Jeremy D. Fogel

Jeremy D. Fogel

Jeremy Fogel is the first Executive Director of the Berkeley Judicial Institute, a center at Berkeley Law School whose mission is to build bridges between judges and academics and to promote an  ethical, resilient and independent judiciary. Prior to his appointment at Berkeley, he served as Director of the Federal Judicial Center in Washington, DC (2011-2018), as a United States District  Judge for the Northern District of California (1998-2011), and as a judge of the Santa Clara  County Superior (1986-1998) and Municipal (1981-1986) Courts. He was the founding Directing  Attorney of the Mental Health Advocacy Project from 1978 to 1981 and was a national leader in promoting access to justice for people with chronic mental health issues.

Judge Fogel has taught for the Federal Judicial Center since 2002 and was a lecturer at Stanford  Law School, where he taught a course on the psychology of litigation, from 2003 until his  relocation to Washington in 2011. He taught for the California Continuing Judicial Studies  Program (CJSP) and California Judicial College from 1987 to 2010 and served on CJSP’s  Curriculum Planning Committee for six years, including two as chair. He has served as a faculty  member for legal exchanges on ethics, case management and intellectual property in  approximately twenty foreign countries. During his tenure at the Federal Judicial Center, he  oversaw the development of the Center’s first comprehensive, integrated curriculum for judicial  branch education.

Judge Fogel was a member of the Committee on Financial Disclosure of the Judicial Conference  of the United States from 2004-2011; he chaired the subcommittee that developed the original  platform and procedures for electronic filing of annual financial disclosure reports and laid the groundwork for online public access. As a California state court judge, he chaired the Judicial  Ethics Committee and Judicial Discipline and Disability Committee of the California Judges  Association, and he organized and led a confidential counseling program for judges facing  disciplinary proceedings.

He received his B.A. from Stanford University in 1971 and his J.D. from Harvard Law School in  1974. Judge Fogel has received numerous accolades, including the Samuel E. Gates Litigation  Award from the American College of Trial Lawyers for significant contributions to the litigation  process, the President’s Award for Outstanding Service to the California Judiciary from the  California Judges Association, and the Vanguard Award from the State Bar of California for  notable contributions to intellectual property law.