Clemente Ruiz Nazario

Clemente Ruiz Nazario (November 23, 1896 in San Germán, Puerto Rico ?), was the first Puerto Rican appointed as District Judge to the United States District Court for the District of Puerto Rico.[1]

Ruiz Nazario served in 1921 as a Second Lieutenant in the United States Army Reserve and then went to University of Puerto Rico where he received his teacher certificate and his law degree from the University of Puerto Rico School of Law. He was appointed by President Harry S. Truman, in 1952. Setting a precedent, the appointment of Ruiz Nazario to the federal district court in Puerto Rico marked the beginning of an uninterrupted practice of appointing Puerto Rican men and women to that Court. Nominated as the next-to-last fixed-term judge in the District of Puerto Rico, he was joined by a second judge as Puerto Rico's federal caseload increased, Judge Hiram Rafael Cancio who, after Ruiz Nazario's resignation in December 1966, was appointed as Puerto Rico's first Article III lifetime federal judge. He died on December 25, 1969.

Legacy

Clemente Ruiz Nazario Courthouse, in Hato Rey, PR.

The main Clemente Ruiz Nazario United States Courthouse in San Juan, Puerto Rico, adjacent to the Federico Degetau Federal Building is named after him.

See also

References

  • Guillermo A. Baralt, History of the Federal Court in Puerto Rico: 1899-1999 (2004) (also published in Spanish as Historia del Tribunal Federal de Puerto Rico)
Legal offices
Preceded by
Thomas H. Roberts
Judge of the United States District Court for the District of Puerto Rico
19521966
Succeeded by
Juan B. Fernandez-Badillo


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