Originally posted by Mrs.BrainSurgeon
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At the federal level, if you are in law school (which I don't think you are...), you apply through the online OSCAR system. OSCAR provides the Law Clerk Hiring Plan for 3Ls, which the judges are **supposed to** follow. Info on that is available at www.oscar.uscourts.gov. If you are still in law school, you must go through OSCAR. You apply only during the application and interview season as set up by OSCAR (interviews for the following academic year--the calendar for term clerkships--begin in Sept).
If you are a law school grad, you can apply either through OSCAR or by sending your resume, writing sample and cover letter directly to the judges you are interested in clerking for. But, if you send a package during the "off" season (after interviews for the upcoming year), you may not hear anything for months and months because the judge is already staffed for the upcoming term and doesn't have any openings. It will save you a lot of wasted time if you go online to OSCAR and find out which judges are looking for a clerk. Some have career clerks and never hire new ones; others have unexpected openings and are looking to staff up immediately. Also, the OSCAR site has information that is particular to each judge--some judges are weird...they want your LSAT scores or something bizarre. Finally, I would think outside the box: US district ct clerkships are not the only ones out there. There is the CoA, US Mag, BK Ct, Ct of Interntl Trade, the US Tax Ct, etc.
You do not need to be licensed in the state where the federal judge presides; you need only to have a bar license in one of the 50 states or territories and be in good standing in every jurisdiction in which you hold a license.
In my comments re: federal clerkships, I am referring to all Article III and Article I judges, except for the justices on the Supreme Court. Applying to the Supreme Court is a completely different animal--I think the justices have feeder professors who refer to them qualified candidates or something. I don't know anything about that very "elite" process. To say the least, I am not **special** that way!
I believe there are several people here, including myself, who've done state and/or federal clerkships and could be of more detailed guidance if you seek out a clerkship.
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