Judge Humphrey is a member of the National Conference of Bankruptcy Judges, the American Bankruptcy Institute, the Thomas F. Waldron American Bankruptcy Law Forum (Trustee), the Dayton Bar Association (Foundation Fellow), and the Federal Bar Association.
He has served as a member of the Local Bankruptcy Rules Committee, the Bankruptcy Bench-Bar Conference Committee (Chair 2015-2019), and the Complex Chapter 11 Procedures working group for the District. He also has an obvious liberty interest in not being subjected to an involuntary psychiatric examination and a further liberty interest in not being stigmatized as having committed misconduct and having his mental health questioned.”The four judges complained that Adams had threatened a federal magistrate judge with contempt for missing a Social Security appeal deadline, which Adams said was a chronic problem at the court.
That representation spanned many industries, including manufacturing, real estate, lodging, retail, construction, restaurant and food service, transportation, utilities, financial institutions, and equipment sales and leasing.Both as a practitioner and as a judge, Judge Humphrey has been a presenter at numerous legal education seminars and conferences and has served as a mediator for many contested matters and proceedings. He is a graduate of Kent State University and The Ohio State University Moritz College of Law.Judge Humphrey is a member of the National Conference of Bankruptcy Judges, the American Bankruptcy Institute, the Thomas F. Waldron American Bankruptcy Law Forum (Trustee), the Dayton Bar Association (Foundation Fellow), and the Federal Bar Association. He is represented by Paul Orfanedes with Judicial Watch.In his 24-page lawsuit, Adams claims the sanctions violate his Fifth Amendment rights to due process. Since being appointed, he has enjoyed participating in the University of Dayton School of Law’s externship program and as a judge for the high school Robert N. Farquhar District Mock Trial Competition.Judge Humphrey was appointed as a Judge of the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Ohio, sitting in Dayton, in 2007.
It also ordered that Judge Adams ‘shall submit to any treatment or counseling deemed necessary by the psychiatrist.’ Further, it asserted that, should Judge Adams continue to refuse to undergo a psychiatric examination, he be requested to voluntarily retire,” according to the complaint.After Adams responded to the report and recommendations, the Judicial Council issued an order and memorandum that “largely adopted the Special Committee’s recommendations,” but vacated the order that no new cases be assigned to him for two years. In addition to the Judicial Council of the Sixth Circuit, he sued its chairman, Judge R. Guy Cole, the Committee on Judicial Conduct and Disability of the Judicial Conference of the United States, and its chairman, Judge Anthony J. Scirica. “The report concluded that Judge Adams did not suffer from any diagnosable mental disorder,” he says.In the face of his continuing resistance, the committee did expand the scope of its investigation to include whether he suffered from a mental disability, and demanded that Adams provide it with complete records about his “mental or emotional treatment, counseling, evaluation or diagnosis,” and “all records regarding any psychotropic medications (such as mood stabilizers, antidepressants, or tranquilizers),” Adams says in the complaint.
In autumn that year, “the Special Committee demanded that Judge Adams undergo a psychiatric evaluation as part of its investigation,” but “identified no specific reason for the request,” Adams says in his complaint.U.S. It was also unfair.”Adams appealed, but in August this year the review committee largely upheld the Judicial Council’s order and memorandum. 6. Circuit Judges Ralph B. Courthouse in Cincinnati, Ohio.It is one of thirteen United States courts of appeals.. William Howard Taft, the only person ever to serve as both President and Chief Justice of the United States, once served on the Sixth Circuit.Four other judges of the Sixth Circuit have been elevated to serve on the Supreme Court.