18] [16] [21]

Author

Driscoll has been an author or co-author of the following publications, among others:

• Co-authored the chapters on discovery management, electronic discovery, and trials in The Business Courts Benchbook. [13]

• Authored the chapter on motion practice in the treatise, Commercial Litigation in New York State Courts (Haig. ed. 2020). [22]

• The Time Has Come (Accompanied by Affidavits): A Method for More Expeditious Trials in Commercial Cases. [8]

• Keeping Current: The New York State Supreme Court Commercial Division: Past, Present, and Future (Part 2). [9]

• Keeping Current: The New York State Supreme Court Commercial Division: Past, Present, and Future (Part 1). [10] [23]

Positions and memberships

• President, American College of Business Court Judges. [11]

• Co-chair, New York Chief Administrative Judge's working group on electronic discovery. [18]

• Member, appointed by Chief Judge Jonathan Lippman as an original member of the New York Commercial Division Advisory Council. [7] [18]

• Co-chair of the Subcommittee on Alternative Dispute Resolution, within the New York Chief Judge's Advisory Council on Commercial Litigation in New York State. [18]

• Co-chair of the Real Estate and Land Use Litigation Subcommittee of the ABA Business Law Section's Business and Corporate Litigation Committee. [24]

• Business Court Representative to the American Bar Association's Business Law Section. [12]

• Served as president of the Catholic Lawyers Guild of Nassau County. [25]

Awards and honors

• In 2018, Driscoll received the Judge of the Year from the Long Beach Lawyers Association. "The award is presented each year to a member of the judiciary who, through actions and deeds, has consistently demonstrated extraordinary leadership, fairness and integrity." [26]

Summa cum laude graduate Hofstra University. [18]

Cum laude graduate of Harvard Law School. [18]

• Driscoll was among the first group of Nassau Community College adjunct faculty to receive the New York State Education Chancellor’s Award for Excellence in Adjunct Teaching. [16]

• Driscoll was inducted into the Holy Trinity High School Hall of Fame in 2005. [18]

References

  1. ^ "Timothy S. Driscoll, New York State Board of Elections".
  2. ^ "New York State Unified Court System, 10th Judicial District, Nassau County Supreme Court".
  3. ^ a b "Biography of Justice Timothy S. Driscoll, New York State Unified Court System, Commercial Division, Nassau County".
  4. ^ "History, Commercial Division - New York Supreme Court, New York State Unified Court System".
  5. ^ "PART 202. Uniform Civil Rules For The Supreme Court And The County Court | NYCOURTS.GOV". ww2.nycourts.gov. Archived from the original on 2019-03-11. Retrieved 2019-03-02.
  6. ^ "Search New York Slip Decisions".
  7. ^ a b Prudenti, Chief Administrative Judge A. Gail (March 26, 2013). "Chief Judge Names Members of Commercial Division Advisory Council, Press Release" (PDF).
  8. ^ a b Driscoll, Hon. Timothy S. (2017-07-15). "A Method for More Expeditious Trials in Commercial Cases | blt". Business Law Today from ABA. Retrieved 2024-07-21.
  9. ^ a b Driscoll, Hon. Timothy S. (July 2015). "Keeping Current: Recent Developments in the Commercial Division of the New York State Supreme Court (Part Two)". Business Law Today.
  10. ^ a b Driscoll, Hon. Timothy S. (October 2014). "Keeping Current: The New York State Supreme Court Commercial Division: Past, Present, and Future (Part 1)". Business Law Today.
  11. ^ a b "American College of Business Court Judges – Law & Economics Center". masonlec.org. Retrieved 2024-07-21.
  12. ^ a b "Business Court Representatives, American Bar Association, Business Law Section".
  13. ^ a b Tiradentes, Vanessa R. (2019). The Business Courts Benchbook. American Bar Association. ISBN  978-1-64105-540-6.
  14. ^ "Maryland Business and Technology (B&T) Judicial Bootcamp" (PDF). 2023.
  15. ^ "New York's Appellate Terms, A Manual for Practitioners" (PDF). July 2014.
  16. ^ a b c "A Discussion with Judge Timothy Driscoll". americanbar.org. April 18, 2023.
  17. ^ "Appellate Division - Second Judicial Department". nycourts.gov. Retrieved 2024-07-21.
  18. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Hon. Timothy S. Driscoll, New York State Supreme Court, Mineola, New York State Bar Association" (PDF).
  19. ^ "Biography of Justice Timothy S. Driscoll, New York State Unified Court System, Commercial Division - Nassau County".
  20. ^ Driscoll, Hon. Timothy S. (February 26, 2024). "The Enduring Bond Between Clerks and Judges". New York Law Journal. Retrieved 2024-07-21.
  21. ^ "Brooklyn Law School - Driscoll Timothy". www.brooklaw.edu. Retrieved 2024-07-21.
  22. ^ McEntee, John P. (April 2022). "Focus: Book Review" (PDF). Nassau Lawyer, The Journal of the Nassau County Bar Association. 71 (8): 5.
  23. ^ Driscoll, Hon. Timothy H. (October 22, 2014). "Keeping Current: The New York State Supreme Court Commercial Division: Past, Present, And Future, in Corporate Counsel Business Journal".
  24. ^ "Business and Corporate Litigation Section Subcommittees, American Bar Association Business Law Section".
  25. ^ "Timothy S. Driscoll". Retrieved 2024-07-21.
  26. ^ "Timothy Driscoll Awarded 'Judge of the Year' by Long Beach Lawyers Association". New York Law Journal. Retrieved 2024-07-21.

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