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Visiting judge

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A visiting judge is a judge appointed to hear a case as a member of a court to which he or she does not ordinarily belong (cf. pro hac vice for attorneys). In many United States Courts of Appeals it is not uncommon for a district judge to sit on a panel as a visiting judge; less frequently a judge from another circuit (in active service or, more commonly, in senior status). Retired Supreme Court justices have done the same, most recently Justice O'Connor,[1] and very unusually, sitting Justices (in 1984, for example, then-Justice William Rehnquist served as a visiting judge for a jury trial in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia.[2]). This is sometimes done to ease caseload pressures, and sometimes (as in Rehnquist's case) for experience.[3]

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