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David Brearley named first district judge.
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December 22, 1789, Judge Brearley convenes first court session.
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December 20, 1790, Judge Robert Morris confirmed to replace Judge Brearley.
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William Pennington appointed to federal bench.
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Bonaparte v. Camden tests eminent domain.
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District Court permanently moves to Trenton.
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Goodyear v. Day - Daniel Webster successfully defends patent for vulcanized rubber.
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The Confederate schooner Etta is condemned in U.S. v. The Etta.
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Judge John Nixon protects black suffrage in U.S. v. Souders.
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First N.J. federal courthouse opens in Trenton.
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D.N.J. borrows Judges William Butler and Leonard Wales from neighboring districts.
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Newark's first federal courthouse opens.
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Second judgeship authorized - Hon. Joseph Cross.
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In Feigenspan v. Bodine, Judge John Rellstab upholds constitutionality of Prohibition.
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Court terms are authorized in Camden.
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Dipping vanilla ice cream in chocolate is found not patentable in Eskimo Pie v. Levous.
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John Boyd Davis is the first judge assigned to Camden.
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Judge William Clark finds 18th Amendment unconstitutional.
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First U.S. probation officer, Edgar Dobbins, officially named.
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New federal courthouses open in Newark and Camden, left.
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New courthouse opens in Trenton.
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Schlitz v. Krueger - Newark's Krueger Brewery owns "Taste Tells" trademark.
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Judge Guy Fake sends Lady Justice statue to museum in Washington.
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Jury convicts nine of being unregistered agents of Nazi Germany.
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Referees in bankruptcy become full-time officials.
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Judge Guy Fake becomes first chief judge.
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Judge Anthony T. Augelli is first foreign-born judge in the district.
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Former Newark Mayor Hugh Addonizio convicted of extortion.
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Michael Keller, Jr. named first magistrate in the district.
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In YWCA v. Kugler, court holds woman has constitutional right to terminate pregnancy.
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Roger Lowenstein becomes the first federal public defender.
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Judge Clarkson Fisher presides over the Camden 28 trial.
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Referees in bankruptcy officially become judges; first bankruptcy clerk is hired.
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Judge Anne E. Thompson is first African American and first female appointed to the district.
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Judge Vincent Commisa becomes first chief judge of N.J. Bankruptcy Court.
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Judge H. Lee Sarokin frees Rubin "Hurricane" Carter.
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U.S. v. Accetturo, the longest trial in D.N.J. history (21 months), ends in acquittal.
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Magistrates officially become magistrate judges.
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Martin Luther King, Jr. Federal Building & Courthouse in Newark opens.
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Clarkson S. Fisher Courthouse in Trenton opens.
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Mitchell H. Cohen Courthouse in Camden opens.
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Electronic filing comes to the Bankruptcy Court.
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Electronic filing comes to the District Court.