The Second Judicial District Commission on Judicial
Performance, by a vote of nine to one, recommends that Judge J.
Stephen Phillips BE RETAINED.
Judge Phillips received his undergraduate degree from the University
of Wyoming, and received his law degree from the University of Colorado.
He was admitted to the Colorado Bar in 1968. Judge Phillips served
as an attorney in the Army Judge Advocate General Corps for four
years. He worked as a Colorado Assistant Attorney General for seven
years and was chief of the criminal appeals and enforcement sections.
In early 1982, Judge Phillips became an Assistant United States
Attorney, where he worked for 15 months until he was appointed to
the district court bench. He has been a district court judge for
21 years. Judge Phillips and his wife have three grown sons.
Judge Phillips has served in every division of the Denver District
Court at least twice. He was chief judge for three years. His present
assignment is in the civil division, where he has served since early
2003.
The Commission considered the survey questionnaires completed by
attorneys and non-attorneys, and met with Judge Phillips twice,
in part because he initially expressed some criticism of the retention/evaluation
process. The Commission noted that Judge Phillips' ratings from
attorneys dropped substantially from his last evaluation. Judge
Phillips generally scored at or below the statewide averages for
district court judges. There were criticisms in the surveys from
lawyers about his temperament. His demeanor was rated well below
average by lawyers as was his willingness to reconsider errors.
Judge Phillips agreed this was an area in which he needs to improve.
He theorized the criticisms may stem from the fact that he strives
to meet American Bar Association guidelines to get cases tried within
a year from filing, and that this relatively quick pace does not
sit well with some attorneys.
Non-attorneys gave Judge Phillips very high marks in all categories.
Non-attorneys rated his overall demeanor significantly higher than
the statewide average and gave him high marks for treating the participants
in the process with dignity and respect.
Eighty-two percent of attorneys recommended that Judge Phillips
be retained, while 18% recommended that he not be retained. Ninety-two
percent of non-attorneys recommended that Judge Phillips be retained,
while 8% recommended that he not be retained. |