Judicial Transparency
Federal judges serve life tenure with enormous power over constitutional rights, yet face weaker disclosure rules than legislators. GovGuide maps financial holdings, recusal histories, and the full political chain — who appointed each judge, who confirmed them, and who funds the appointers.
Life tenure
No re-election accountability. A single appointment shapes law for decades.
Voluntary recusal
Judges police their own conflicts. No external enforcement mechanism exists.
Delayed disclosure
Financial reports are filed annually, months after the reporting period ends.
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Court Structure
Three tiers of Article III courts established by the Constitution and Congress.
Supreme Court of the United States
9 justicesComposition
- Chief Justice
- 1
- Associate Justices
- 8
- Term
- Life tenure (Art. III)
- Quorum
- 6 justices
Caseload
- Petitions received / term
- ~7,000
- Cases heard / term
- ~60 – 80
- Rule of Four
- 4 votes to grant cert.
- Disclosure standard
- Ethics in Government Act
U.S. Courts of Appeals
13 circuitsThe intermediate appellate courts review decisions from the district courts and federal agencies. Their rulings bind all lower courts within the circuit and are second only to the Supreme Court. Most federal cases end here — the Supreme Court hears fewer than 1% of appeals petitioned.
| Circuit | States / Jurisdiction | Active Seats | Profile |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1st Circuit | ME, MA, NH, RI, PR | 6 | Judges → |
| 2nd Circuit | CT, NY, VT | 13 | Judges → |
| 3rd Circuit | DE, NJ, PA, VI | 14 | Judges → |
| 4th Circuit | MD, NC, SC, VA, WV | 15 | Judges → |
| 5th Circuit | LA, MS, TX | 17 | Judges → |
| 6th Circuit | KY, MI, OH, TN | 16 | Judges → |
| 7th Circuit | IL, IN, WI | 11 | Judges → |
| 8th Circuit | AR, IA, MN, MO, NE, ND, SD | 11 | Judges → |
| 9th Circuit | AK, AZ, CA, HI, ID, MT, NV, OR, WA, GU, CNMI | 29 | Judges → |
| 10th Circuit | CO, KS, NM, OK, UT, WY | 12 | Judges → |
| 11th Circuit | AL, FL, GA | 12 | Judges → |
| D.C. Circuit | District of Columbia | 11 | Judges → |
| Fed. Circuit | Nationwide (patents, trade, federal claims) | 12 | Judges → |
U.S. District Courts
94 districtsStructure
- Total districts
- 94
- Coverage
- All 50 states + D.C., territories
- Active judges
- ~670
Jurisdiction
- Federal criminal prosecutions
- Civil cases under federal law
- Constitutional challenges
- Diversity jurisdiction (>$75K)
- Bankruptcy courts (attached)
Notable districts
- S.D.N.Y. — financial & securities
- D.D.C. — federal agency review
- N.D. Cal. — tech & antitrust
- E.D. Tex. — patent litigation
- W.D. Wash. — immigration appeals
Recent Judicial Conflict Alerts
All alerts →Flags generated when a judge's disclosed financial holdings intersect with cases on their docket, or when recusal obligations may have been overlooked.
- critical
Undisclosed holding — live data coming soon
Flags for judges presiding over cases involving companies in which they hold undisclosed or late-disclosed financial interests will appear here once the financial disclosure pipeline is live.
- high
Recusal gap — live data coming soon
Cases where a judge participated without recusing despite prior employment or investment ties to a party will surface here after cross-referencing disclosure filings.
- pending
Political chain cross-reference — live data coming soon
Alerts correlating a judge's ruling patterns with their appointing president's donor industries will populate here once the voting and donation datasets are connected.
The Appointment Chain
Every Article III judge traces back through a chain of democratic accountability. GovGuide makes that chain navigable.
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President nominates
The sitting president selects nominees, typically from lists compiled by the Federalist Society, American Constitution Society, or the White House Counsel's office. Donors and political allies often influence the selection process.
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Senate Judiciary Committee reviews
The committee holds public hearings, questions the nominee, and votes whether to send the nomination to the full Senate. Committee members' donors and affiliations are tracked here.
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Full Senate confirms
A simple majority of the Senate (51 votes since the 2017 nuclear option change) is required. Each judge's profile includes the confirmation vote tally and individual senator votes.
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Judge serves — with disclosure obligations
Federal judges file annual financial disclosures under the Ethics in Government Act. Since 2023, the Ethics in Government Act requires online publication. GovGuide indexes these filings and cross-references them with case assignments.