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Charles "Bud" Stack


Charles R. "Bud" Stack (born September 26, 1935) is a Florida lawyer and a former federal judicial nominee to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit whose nomination became a campaign issue during the 1996 presidential campaign.

Raised in Melbourne, Florida, Stack earned a bachelor's degree in business administration from the University of Florida. He then earned a law degree from the University of Florida College of Law.

Stack has been a personal-injury and product liability lawyer for many years, co-founding the High Stack Gordon firm in Melbourne, Florida in 1962. His co-founder of the firm was Miami Mayor Robert King High.

In 1991, Stack offered to help Bill Clinton in his campaign for president after watching Clinton give a speech on C-SPAN, according to an article in the Miami Herald. Stack then served as the Florida finance director for the Clinton campaign in 1992, raising $7 million for the campaign. Shortly after Clinton was elected president, Stack informed the Clinton administration that he was interested in an appeals-court judgeship, although the president's aides had discussed instead offering him an ambassadorship or a seat on a lower court.

On October 27, 1995, President Clinton nominated Stack to a seat on the Eleventh Circuit that had been vacated by Peter Thorp Fay, who had taken senior status the previous year. "Ever since I got out of law school, I thought there should be a time when I would be a law school professor or a judge," Stack told the Associated Press in an article that appeared on its wire on April 29, 1996 "I've practiced law for 35 years. I wanted to do something new."

Although the U.S. Senate at that time was controlled by Republicans, Stack's nomination initially was not necessarily thought to be controversial. Even Republican Sen. Orrin Hatch, then the chairman of the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee, praised Stack. "I think he's a good nominee," Hatch told the St. Petersburg Times in an article that appeared on October 28, 1995. "He's a close friend of the president, but I personally do not believe it should be a disqualification." On February 28, 1996, at a hearing on his nomination before the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee, Stack said he was not familiar with Adarand Constructors, Inc. v. Peña, a key Supreme Court ruling on minority set-aside contracts from in 1995, and acknowledged that he had only tried a handful of criminal cases, according to a March 29, 1996 article on the hearing in the St. Petersburg Times.


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