The judge, Zahid N. Quraishi of New Jersey, said after his selection by President Biden, “Candidly, I would prefer to be the hundredth, if not the thousandth.”
Zahid N. Quraishi, a federal magistrate judge and the son of Pakistani immigrants, was confirmed by the U.S. Senate for a federal judgeship in New Jersey on Thursday, becoming the first Muslim Federal District Court judge in the nation’s history.
Judge Quraishi acknowledged his history-making status after President Biden announced his intention to nominate him in March. “Candidly,” the judge said, “I would prefer to be the hundredth, if not the thousandth.” He added, “I understand what it means to the community.”
The Senate confirmation on Thursday, by a vote of 81 to 16, touched off a wave of congratulatory messages on social media from Democrats and progressives. Senator Cory Booker of New Jersey called Judge Quraishi “an excellent addition to the court.” Senator Mazie Hirono of Hawaii said “Congratulations Judge Quraishi!” The Senate majority leader, Chuck Schumer of New York, and Senator Gary Peters of Michigan released congratulatory messages too.
Senator Bob Menendez of New Jersey called Mr. Quraishi “a man of integrity, a consummate public servant, and a trailblazer for Asian Americans and Muslim Americans across this country who dream of one day presiding over a court of their own.” He added: “We should all draw inspiration from his story, because it is a story that could only take place in the United States of America.”
Underscoring the historical significance of the confirmation, Janai Nelson, associate director-counsel of NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, Inc., said “Now seems like a good time to note that the first federal courts were created over 230 years ago.”
Judge Quraishi was among the first wave of judicial nominations by Mr. Biden, who sought to counter the influence of his predecessor in steering federal courts to the right. Five of those nominees were people of color, and two had worked as public defenders.
In 2019, Judge Quraishi was appointed a U.S. magistrate judge in New Jersey. Before that he was chair of the white collar criminal defense and investigations group for Riker Danzig Scherer Hyland & Perretti LLP, a large law firm in New Jersey. From 2008 to 2013 he was an assistant U.S. attorney in New Jersey. Before that, he was an assistant chief counsel at the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.
Judge Quraishi, who was born in New York City and raised in Fanwood, N.J., graduated from Rutgers Law School in 2000. After clerking for a judge, he went to work at LeBoeuf, Lamb, Greene & MacRae LLP, which he later described in a podcast as a move to, in part, please his parents, who had immigrated to the United States from Pakistan.
“I took a job at the biggest law firm I could get a job at with the biggest salary,” Judge Quraishi said in January on a podcast hosted by the Muslim Bar Association of New York. “I thought that would make my parents proud.”
His first day at work, he said, was Sept. 11, 2001. Two years later, Judge Quraishi joined the Army and was deployed to Iraq. He was awarded the Bronze Star and was discharged in 2007.
The Council on American-Islamic Relations, a civil rights organization, has criticized Judge Quraishi’s work in Iraq, and in the second term of President Bush. In a statement, the group said he worked as a “‘detention legal adviser’ during the American occupation of Iraq from 2003 to 2007 when prisoner abuse was rampant.” That work, and his service with Immigration and Customs Enforcement during the Bush administration “sparked concern in the civil rights community,” the group said.
The organization wrote a letter to senators urging them to investigate Judge Quraishi’s work during this time.
In the podcast interview, Judge Quraishi described his path to the federal bench as a departure from what his father, a physician, had initially intended. “You can imagine my father thinking I would be going to med school to follow in his footsteps,” Judge Quraishi recalled. But, he said, “I had no interest.” So he applied to law school instead.
“Without any real goal in mind, I thought why not go to law school?” he said in the podcast. “I like to argue, I talk all the time.”
In April, Judge Quraishi’s 73-year-old father, Nisar, died from complications of the coronavirus, The Tribeca Trib reported. “He loved practicing medicine,” Judge Quraishi told the paper. “He loved helping other people, which caused him to be infected and pass away.”
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