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David Prosser Jr.

David T. Prosser Jr. (born December 24, 1942) is an American jurist and politician who served as Speaker of the Wisconsin State Assembly from 1995 to 1996, and as a justice of the Wisconsin Supreme Court from 1998 to 2016. He is currently an advisor to Wisconsin Assembly speaker Robin Vos as Vos seeks a rationale for impeaching current Wisconsin Supreme Court justice Janet Protasiewicz.

David Prosser Jr.
Prosser in March 2011
Justice of the Wisconsin Supreme Court
In office
September 10, 1998 – July 31, 2016
Appointed byTommy Thompson
Preceded byJanine Geske
Succeeded byDaniel Kelly
Commissioner of the Wisconsin Tax Appeals Commission
In office
January 1997 – September 1998
Appointed byTommy Thompson
Preceded byJoe Mettner
Succeeded byThomas Boykoff
72nd Speaker of the Wisconsin State Assembly
In office
January 3, 1995 – January 3, 1997
Preceded byWalter Kunicki
Succeeded byBen Brancel
Minority Leader of the Wisconsin Assembly
In office
January 3, 1989 – January 3, 1995
Preceded byBetty Jo Nelsen
Succeeded byWalter Kunicki
Member of the Wisconsin State Assembly
In office
January 7, 1985 – January 3, 1997
Preceded byHeron Van Gorden
Succeeded bySteve Wieckert
Constituency57th district
In office
January 3, 1983 – January 7, 1985
Preceded byTommy Thompson
Succeeded byJoe Wineke
Constituency79th district
In office
January 3, 1979 – January 3, 1983
Preceded byTobias A. Roth
Succeeded byHarvey Stower
Constituency42nd district
District Attorney of Outagamie County
In office
January 1, 1977 – January 1, 1979
Preceded byKenneth F. Rottier
Succeeded byWilliam Drengler
Personal details
Born (1942-12-24) December 24, 1942 (age 80)
Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
Political partyRepublican
Alma mater
ProfessionAttorney

Following his graduation from University of Wisconsin Law School, Prosser worked in Washington as an attorney at the U.S. Department of Justice and as an aide to U.S. Representative Harold Vernon Froehlich. Returning to Wisconsin, he began a private practice, worked as a district attorney for two years, then served 18 years as a Republican party legislator in the Wisconsin State Assembly. He was the state house minority leader for six of those years and Speaker of the Assembly for two years.

After an unsuccessful bid for the U.S. House in 1996, Prosser was appointed by Wisconsin Governor Tommy Thompson to a vacant seat on the state tax appeals board, then in 1998 to a vacant seat on Wisconsin Supreme Court. He was elected to his first 10-year term without opposition in 2001. He ran for reelection in April 2011 against little-known Wisconsin assistant attorney general JoAnne Kloppenburg. The race received national attention and was viewed as a referendum on efforts by Republican Governor Scott Walker and the Republican-controlled legislature to curb the union rights of public workers in Wisconsin.[1][2] The April 5, 2011, election was too close to call until two days later when the Waukesha County Clerk announced she had erroneously omitted more than 14,000 votes from her earlier tally. The additional votes gave Prosser a lead of over 7,000 which was sustained by a later recount.

Prosser received media attention in 2010 following verbal altercations with the chief justice of the Wisconsin Supreme Court, and also in June 2011 when allegations were made of a physical altercation between Prosser and fellow associate justice Ann Walsh Bradley that occurred in connection with the union-curbing bill.[3] A special prosecutor investigated but declined to press criminal charges.[4] An ethics action against Prosser was recommended by the Wisconsin Judicial Commission,[5] however, after three other justices recused themselves from the matter, no further action was taken.[6] Prosser returned to the spotlight in September 2023, when he emerged as an advisor to Wisconsin Assembly speaker Robin Vos in his attempts to find a rationale to impeach the newest Wisconsin Supreme Court justice, Janet Protasiewicz.[7]

Early life and education Edit

Prosser was born in Chicago, Illinois, to David T. Prosser Sr. and his wife Elizabeth (Patterson) Prosser,[8] and was raised in Appleton, Wisconsin. After graduating from Appleton High School, he attended DePauw University, receiving his B.A. in 1965.[9] He went on to law school at the University of Wisconsin and received his J.D. in 1968.[9]

Career Edit

Early career Edit

Prosser lectured at Indiana University-Indianapolis Law School from 1968 to 1969, before working from 1969 to 1972 in Washington, D.C., as an attorney advisor in the Office of Criminal Justice, U.S. Department of Justice.[10][11] He ran unsuccessfully for a seat in the Wisconsin State Assembly in 1972, then served as an administrative assistant to U.S. Representative Harold Vernon Froehlich. Froehlich was a Republican and a former speaker of the Wisconsin State Assembly, serving his first term in the U.S. House of Representatives. As a member of the House Judiciary Committee during the Watergate impeachment hearings, in the 1973–1974 term, he was one of the few Republicans who voted in favor of impeaching Richard Nixon. Froehlich lost re-election in the Democratic wave of 1974.[9][11] Prosser returned to Wisconsin and, after two years in private practice as a self-employed lawyer, he was elected Outagamie County district attorney in the 1976 election, serving from 1977 to 1978.[9][12]

Wisconsin legislature Edit

Prosser represented the Appleton area in the Wisconsin State Assembly as a Republican from 1979 through 1996.[11] His committee assignments included Criminal Justice and Public Safety and Judiciary.[9] During his tenure in the Assembly, he served six years as Minority leader and two years as Speaker.[11]

In 1981, he opposed removing criminal penalties on sexual activity and cohabitation between unmarried, consulting adults,[13] though he did express a willingness to repeal the jail terms.[14] He stated that legalizing sex outside of marriage would increase divorce rates, the number of children born outside of wedlock, welfare payments, sexually transmitted diseases, and abortions.[14] In 1995, while he was Assembly Speaker, Prosser led the push for the new baseball stadium for the Milwaukee Brewers, saying that Wisconsin had a choice of being either a "big league or bush league" state.[15]

Campaign for U.S. Congress Edit

In 1996 he ran for the 8th congressional district seat in the U.S. Congress vacated by retiring U.S. Representative Toby Roth.[16] Prosser won what the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel described as a "bitter and high-spending" primary, but was defeated in the general election by Democrat Jay W. Johnson.[16] One month later, Governor Thompson appointed Prosser to the Wisconsin Tax Appeals Commission where he conducted hearings and ruled on disputes related to state taxation.[11][16]

Wisconsin Supreme Court Edit

In September 1998, Thompson appointed Prosser to a vacant seat on the Wisconsin Supreme Court, hailing him as a conservative.[17] In an unusual move, a bipartisan group of 77 of the 132 state legislators sent a letter to Thompson supporting the appointment, describing Prosser as, "learned, thoughtful, and fiercely defensive of our system of law".[18]

In 2011, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel said Prosser is a "reliable judicial conservative, but he's also independent",[19] citing an August 2010 Wisconsin Law Journal analysis which concluded "Prosser voted with no justice more than 85% of the time, though he generally combined with three other conservative justices (Michael Gableman, Patience Roggensack, and Annette Ziegler), to form a 4-3 majority on the court.[20] The New York Times said some observers believe that Prosser is a member of a conservative 4-3 bloc on the court.[1]

In October 2010, Prosser indicated that he supported limiting free online access to Wisconsin trial court records because the information can be misused by employers and landlords, saying, "Some people are actually innocent, and they shouldn't be disadvantaged forever" by the online records.[21] Opponents of the change argued that restricting free online access may result in private vendors selling the information, and may conflict with Wisconsin's open records law.[21]

Following the decision in Donohoo v. Action Wisconsin Inc., Prosser voted to amend the state's judicial code of conduct to allow judges to decide cases involving their campaign contributors,[22] saying there are various levels of support and a campaign contribution or endorsement "in and of itself does not create so close or special relationship so as to require automatic recusal."[23] He has also said his policy is not to recuse himself from cases involving lawmakers he has served with in the past unless the case is actually about the lawmakers.[24]

Prosser retired from the Wisconsin Supreme Court on July 31, 2016.[25]

Other professional activities Edit

Prosser served as a member of the Wisconsin Council of Criminal Justice (1980–1983), the Judicial Council Commission on Preliminary Examinations (1981), the Wisconsin Sentencing Commission (1984–1988, 1994–1995), the Wisconsin Sesquicentennial Commission (1993–1999), and the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws (1983–1996).[11][26]

Controversies Edit

Decision not to prosecute abuse case Edit

In 1978, while serving as District Attorney of Outagamie County, Prosser declined to prosecute a Catholic priest accused of sexual abuse by two brothers (ages 12 and 14), who said the priest had touched their chests and unsuccessfully attempted to touch lower.[27] Prosser later explained he did not file charges because the case was weak; it involved relatively new sexual assault laws that were untested at the time, and he did not think he could win a jury trial.[28][29] He said he had assumed the priest, John Patrick Feeney, would be reassigned as a result of his discussion with Feeney's bishop.[30] The priest was not removed from duties which allowed him contact with children, and he went on to abuse other children before being sent to prison on a 15-year sentence in 2004.[27][31] The prosecutor who ultimately and successfully prosecuted the case in the early 2000s said that when Prosser had the case in the 1970s, he was lacking sufficient information: "We were able to gather a wealth of information that far exceeded what Prosser had," he said, adding, "It's not fair to second-guess him now."[31] When interviewed in 2011 one of the victims said that in 1978 he and his brother had not communicated detailed information about the abuse to the authorities, and that when the case came to trial in 2002, Prosser helped in the prosecution.[28][32]

During Prosser's 2011 run for re-election to the Wisconsin Supreme Court, the incident was revived in a political ad by a pro-union organization[33] which claimed that Prosser did not investigate the abuse allegations and participated in a coverup.[34] The ad was ultimately rated "Mostly False" by the fact-checking website, PolitiFact.com, which concluded that the ad omitted critical facts and created false impressions.[34] One of the abuse victims, who had been critical of Prosser's decision not to prosecute, criticized the ad as "offensive, inaccurate and out of context."[35] Prosser asked his opponent, Kloppenburg, to call for the removal of the ad—she replied that the First Amendment gave the group the right to run such ads.[36]

Assembly staffers used for campaigning Edit

In 2006, Prosser testified on behalf of Wisconsin State Representative Scott Jensen who was being tried on three felony counts of misconduct in office because his legislative staffers also performed campaign activity on his behalf. Prosser stated that during seven years of his own tenure in the Wisconsin Assembly, he had used his taxpayer-funded staff for campaigning—the same crime Jensen was eventually convicted of.[37][38] Prosser was not charged, and defended the actions saying, "it was a different era and public expectations were quite different". However critics described this as illegal activity, and the Appleton Post Crescent, Prosser's hometown paper, found Prosser's admissions sufficient reason to endorse Prosser's opponent in the 2011 election, saying Prosser fell short of having the "unimpeachable integrity" required of a high court judge because he had admittedly "condoned illegal activity" while serving as an elected official.[39]

Altercations with other justices Edit

During a closed-door debate between the justices on February 10, 2010, Prosser called Chief Justice Shirley Abrahamson "a total bitch" and threatened to "destroy her".[40] A review of emails by the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel indicated that "justices on both sides described the court as dysfunctional, and Prosser and others suggested bringing in a third party for help".[40] The 2010 conflict on the court was also criticized as having a potential for lowering court productivity and distracting the focus of the justices.[41] Prosser admitted he overreacted, but justified his statements, saying he had been goaded, bullied and abused by two other justices for a long time,[40] and that the fights were caused by liberal members of the court "ganging up" on him and attempting to create a "foul atmosphere".[42] He also said the March 2011 revelations of the year-old altercation were an attempt to hurt his bid for re-election.[40][42] When interviewed in March 2011, Justice Ann Walsh Bradley acknowledged Prosser had had outbursts over the years, but said there had not been one of significant magnitude since February 2010. She also commented that, "he is a good man - but you cannot accurately say he has a steady, even temperament."[40]

Conflicting media reports on June 25, 2011 indicated that Prosser had gotten into an altercation with Bradley on June 13, 2011 in her office, which allegedly became physical.[43][44][45][46][47] The dispute occurred during a discussion in Bradley's office with four other Justices present, before the court issued its June 13, 2011 split decision to uphold the law limiting collective bargaining rights for most Wisconsin state public employees.[44] In one report, witnesses alleged that after Bradley told Prosser to leave her office, Prosser grabbed Bradley around the neck in what was described as a chokehold. Prosser claimed that Bradley charged Prosser with her fist raised, and that in attempting to block her, he made contact with her neck. Capitol Police Chief Charles Tubbs was notified of the incident, and met with the entire Supreme Court. Investigations into the matter were opened by the Wisconsin Judicial Commission and the Dane County Sheriff's office.[48] After initially saying he would refrain from comment until a proper investigation was completed,[2] Prosser denied he choked Bradley saying, "claims made to the media will be proven false." Bradley then made a public statement saying that Prosser, "put his hands around my neck in anger in a chokehold", as she was asking him to leave her office.[43][44][45][46][47]

The Dane County Sheriff's office gave its findings to county District Attorney Ismael Ozanne, who referred the matter to special prosecutor Patricia Barrett; Barrett ultimately ruled in late August 2011 that the circumstances and evidence reviewed did not support the filing of criminal charges.[4] On March 16, 2012, the Wisconsin Judicial Commission filed an ethics complaint against Prosser, "recommending that the court discipline him for alleged misconduct",[5][49] however, three conservative members of the court recused themselves from the matter, with the result that no quorum existed, and no decision could be made.[6]

Failure to recuse during "John Doe" probe of Scott Walker Edit

Leaked files obtained by the Guardian revealed that a network of dark money groups spent $3.5 million to pay for TV and radio ads backing the judge during his 2011 campaign.[50][51] According to these leaked emails "The push was seen as vital, the documents disclose, as a means of retaining the rightwing majority of the court and thereby preserving the anti-union measures introduced by Walker. 'If we lose [Justice Prosser], the Walker agenda is toast,' one ally writes in an email sent around to the governor’s chief of staff and several conservative lobbyists."[51] In 2015, a John Doe probe into Scott Walker's funding sources during the 2012 recall campaign against him involved the same set groups that funded Prosser's 2011 campaign.[51] Despite the obvious possible conflicts of interest, Prosser refused to recuse himself, ultimately casting the deciding vote to terminate the probe.[51] Prosser told the Guardian that four years had passed since his re-election before he joined the decision to close the John Doe investigation, over which time any potential conflict of interest had faded.[51]

Advising Republican leadership regarding impeachment Edit

In fall 2023, Prosser was included in a special panel to advise Wisconsin Assembly speaker Robin Vos on the question of impeaching the newest Wisconsin Supreme Court justice, Janet Protasiewicz. This followed several weeks of acrimony as Vos threatened impeachment to prevent the justice from participating in pending redistricting cases. Prosser's opinion on the matter became known through an October 6 letter to the speaker, which read:[52][53]

Section 1 of Article VII states that before the trial of impeachment, "the members of the court [Senate] shall take an oath or affirmation truly and impartially to try impeachment according to evidence." In my view, there is no assurance that two-thirds of the present "court" would be convinced that they are bound "impartially" by the "evidence" to vote for impeachment. Once again, the "evidence" has to persuade members of the court... and a large percentage of the public... that impeachment is legitimate. Impeachment that appears to be solely partisan will likely backfire.

Even if a Supreme Court Justice were impeached and convicted, the governor would promptly name a successor who might be more problematic.

The Constitution also provides that "no judicial officer shall exercise his [or her] office, after he [or she] shall be impeached, until his [or her] acquittal." To impeach a justice solely to delay a case or cases will be viewed as unreasonable partisan politics.

To sum up my views, there should be no effort to impeach Justice Protasiewicz on anything we know now. Impeachment is so serious, severe, and rare that it should not be considered unless the subject has committed a crime, or the subject has committed indisputable "corrupt conduct" while "in office."

2011 re-election campaign Edit

Prosser faced JoAnne Kloppenburg, a long-time but little-known Wisconsin assistant attorney general, in both the February 5, 2011, spring primary, and the April 5 run-off election.

Primary election Edit

In December 2010, Prosser's campaign director expressed strong support for governor-elect Walker, saying Prosser's "personal ideology more closely mirrors" Walker's, and that a win by Prosser would result in, "protecting the conservative judicial majority and acting as a common sense complement to both the new administration and Legislature."[54] He later disavowed the statements and claimed he had not seen the release.[55] Prosser's campaign manager also said that, "This election is about a 4-3 commonsense conservative majority vs. a 3-4 liberal majority, and nothing more."[56][57]

In a survey of attorneys conducted by the Milwaukee Bar Association that was published February 2011, Prosser received more votes saying he was "qualified" than any of his opponents; besting Kloppenburg by a margin of 296 to 112.[58] He was endorsed in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, and the Sun Prairie Star.[59] He won the primary handily, receiving 231,000 votes to second-place finisher Kloppenburg's 105,000 votes; a 30% margin.

General election Edit

In the general election of April 5, 2011, Prosser again faced Kloppenburg. The contest received considerable attention due to the 2011 Wisconsin protests of Walker's budget repair bill and limitations on public employee bargaining rights; issues which would likely soon come before the Wisconsin Supreme Court. Kloppenburg supporters attempted to tie Prosser to the policies of Republican governor Scott Walker, and his March 2011 law limiting most of Wisconsin's public employees' collective bargaining rights. The non-partisan race for the court seat was also characterized as a proxy battle or referendum on the administration of Governor Walker and other Republican officials.[1][60][61] Both candidates stated their unhappiness regarding the increased partisan aspect of the race,[62][63] with Prosser claiming that if he was defeated, it would mean the end of judicial independence.[64]

On March 31, Prosser's campaign co-chair, former Democratic governor Patrick Lucey, resigned from the campaign and endorsed Kloppenburg, saying it appeared that Prosser had lost his impartiality, and was showing "a disturbing distemper and lack of civility that does not bode well for the High Court".[65]

The Wausau Daily Herald reversed its primary election endorsement, and urged its readers to vote against Prosser in the general, describing him as "an intemperate figure given to partisan rhetoric".[66] Citing the earlier statement of Prosser's campaign director that the election is about maintaining a conservative majority on the court, The Capital Times endorsed Kloppenburg.[67] Prosser was endorsed by the Sun Prairie Star, The Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel, and former Alaska governor Sarah Palin (via Twitter), among others for the general election.[68]

State officials predicted a voter turnout of around 20 percent, a typical level of turnout for an April election.[69] However, voter interest and turnout were unusually high with nearly 1.5 million votes cast.[70]

Result Edit

The day after the election, Kloppenburg was thought to be ahead by a razor-thin margin of 204-votes, leading her to prematurely declare victory.[71][72] Late in the afternoon of April 7, Waukesha County Clerk Kathy Nickolaus announced that the preliminary vote totals she had given to the Associated Press on April 6 did not include 14,315 votes from Brookfield, her county's second largest city and one of the most Republican. The announcement changed the unofficial total, giving Prosser a lead of over 7,000 votes which likely would not be changed by a recount.[73] Other, much smaller errors in the preliminary count were found in other counties favoring both candidates.[74] A final vote canvass of all the counties in Wisconsin gave Prosser an official lead of 7,316 votes on April 15.[75] Kloppenburg did request a recount at taxpayer expense (costing as much as $500,000)[76] and Prosser was eventually declared the winner by 7,006 votes.[77]

New York Times analyst Nate Silver declared on April 8 that Nickolaus' error pointed to incompetence, not conspiracy.[78] However, Democrats called on Nickolaus to resign, citing her previous employment under Prosser in the mid-1990s as a member of the assembly caucus[75] and questions about her procedures and counts in prior elections.[79] State election officials announced an investigation of possible voting irregularities going back to 2006.[80]

Electoral history Edit

2011 Wisconsin Supreme Court Non-partisan general election recount - May 23, 2011[74]
Candidate Votes %
David T. Prosser Jr. (incumbent) 752,694 50.17
Joanne Kloppenburg 745,690 49.70
Write ins 1,729 .11
2011 Wisconsin Supreme Court Non-partisan general election - April 5, 2011[74]
Candidate Votes %
David Prosser (incumbent) 752,323 50.2
Joanne Kloppenburg 745,007 49.8
2011 Wisconsin Supreme Court Non-partisan primary election - February 15, 2011[81]
Candidate Votes %
David Prosser (incumbent) 231,017 55
Joanne Kloppenburg 105,002 25
Marla Stephens 45,256 11
Joel Winnig 37,831 9
2001 Wisconsin Supreme Court General
Non-partisan election[82]
Candidate Votes %
David Prosser (incumbent) 549,860 99.53
(Scattering) 2,569 0.47
U.S. House of Representatives, Wisconsin's 8th District 1996 General Election, November 5, 1996[83]
Party Candidate Votes %
Democratic Jay W. Johnson 129,551 52
Republican David T. Prosser Jr. 119,398 48
Democratic gain from Republican
Wisconsin State Assembly 57th District - General Election November 8, 1994[84]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican David T. Prosser Jr. (incumbent) 12,277 100
Republican hold
Wisconsin State Assembly 57th District General Election November 1992[85]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican David T. Prosser Jr. (incumbent) 16,392 68
Democratic Michael Meyer 7,790 32
Republican hold
Wisconsin State Assembly 57th District General Election November 1990[86]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican David T. Prosser Jr. (incumbent) 11,342 69
Democratic Michael Meyer 5,144 31
Republican hold
Wisconsin State Assembly 57th District General Election November 1988[87]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican David T. Prosser Jr. (incumbent) 16,280 73
Democratic Kathleen P. Hartman 6,077 27
Republican hold
Wisconsin State Assembly 57th District General Election November 4, 1986[88]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican David T. Prosser Jr. (incumbent) 12,001 74
Democratic Kathleen P. Hartman 4,291 26
Republican hold
Wisconsin State Assembly 57th District General Election November 1984[89]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican David T. Prosser Jr. (incumbent) 16,728 100
Republican hold
Wisconsin State Assembly 79th District General Election November 1982[90]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican David T. Prosser Jr. (incumbent) 10,855 68
Democratic David N. Innis 5,135 32
Republican hold
Wisconsin State Assembly 42nd District General Election November 1980[91]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican David T. Prosser Jr. (incumbent) 13,301 100
Republican hold
Wisconsin State Assembly 42nd District General Election November 7, 1978[92]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican David T. Prosser Jr. 9,991 66
Democratic James F. Schreiter 5,124 34
Republican hold
Wisconsin State Assembly 42nd District Primary Election September 12, 1978[93]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican David T. Prosser Jr. 3,822 69
Republican Arnold E. Grommer 1,685 31
Wisconsin State Assembly 42nd District Primary Election September 12, 1972[94]
Party Candidate Votes %
Republican Tobias A. Roth 4,383 53
Republican David T. Prosser Jr. 3,256 39
Republican Norman Austin 402 5
Republican Neal W. Wellman 227 3

References Edit

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  47. ^ Ethics violations filed against Prosser
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External links Edit

  • David T. Prosser at Ballotpedia
  • Financial information (federal office) at the Federal Election Commission
  • Profile at Vote Smart
  • The 118-page police dossier on the July 13 incident released in August 2011, a word-searchable 70-page version that only includes the interview reports, and 12 pages of the most relevant excerpts.
Wisconsin State Assembly
Preceded by Member of the Wisconsin State Assembly from the 42nd district
1979 – 1983
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of the Wisconsin State Assembly from the 79th district
1983 – 1985
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of the Wisconsin State Assembly from the 57th district
1985 – 1997
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minority Leader of the Wisconsin Assembly
1989 – 1995
Succeeded by
Preceded by Speaker of the Wisconsin State Assembly
1995 – 1997
Succeeded by
Legal offices
Preceded by
Kenneth F. Rottier
District Attorney of Outagamie County, Wisconsin
1977 – 1979
Succeeded by
William Drengler
Preceded by Justice of the Wisconsin Supreme Court
1998 – 2016
Succeeded by

david, prosser, this, article, about, american, judge, other, uses, david, prosser, david, prosser, born, december, 1942, american, jurist, politician, served, speaker, wisconsin, state, assembly, from, 1995, 1996, justice, wisconsin, supreme, court, from, 199. This article is about the American judge For other uses see David Prosser David T Prosser Jr born December 24 1942 is an American jurist and politician who served as Speaker of the Wisconsin State Assembly from 1995 to 1996 and as a justice of the Wisconsin Supreme Court from 1998 to 2016 He is currently an advisor to Wisconsin Assembly speaker Robin Vos as Vos seeks a rationale for impeaching current Wisconsin Supreme Court justice Janet Protasiewicz David Prosser Jr Prosser in March 2011Justice of the Wisconsin Supreme CourtIn office September 10 1998 July 31 2016Appointed byTommy ThompsonPreceded byJanine GeskeSucceeded byDaniel KellyCommissioner of the Wisconsin Tax Appeals CommissionIn office January 1997 September 1998Appointed byTommy ThompsonPreceded byJoe MettnerSucceeded byThomas Boykoff72nd Speaker of the Wisconsin State AssemblyIn office January 3 1995 January 3 1997Preceded byWalter KunickiSucceeded byBen BrancelMinority Leader of the Wisconsin AssemblyIn office January 3 1989 January 3 1995Preceded byBetty Jo NelsenSucceeded byWalter KunickiMember of the Wisconsin State AssemblyIn office January 7 1985 January 3 1997Preceded byHeron Van GordenSucceeded bySteve WieckertConstituency57th districtIn office January 3 1983 January 7 1985Preceded byTommy ThompsonSucceeded byJoe WinekeConstituency79th districtIn office January 3 1979 January 3 1983Preceded byTobias A RothSucceeded byHarvey StowerConstituency42nd districtDistrict Attorney of Outagamie CountyIn office January 1 1977 January 1 1979Preceded byKenneth F RottierSucceeded byWilliam DrenglerPersonal detailsBorn 1942 12 24 December 24 1942 age 80 Chicago Illinois U S Political partyRepublicanAlma materDePauw University B A 1965 University of Wisconsin Law School J D 1968 ProfessionAttorneyFollowing his graduation from University of Wisconsin Law School Prosser worked in Washington as an attorney at the U S Department of Justice and as an aide to U S Representative Harold Vernon Froehlich Returning to Wisconsin he began a private practice worked as a district attorney for two years then served 18 years as a Republican party legislator in the Wisconsin State Assembly He was the state house minority leader for six of those years and Speaker of the Assembly for two years After an unsuccessful bid for the U S House in 1996 Prosser was appointed by Wisconsin Governor Tommy Thompson to a vacant seat on the state tax appeals board then in 1998 to a vacant seat on Wisconsin Supreme Court He was elected to his first 10 year term without opposition in 2001 He ran for reelection in April 2011 against little known Wisconsin assistant attorney general JoAnne Kloppenburg The race received national attention and was viewed as a referendum on efforts by Republican Governor Scott Walker and the Republican controlled legislature to curb the union rights of public workers in Wisconsin 1 2 The April 5 2011 election was too close to call until two days later when the Waukesha County Clerk announced she had erroneously omitted more than 14 000 votes from her earlier tally The additional votes gave Prosser a lead of over 7 000 which was sustained by a later recount Prosser received media attention in 2010 following verbal altercations with the chief justice of the Wisconsin Supreme Court and also in June 2011 when allegations were made of a physical altercation between Prosser and fellow associate justice Ann Walsh Bradley that occurred in connection with the union curbing bill 3 A special prosecutor investigated but declined to press criminal charges 4 An ethics action against Prosser was recommended by the Wisconsin Judicial Commission 5 however after three other justices recused themselves from the matter no further action was taken 6 Prosser returned to the spotlight in September 2023 when he emerged as an advisor to Wisconsin Assembly speaker Robin Vos in his attempts to find a rationale to impeach the newest Wisconsin Supreme Court justice Janet Protasiewicz 7 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 2 1 Early career 2 2 Wisconsin legislature 2 3 Campaign for U S Congress 2 4 Wisconsin Supreme Court 2 5 Other professional activities 3 Controversies 3 1 Decision not to prosecute abuse case 3 2 Assembly staffers used for campaigning 3 3 Altercations with other justices 3 4 Failure to recuse during John Doe probe of Scott Walker 3 5 Advising Republican leadership regarding impeachment 4 2011 re election campaign 4 1 Primary election 4 2 General election 4 3 Result 5 Electoral history 6 References 7 External linksEarly life and education EditProsser was born in Chicago Illinois to David T Prosser Sr and his wife Elizabeth Patterson Prosser 8 and was raised in Appleton Wisconsin After graduating from Appleton High School he attended DePauw University receiving his B A in 1965 9 He went on to law school at the University of Wisconsin and received his J D in 1968 9 Career EditEarly career Edit Prosser lectured at Indiana University Indianapolis Law School from 1968 to 1969 before working from 1969 to 1972 in Washington D C as an attorney advisor in the Office of Criminal Justice U S Department of Justice 10 11 He ran unsuccessfully for a seat in the Wisconsin State Assembly in 1972 then served as an administrative assistant to U S Representative Harold Vernon Froehlich Froehlich was a Republican and a former speaker of the Wisconsin State Assembly serving his first term in the U S House of Representatives As a member of the House Judiciary Committee during the Watergate impeachment hearings in the 1973 1974 term he was one of the few Republicans who voted in favor of impeaching Richard Nixon Froehlich lost re election in the Democratic wave of 1974 9 11 Prosser returned to Wisconsin and after two years in private practice as a self employed lawyer he was elected Outagamie County district attorney in the 1976 election serving from 1977 to 1978 9 12 Wisconsin legislature Edit Prosser represented the Appleton area in the Wisconsin State Assembly as a Republican from 1979 through 1996 11 His committee assignments included Criminal Justice and Public Safety and Judiciary 9 During his tenure in the Assembly he served six years as Minority leader and two years as Speaker 11 In 1981 he opposed removing criminal penalties on sexual activity and cohabitation between unmarried consulting adults 13 though he did express a willingness to repeal the jail terms 14 He stated that legalizing sex outside of marriage would increase divorce rates the number of children born outside of wedlock welfare payments sexually transmitted diseases and abortions 14 In 1995 while he was Assembly Speaker Prosser led the push for the new baseball stadium for the Milwaukee Brewers saying that Wisconsin had a choice of being either a big league or bush league state 15 Campaign for U S Congress Edit In 1996 he ran for the 8th congressional district seat in the U S Congress vacated by retiring U S Representative Toby Roth 16 Prosser won what the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel described as a bitter and high spending primary but was defeated in the general election by Democrat Jay W Johnson 16 One month later Governor Thompson appointed Prosser to the Wisconsin Tax Appeals Commission where he conducted hearings and ruled on disputes related to state taxation 11 16 Wisconsin Supreme Court Edit In September 1998 Thompson appointed Prosser to a vacant seat on the Wisconsin Supreme Court hailing him as a conservative 17 In an unusual move a bipartisan group of 77 of the 132 state legislators sent a letter to Thompson supporting the appointment describing Prosser as learned thoughtful and fiercely defensive of our system of law 18 In 2011 the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel said Prosser is a reliable judicial conservative but he s also independent 19 citing an August 2010 Wisconsin Law Journal analysis which concluded Prosser voted with no justice more than 85 of the time though he generally combined with three other conservative justices Michael Gableman Patience Roggensack and Annette Ziegler to form a 4 3 majority on the court 20 The New York Times said some observers believe that Prosser is a member of a conservative 4 3 bloc on the court 1 In October 2010 Prosser indicated that he supported limiting free online access to Wisconsin trial court records because the information can be misused by employers and landlords saying Some people are actually innocent and they shouldn t be disadvantaged forever by the online records 21 Opponents of the change argued that restricting free online access may result in private vendors selling the information and may conflict with Wisconsin s open records law 21 Following the decision in Donohoo v Action Wisconsin Inc Prosser voted to amend the state s judicial code of conduct to allow judges to decide cases involving their campaign contributors 22 saying there are various levels of support and a campaign contribution or endorsement in and of itself does not create so close or special relationship so as to require automatic recusal 23 He has also said his policy is not to recuse himself from cases involving lawmakers he has served with in the past unless the case is actually about the lawmakers 24 Prosser retired from the Wisconsin Supreme Court on July 31 2016 25 Other professional activities Edit Prosser served as a member of the Wisconsin Council of Criminal Justice 1980 1983 the Judicial Council Commission on Preliminary Examinations 1981 the Wisconsin Sentencing Commission 1984 1988 1994 1995 the Wisconsin Sesquicentennial Commission 1993 1999 and the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws 1983 1996 11 26 Controversies EditDecision not to prosecute abuse case Edit In 1978 while serving as District Attorney of Outagamie County Prosser declined to prosecute a Catholic priest accused of sexual abuse by two brothers ages 12 and 14 who said the priest had touched their chests and unsuccessfully attempted to touch lower 27 Prosser later explained he did not file charges because the case was weak it involved relatively new sexual assault laws that were untested at the time and he did not think he could win a jury trial 28 29 He said he had assumed the priest John Patrick Feeney would be reassigned as a result of his discussion with Feeney s bishop 30 The priest was not removed from duties which allowed him contact with children and he went on to abuse other children before being sent to prison on a 15 year sentence in 2004 27 31 The prosecutor who ultimately and successfully prosecuted the case in the early 2000s said that when Prosser had the case in the 1970s he was lacking sufficient information We were able to gather a wealth of information that far exceeded what Prosser had he said adding It s not fair to second guess him now 31 When interviewed in 2011 one of the victims said that in 1978 he and his brother had not communicated detailed information about the abuse to the authorities and that when the case came to trial in 2002 Prosser helped in the prosecution 28 32 During Prosser s 2011 run for re election to the Wisconsin Supreme Court the incident was revived in a political ad by a pro union organization 33 which claimed that Prosser did not investigate the abuse allegations and participated in a coverup 34 The ad was ultimately rated Mostly False by the fact checking website PolitiFact com which concluded that the ad omitted critical facts and created false impressions 34 One of the abuse victims who had been critical of Prosser s decision not to prosecute criticized the ad as offensive inaccurate and out of context 35 Prosser asked his opponent Kloppenburg to call for the removal of the ad she replied that the First Amendment gave the group the right to run such ads 36 Assembly staffers used for campaigning Edit In 2006 Prosser testified on behalf of Wisconsin State Representative Scott Jensen who was being tried on three felony counts of misconduct in office because his legislative staffers also performed campaign activity on his behalf Prosser stated that during seven years of his own tenure in the Wisconsin Assembly he had used his taxpayer funded staff for campaigning the same crime Jensen was eventually convicted of 37 38 Prosser was not charged and defended the actions saying it was a different era and public expectations were quite different However critics described this as illegal activity and the Appleton Post Crescent Prosser s hometown paper found Prosser s admissions sufficient reason to endorse Prosser s opponent in the 2011 election saying Prosser fell short of having the unimpeachable integrity required of a high court judge because he had admittedly condoned illegal activity while serving as an elected official 39 Altercations with other justices Edit During a closed door debate between the justices on February 10 2010 Prosser called Chief Justice Shirley Abrahamson a total bitch and threatened to destroy her 40 A review of emails by the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel indicated that justices on both sides described the court as dysfunctional and Prosser and others suggested bringing in a third party for help 40 The 2010 conflict on the court was also criticized as having a potential for lowering court productivity and distracting the focus of the justices 41 Prosser admitted he overreacted but justified his statements saying he had been goaded bullied and abused by two other justices for a long time 40 and that the fights were caused by liberal members of the court ganging up on him and attempting to create a foul atmosphere 42 He also said the March 2011 revelations of the year old altercation were an attempt to hurt his bid for re election 40 42 When interviewed in March 2011 Justice Ann Walsh Bradley acknowledged Prosser had had outbursts over the years but said there had not been one of significant magnitude since February 2010 She also commented that he is a good man but you cannot accurately say he has a steady even temperament 40 Conflicting media reports on June 25 2011 indicated that Prosser had gotten into an altercation with Bradley on June 13 2011 in her office which allegedly became physical 43 44 45 46 47 The dispute occurred during a discussion in Bradley s office with four other Justices present before the court issued its June 13 2011 split decision to uphold the law limiting collective bargaining rights for most Wisconsin state public employees 44 In one report witnesses alleged that after Bradley told Prosser to leave her office Prosser grabbed Bradley around the neck in what was described as a chokehold Prosser claimed that Bradley charged Prosser with her fist raised and that in attempting to block her he made contact with her neck Capitol Police Chief Charles Tubbs was notified of the incident and met with the entire Supreme Court Investigations into the matter were opened by the Wisconsin Judicial Commission and the Dane County Sheriff s office 48 After initially saying he would refrain from comment until a proper investigation was completed 2 Prosser denied he choked Bradley saying claims made to the media will be proven false Bradley then made a public statement saying that Prosser put his hands around my neck in anger in a chokehold as she was asking him to leave her office 43 44 45 46 47 The Dane County Sheriff s office gave its findings to county District Attorney Ismael Ozanne who referred the matter to special prosecutor Patricia Barrett Barrett ultimately ruled in late August 2011 that the circumstances and evidence reviewed did not support the filing of criminal charges 4 On March 16 2012 the Wisconsin Judicial Commission filed an ethics complaint against Prosser recommending that the court discipline him for alleged misconduct 5 49 however three conservative members of the court recused themselves from the matter with the result that no quorum existed and no decision could be made 6 Failure to recuse during John Doe probe of Scott Walker Edit Leaked files obtained by the Guardian revealed that a network of dark money groups spent 3 5 million to pay for TV and radio ads backing the judge during his 2011 campaign 50 51 According to these leaked emails The push was seen as vital the documents disclose as a means of retaining the rightwing majority of the court and thereby preserving the anti union measures introduced by Walker If we lose Justice Prosser the Walker agenda is toast one ally writes in an email sent around to the governor s chief of staff and several conservative lobbyists 51 In 2015 a John Doe probe into Scott Walker s funding sources during the 2012 recall campaign against him involved the same set groups that funded Prosser s 2011 campaign 51 Despite the obvious possible conflicts of interest Prosser refused to recuse himself ultimately casting the deciding vote to terminate the probe 51 Prosser told the Guardian that four years had passed since his re election before he joined the decision to close the John Doe investigation over which time any potential conflict of interest had faded 51 Advising Republican leadership regarding impeachment Edit In fall 2023 Prosser was included in a special panel to advise Wisconsin Assembly speaker Robin Vos on the question of impeaching the newest Wisconsin Supreme Court justice Janet Protasiewicz This followed several weeks of acrimony as Vos threatened impeachment to prevent the justice from participating in pending redistricting cases Prosser s opinion on the matter became known through an October 6 letter to the speaker which read 52 53 Section 1 of Article VII states that before the trial of impeachment the members of the court Senate shall take an oath or affirmation truly and impartially to try impeachment according to evidence In my view there is no assurance that two thirds of the present court would be convinced that they are bound impartially by the evidence to vote for impeachment Once again the evidence has to persuade members of the court and a large percentage of the public that impeachment is legitimate Impeachment that appears to be solely partisan will likely backfire Even if a Supreme Court Justice were impeached and convicted the governor would promptly name a successor who might be more problematic The Constitution also provides that no judicial officer shall exercise his or her office after he or she shall be impeached until his or her acquittal To impeach a justice solely to delay a case or cases will be viewed as unreasonable partisan politics To sum up my views there should be no effort to impeach Justice Protasiewicz on anything we know now Impeachment is so serious severe and rare that it should not be considered unless the subject has committed a crime or the subject has committed indisputable corrupt conduct while in office 2011 re election campaign EditMain article Wisconsin Supreme Court election 2011 Prosser faced JoAnne Kloppenburg a long time but little known Wisconsin assistant attorney general in both the February 5 2011 spring primary and the April 5 run off election Primary election Edit In December 2010 Prosser s campaign director expressed strong support for governor elect Walker saying Prosser s personal ideology more closely mirrors Walker s and that a win by Prosser would result in protecting the conservative judicial majority and acting as a common sense complement to both the new administration and Legislature 54 He later disavowed the statements and claimed he had not seen the release 55 Prosser s campaign manager also said that This election is about a 4 3 commonsense conservative majority vs a 3 4 liberal majority and nothing more 56 57 In a survey of attorneys conducted by the Milwaukee Bar Association that was published February 2011 Prosser received more votes saying he was qualified than any of his opponents besting Kloppenburg by a margin of 296 to 112 58 He was endorsed in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and the Sun Prairie Star 59 He won the primary handily receiving 231 000 votes to second place finisher Kloppenburg s 105 000 votes a 30 margin General election Edit In the general election of April 5 2011 Prosser again faced Kloppenburg The contest received considerable attention due to the 2011 Wisconsin protests of Walker s budget repair bill and limitations on public employee bargaining rights issues which would likely soon come before the Wisconsin Supreme Court Kloppenburg supporters attempted to tie Prosser to the policies of Republican governor Scott Walker and his March 2011 law limiting most of Wisconsin s public employees collective bargaining rights The non partisan race for the court seat was also characterized as a proxy battle or referendum on the administration of Governor Walker and other Republican officials 1 60 61 Both candidates stated their unhappiness regarding the increased partisan aspect of the race 62 63 with Prosser claiming that if he was defeated it would mean the end of judicial independence 64 On March 31 Prosser s campaign co chair former Democratic governor Patrick Lucey resigned from the campaign and endorsed Kloppenburg saying it appeared that Prosser had lost his impartiality and was showing a disturbing distemper and lack of civility that does not bode well for the High Court 65 The Wausau Daily Herald reversed its primary election endorsement and urged its readers to vote against Prosser in the general describing him as an intemperate figure given to partisan rhetoric 66 Citing the earlier statement of Prosser s campaign director that the election is about maintaining a conservative majority on the court The Capital Times endorsed Kloppenburg 67 Prosser was endorsed by the Sun Prairie Star The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and former Alaska governor Sarah Palin via Twitter among others for the general election 68 State officials predicted a voter turnout of around 20 percent a typical level of turnout for an April election 69 However voter interest and turnout were unusually high with nearly 1 5 million votes cast 70 Result Edit The day after the election Kloppenburg was thought to be ahead by a razor thin margin of 204 votes leading her to prematurely declare victory 71 72 Late in the afternoon of April 7 Waukesha County Clerk Kathy Nickolaus announced that the preliminary vote totals she had given to the Associated Press on April 6 did not include 14 315 votes from Brookfield her county s second largest city and one of the most Republican The announcement changed the unofficial total giving Prosser a lead of over 7 000 votes which likely would not be changed by a recount 73 Other much smaller errors in the preliminary count were found in other counties favoring both candidates 74 A final vote canvass of all the counties in Wisconsin gave Prosser an official lead of 7 316 votes on April 15 75 Kloppenburg did request a recount at taxpayer expense costing as much as 500 000 76 and Prosser was eventually declared the winner by 7 006 votes 77 New York Times analyst Nate Silver declared on April 8 that Nickolaus error pointed to incompetence not conspiracy 78 However Democrats called on Nickolaus to resign citing her previous employment under Prosser in the mid 1990s as a member of the assembly caucus 75 and questions about her procedures and counts in prior elections 79 State election officials announced an investigation of possible voting irregularities going back to 2006 80 Electoral history Edit2011 Wisconsin Supreme Court Non partisan general election recount May 23 2011 74 Candidate Votes David T Prosser Jr incumbent 752 694 50 17Joanne Kloppenburg 745 690 49 70Write ins 1 729 112011 Wisconsin Supreme Court Non partisan general election April 5 2011 74 Candidate Votes David Prosser incumbent 752 323 50 2Joanne Kloppenburg 745 007 49 82011 Wisconsin Supreme Court Non partisan primary election February 15 2011 81 Candidate Votes David Prosser incumbent 231 017 55Joanne Kloppenburg 105 002 25Marla Stephens 45 256 11Joel Winnig 37 831 92001 Wisconsin Supreme Court General Non partisan election 82 Candidate Votes David Prosser incumbent 549 860 99 53 Scattering 2 569 0 47U S House of Representatives Wisconsin s 8th District 1996 General Election November 5 1996 83 Party Candidate Votes Democratic Jay W Johnson 129 551 52Republican David T Prosser Jr 119 398 48Democratic gain from RepublicanWisconsin State Assembly 57th District General Election November 8 1994 84 Party Candidate Votes Republican David T Prosser Jr incumbent 12 277 100Republican holdWisconsin State Assembly 57th District General Election November 1992 85 Party Candidate Votes Republican David T Prosser Jr incumbent 16 392 68Democratic Michael Meyer 7 790 32Republican holdWisconsin State Assembly 57th District General Election November 1990 86 Party Candidate Votes Republican David T Prosser Jr incumbent 11 342 69Democratic Michael Meyer 5 144 31Republican holdWisconsin State Assembly 57th District General Election November 1988 87 Party Candidate Votes Republican David T Prosser Jr incumbent 16 280 73Democratic Kathleen P Hartman 6 077 27Republican holdWisconsin State Assembly 57th District General Election November 4 1986 88 Party Candidate Votes Republican David T Prosser Jr incumbent 12 001 74Democratic Kathleen P Hartman 4 291 26Republican holdWisconsin State Assembly 57th District General Election November 1984 89 Party Candidate Votes Republican David T Prosser Jr incumbent 16 728 100Republican holdWisconsin State Assembly 79th District General Election November 1982 90 Party Candidate Votes Republican David T Prosser Jr incumbent 10 855 68Democratic David N Innis 5 135 32Republican holdWisconsin State Assembly 42nd District General Election November 1980 91 Party Candidate Votes Republican David T Prosser Jr incumbent 13 301 100Republican holdWisconsin State Assembly 42nd District General Election November 7 1978 92 Party Candidate Votes Republican David T Prosser Jr 9 991 66Democratic James F Schreiter 5 124 34Republican holdWisconsin State Assembly 42nd District Primary Election September 12 1978 93 Party Candidate Votes Republican David T Prosser Jr 3 822 69Republican Arnold E Grommer 1 685 31Wisconsin State Assembly 42nd District Primary Election September 12 1972 94 Party Candidate Votes Republican Tobias A Roth 4 383 53Republican David T Prosser Jr 3 256 39Republican Norman Austin 402 5Republican Neal W Wellman 227 3References Edit a b c Monica Davey April 5 2011 Wisconsin Election Turns Into Referendum on Governor The New York Times a b Monica Davey June 25 2011 Wisconsin Judge Said to Have Attacked Colleague The New York Times Lueders Bill June 25 2011 Supreme Court spat got physical Wisconsin Watch Retrieved February 23 2023 a b Jason Stein amp Larry Sandler August 25 2011 Special prosecutor No charges for Prosser Bradley in fracas Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Retrieved November 21 2013 Sauk County District Attorney Patricia Barrett steered clear of specifics about her reasons not to issue charges The totality of the facts and the circumstances and all of the evidence that I reviewed did not support my filing criminal charges Barrett said a b Dee J Hall March 16 2012 Judicial Commission recommends discipline for Prosser Wisconsin State Journal Retrieved September 6 2012 a b Bruce Vielmetti August 10 2012 Gableman joins recusals in Prosser discipline case Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Retrieved September 7 2012 Impeachment review panel includes David Prosser a conservative former justice who was a Republican Assembly speaker PBS Wisconsin September 15 2023 Retrieved September 19 2023 Staff reporter January 4 1943 Anne Boswell Is Engaged to Jack Monroe The Chicago Tribune a b c d e 1979 1980 blue book Biographies and pictures The State of Wisconsin 1980 Retrieved April 11 2011 Prosser Jr David T 1942 Dictionary of Wisconsin History Wisconsin Historical Society Retrieved April 16 2011 a b c d e f Supreme Court Justices David T Prosser Jr Wisconsin Court System Archived from the original on March 28 2011 AP staff reporter September 10 1998 Prosser joins Supreme Court Geske replacement Justice begins hearing arguments after hearing ceremony The Telegraph Herald Dubuque Iowa Associated Press Retrieved April 16 2011 UPI staff reporter May 6 1981 Sexual activity bill gets reprieve The Telegraph Herald Dubuque Iowa UPI Retrieved April 2 2011 a b UPI staff reporter April 27 1981 Legal sexual activity defeated The Telegraph Herald Dubuque Iowa UPI Retrieved April 2 2011 A home run for state Milwaukee Milwaukee Journal Sentinel September 25 1995 Retrieved April 4 2011 a b c Amy Rinard December 10 1996 Thompson Appoints Prosser To Tax Appeals Commission Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Retrieved April 2 2011 Richard P Jones September 5 1998 Prosser named to Supreme Court Thompson selection comes days before justices will begin new term Pay per view Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Walters Steven May 15 1998 Lawmakers back Prosser for high court Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Retrieved April 16 2011 Journal Sentinel editorial board April 2 2011 Prosser a vote for independence opinion Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Retrieved April 2 2011 Ziemer David August 9 2010 Ziegler in majority most often Wisconsin Law Journal Retrieved April 3 2011 a b Patrick Marley October 4 2010 Online court records misused State justice Prosser in favor of limiting access to prevent discrimination Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Retrieved April 2 2011 Alex De Grand January 22 2010 Wisconsin Supreme Court adopts amended recusal rules State Bar of Wisconsin Archived from the original on March 12 2012 Denial of Motion to Vacate Decision Related to the Disqualification of Justice PDF James R Donohoo v Action Wisconsin Inc and Christopher Ott Case No 2006AP396 Supreme Court of Wisconsin July 30 2008 AP staff reporter March 25 2011 Prosser says he won t recuse himself in union rights case Wisconsin Law Journal The Associated Press Retrieved April 2 2011 Justice David T Prosser Jr to retire from Supreme Court July 31 Wisconsin Court System April 27 2016 Supreme Court Justices Biographies pgs 1 16 PDF 2003 2004 Wisconsin Blue Book Archived from the original PDF on May 29 2010 Retrieved April 2 2011 a b Milwaukee Journal Sentinel staff reporter May 19 2008 Justice denies wrongdoing in abuse case Prosser says he urged removal of priest Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Archived from the original on January 14 2012 Retrieved April 2 2011 a b Priest Sex Abuse Case Resurrected In Political Ad WISN Milwaukee March 24 2011 Archived from the original on March 20 2012 Retrieved April 2 2011 AP staff reporter May 18 2008 David Prosser Speaks About Priest Abuse WJFW TV 12 WJFWDT 12 1 and Newswatch 12 The Associated Press Retrieved April 2 2011 AP staff reporter May 23 2008 Prosser Defends 78 Meeting Madison com The Associated Press Retrieved April 2 2011 a b Marie Rohde February 5 2008 Justice Prosser s link to priest case assailed As DA in 79 he decided not to prosecute records indicate Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Archived from the original on March 24 2011 Retrieved April 2 2011 Sharif Durhams amp Don Walker March 25 2011 Abuse victim criticizes ad against Prosser 3 years ago man was critical of decision not to prosecute Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Retrieved April 2 2011 Greater Wisconsin Committee Candidate supported JoAnne Kloppenburg March 25 2011 Retrieved April 2 2011 a b Greater Wisconsin Committee says Supreme Court Justice David Prosser mishandled allegation of sex abuse by priest Politifact Wisconsin March 29 2011 Retrieved April 2 2011 Barely true Sharif Durhams amp Don Walker March 25 2011 Abuse victim criticizes ad against Prosser 3 years ago man was critical of decision not to prosecute Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Retrieved July 1 2011 Patrick Marley March 25 2011 In Madison debate Prosser calls Kloppenburg an ideologue She fires back at justice s role in Supreme Court s divisiveness Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Retrieved April 2 2011 Jensen s Former Employees Defend Old Boss Lawmaker Embroiled In Misconduct Trial Channel3000 com March 7 2006 Archived from the original on March 21 2012 Retrieved April 2 2011 Judge Refuses To Toss Charges Against Jensen Aide Channel3000 com February 3 2006 Archived from the original on March 21 2012 Retrieved April 2 2011 Editorial Supreme Court One issue doesn t add up Appleton Post Crescent March 26 2011 Retrieved April 2 2011 permanent dead link a b c d e Patrick Marley March 19 2011 Supreme Court tensions boil over Prosser says he was goaded into insulting chief justice Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Retrieved April 2 2011 Jack Zemlicka March 25 2011 High court conflict threatens credibility Wisconsin Law Journal Retrieved April 2 2011 a b Wisconsin justice says he doesn t start fights on court Superior Telegram March 22 2011 Retrieved April 2 2011 Wisconsin Supreme Court Justice David Prosser said Tuesday that liberal leaning justices have orchestrated the bitter infighting that has consumed the court to hurt his chances at re election a b Bradley says Prosser choked her Milwaukee Journal Sentinel June 25 2011 a b c Crocker Stephenson Cary Spivak amp Patrick Marley Justices feud gets physical Prosser Bradley clashed on eve of union ruling Milwaukee Journal Sentinel a b Crocker Stephenson June 25 2011 Prosser Reports false that he placed hands on neck of other justice Milwaukee Journal Sentinel a b John Hart June 26 2011 Wis justice accuses colleague of choking her USAToday Associated Press a b Wis justice accuses colleague of choking her NBC News Associated Press Two probes opened into Bradley claim JSOnline June 27 2011 Ethics violations filed against Prosser Journal Matthew DeFour Wisconsin State Leaked John Doe documents paint fuller picture of case against Scott Walker campaign madison com Retrieved October 25 2020 a b c d e Pilkington Ed September 14 2016 Leaked documents reveal secretive influence of corporate cash on politics The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved October 25 2020 Beck Molly October 10 2023 Robin Vos now silent on impeachment after former justice David Prosser tells him not to pursue Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Retrieved October 10 2023 https madison com news local government politics prosser protasiewicz vos impeachment article 51870e20 676a 11ee aeff f7e113f471f2 html Patrick Marley December 9 2010 First dust up emerges in race for Supreme Court Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Retrieved April 2 2011 Kloppenburg Prosser Spar Over Impartiality WTMJ4 AP March 22 2011 Archived from the original on March 29 2011 Retrieved March 30 2011 Abe Sauer March 24 2011 Wisconsin s Nasty Spring Election Impartiality with Its Sleeves Rolled The Awl Retrieved April 2 2011 Kloppenburg says Wisconsin Supreme Court Justice Prosser has prejudged matters that are likely to come before the court PolitiFact Wisconsin Politifact com March 27 2011 Retrieved April 2 2011 Barely true Sandler Larry February 10 2011 Prosser tops Milwaukee bar ratings for state high court Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Archived from the original on February 21 2013 Retrieved April 4 2011 Wausau Daily Herald Editorial Board February 7 2011 In The Primary Elections We endorse Wausau Daily Herald Retrieved April 2 2011 dead link Sun Prairie Star Editorial Board February 4 2011 Our View We Endorse Prosser Bruskewitz get our nods Sun Prairie Star Sun Prairie WI Retrieved April 2 2011 Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Editorial Board February 11 2011 We back Prosser David Prosser is a hard working experienced justice He is not the primary cause of the Supreme Court s squabbling Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Retrieved April 2 2011 Steven Elbow March 23 2011 Enraged by Walker activists put Kloppenburg s Supreme Court campaign on their shoulders The Capital Times Madison com Retrieved April 2 2011 AP staff reporter March 28 2011 Supreme Court race all about union bargaining law Beloit Daily News The Associated Press Retrieved April 2 2011 WTAQ staff March 15 2011 Supreme Court Candidates Unhappy With Partisan Aspect in Race WTAQ News Talk 97 5FM Retrieved April 2 2011 State Supreme Court candidates face off in heated race Green Bay Press Gazette March 27 2011 Retrieved April 11 2011 JR Ross March 28 2011 Prosser says his defeat would destroy judicial independence Kloppenburg knocks him as partisan WisPolitics Archived from the original on July 19 2011 Retrieved April 2 2011 Former Gov Lucey Leaves Prosser s Campaign Endorses Kloppenburg Channel3000 com April 1 2011 Archived from the original on April 4 2011 Retrieved April 2 2011 Wausau Daily Herald Editorial board March 24 2011 We endorse For state Supreme Court JoAnne Kloppenburg Wausau Daily Herald Retrieved April 2 2011 permanent dead link Capitol Times editorial board March 16 2011 Put independent Kloppenburg on court Capitol Times Madison WI Madison com Retrieved April 2 2011 Sun Prairie Editorial Board March 24 2011 Our View We endorse Bruskewitz Prosser among those receiving our April 5 election nods Sun Prairie Star Sun Prairie WI Retrieved April 2 2011 permanent dead link Prosser a vote for independence Milwaukee Journal Sentinel April 2 2011 Retrieved April 2 2011 Palin endorses Prosser in Wis Supreme Court race Wisconsin Law Journal April 1 2001 Archived from the original on April 16 2011 Retrieved 2011 04 02 AP staff reporter March 28 2011 20 percent turnout expected for Wis April election Madison com The Associated Press Retrieved August 8 2012 Todd Richmond April 6 2011 Wis court election too close to call amid anger over union rights law Associated Press Archived from the original on April 10 2011 Unofficial Wis results show court challenger leads by 204 votes USA Today April 6 2011 Retrieved April 11 2011 Kloppenburg declares victory Milwaukee Journal Sentinel April 6 2011 Retrieved April 11 2011 Bill Glauber Jason Stein amp Sharif Durhams April 9 2011 Prosser camp open to Waukesha County only recount Election officials scrutinizing voting results Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Retrieved November 21 2013 a b c Updated vote tallies for state Supreme Court Milwaukee Journal Sentinel April 15 2011 a b Canvass shows conservative incumbent wins Wisconsin supreme court race FOX News Associated Press April 15 2011 Kloppenburg requests recount in state Supreme Court race Prosser wins recount in Wisconsin Supreme Court race Nate Silver April 8 2011 Vote Counting Error In Wisconsin Points to Incompetence Not Conspiracy The New York Times Mike Johnson April 11 2011 Expanded probe of Waukesha County election procedures sought State Democrats make request after an apparent discrepancy is discovered in 2006 results Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Michael Winter April 15 2011 Canvass shows Wis incumbent Justice Prosser has won re election USA Today Canvass Results for 2011 Spring Primary PDF Wisconsin Government Accountability Board February 15 2011 Retrieved April 16 2011 Wisconsin State Elections Board Results of Spring General Election 04 03 2001 Wisconsin Government Accountability Board May 3 2001 Archived from the original on August 10 2011 Retrieved March 25 2011 Statistics of the Presidential and Congressional Election PDF Clerk of the U S House of Representatives November 5 1996 1995 1996 blue book Elections in Wisconsin The State of Wisconsin 1995 Retrieved April 12 2011 1993 1994 blue book Elections in Wisconsin The State of Wisconsin 1993 Retrieved April 12 2011 1991 1992 blue book Elections in Wisconsin The State of Wisconsin 1991 Retrieved April 12 2011 1989 1990 blue book Elections in Wisconsin The State of Wisconsin 1989 Retrieved April 12 2011 1987 1988 blue book Elections in Wisconsin The State of Wisconsin 1987 Retrieved April 12 2011 1985 1986 blue book Elections in Wisconsin The State of Wisconsin 1985 Retrieved April 12 2011 1983 1984 blue book Elections in Wisconsin The State of Wisconsin 1983 Retrieved April 12 2011 1981 1982 blue book Elections in Wisconsin The State of Wisconsin 1981 Retrieved April 12 2011 1979 1980 blue book Elections in Wisconsin The State of Wisconsin 1979 Retrieved April 12 2011 1979 1980 blue book Elections in Wisconsin The State of Wisconsin 1979 Retrieved April 12 2011 1973 blue book Elections in Wisconsin The State of Wisconsin 1973 Retrieved April 12 2011 External links EditDavid T Prosser at Ballotpedia Financial information federal office at the Federal Election Commission Profile at Vote Smart The 118 page police dossier on the July 13 incident released in August 2011 a word searchable 70 page version that only includes the interview reports and 12 pages of the most relevant excerpts Wisconsin State AssemblyPreceded byTobias A Roth Member of the Wisconsin State Assembly from the 42nd district1979 1983 Succeeded byHarvey StowerPreceded byTommy Thompson Member of the Wisconsin State Assembly from the 79th district1983 1985 Succeeded byJoe WinekePreceded byHeron Van Gorden Member of the Wisconsin State Assembly from the 57th district1985 1997 Succeeded bySteve WieckertPreceded byBetty Jo Nelsen Minority Leader of the Wisconsin Assembly1989 1995 Succeeded byWalter KunickiPreceded byWalter Kunicki Speaker of the Wisconsin State Assembly1995 1997 Succeeded byBen BrancelLegal officesPreceded byKenneth F Rottier District Attorney of Outagamie County Wisconsin1977 1979 Succeeded byWilliam DrenglerPreceded byJanine Geske Justice of the Wisconsin Supreme Court1998 2016 Succeeded byDaniel Kelly Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title David Prosser Jr amp oldid 1179658222, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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