Julie Bosman
April 25,
2025, 2:32 p.m. ET3 hours ago
Julie Bosman
https://www.nytimes.com/live/2025/04/25/us/trump-news
Hannah
Dugan has spent most of her legal career working to help low-income people and
marginalized groups.
The
Wisconsin judge who was arrested on Friday morning on charges of obstructing
immigration enforcement spent most of her legal career working on behalf of
low-income people and marginalized groups.
Federal
authorities arrested the judge, Hannah C. Dugan of the Milwaukee County Circuit
Court, on suspicion that she “intentionally misdirected federal agents away
from” an immigrant being pursued by federal authorities, Kash Patel, the F.B.I.
director, wrote on social media. The authorities said that earlier this month,
Judge Dugan directed an undocumented immigrant through a side door in her
courtroom while the agents waited in a public hallway to apprehend him.
Judge Dugan,
widely known in progressive circles in Milwaukee, was elected by a wide margin
in 2016, beating an incumbent appointee of Scott Walker, the Republican former
governor of Wisconsin. Judge Dugan was unopposed for re-election in 2022. Her
current term expires in 2028.
In 2023, she
dismissed a lawsuit brought by the Republican Party of Wisconsin that argued a
get-out-the-vote effort in Milwaukee violated the law.
Judge Dugan,
65, graduated from the University of Wisconsin Law School in 1987 and took a
job at Legal Action of Wisconsin, a group that provides free legal services.
She worked as a lawyer specializing in housing, public benefits and Social
Security cases, and was the coordinator of the organization’s pro bono attorney
program from 1990 to 1994, according to her LinkedIn page.
She later
worked as the executive director for Catholic Charities of Southeastern
Wisconsin. Judge Dugan has also served on the Milwaukee County Ethics Board.
As a lawyer
for Legal Aid, Judge Dugan took on cases defending the indigent. In 1995, she
represented people who panhandled on downtown sidewalks, arguing that banning
them from doing so was unconstitutional.
In 2000, she
argued that a surge in tickets written for “quality-of-life” issues had
resulted in intimidation.
“Anecdotally,
from my clients, people don’t want to go to court, much less to trial, because
they’ve been particularly intimidated by officers,” she told The Milwaukee
Journal Sentinel at the time. “We’ve seen an increase in complaints of
harassment and abuse.”
Judge Dugan
lost a judicial race in 2012. During the campaign, she said she was nonpartisan
and would be impartial, according to the Journal Sentinel.
“Justice is
hard work. Everyone knows that,” she said.
Julius Kim,
a criminal defense lawyer in Milwaukee who has known Judge Dugan for years,
said on Friday that she is known for advocating on behalf of people who are
“underrepresented in the justice system.”
“Social
justice issues are close to her heart,” he said. “But that being said, I don’t
think she’s known by any stretch to be any kind of pushover in the courthouse,
either. I think she takes her obligations seriously as a judge.”
In 2021,
Judge Dugan was a finalist in the “Most Trusted Public Official” category in
the Best of Milwaukee contest in The Shepherd Express, an alternative
publication.
In an
article she wrote that year detailing the history of women in Wisconsin’s legal
profession, Judge Dugan noted that a “passion project” of hers was to have her
picture taken outside of every courthouse in Wisconsin.
Local
officials in Milwaukee criticized her arrest.
Mayor
Cavalier Johnson of Milwaukee said that “it sends a chilling effect to other
people who participate in our judicial process here in Milwaukee.
“When folks
do not participate in the judicial process, that makes our community less
safe,” he said.
David
Crowley, the Milwaukee County executive, said in a statement that Judge Dugan
is “entitled to her constitutional right to due process.”
“However, it
is clear that the F.B.I. is politicizing this situation to make an example of
her and others across the country who oppose their attack on the judicial
system and our nation’s immigration laws,” he said.
Outside the
federal courthouse in Milwaukee on Friday afternoon, dozens of people gathered
in protest of Judge Dugan’s arrest. Some called it an attack on the judiciary
by the Trump administration, carrying signs reading “Hands off our judges.”
“If we don’t
stand up now, we’ll lose the chance to,” said Jenica Wolski, 37, a graphic
artist from the nearby suburb of Wauwatosa. “We are sliding so fast into
authoritarianism, it’s scary.”
Dan
Simmonsand Robert Chiarito contributed reporting from Milwaukee.
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