EXPERIENCED AND QUALIFIED

State Bars and Court Admissions

State Bar of California, July, 1984, (#117381)
State Bar of Indiana, June, 1997, (#19809-49)
State Bar of Idaho, April, 1998, (#5722)
State Bar of Utah, October, 1998, (#8210)
State Bar of Nebraska, February, 2000, (#21853)
State Bar of Colorado, May, 2000, (#31674)
State Bar of South Dakota, June, 2000, (#3105)
State Bar of Missouri, April, 2001, (#52736)
State Bar of Wyoming, May, 2001, (#6-3440)
State Bar of New Mexico, September, 2001, (#14651)
State Bar of Texas, October, 2001, (# 24031362)
State Bar of Oklahoma, December, 2002 (#19616)
State Bar of Illinois, May, 2003 (#06279154)
State Bar of Nevada, October, 2003 (#8482)
State Bar of Tennessee, July, 2004 (#023413)

United States District Courts

Central District of California, 1986
Southern District of California, 1986
Northern District of California, 2002
Eastern District of California, 2002
Northern District of Indiana, 1997
Southern District of Indiana, 1997
District of Idaho, 1998
District of Utah, 1998
District of Colorado, 2000
Western District of Missouri, 2001
Eastern District of Missouri, 2001
District of South Dakota, 2007
District of Wyoming, 2006

United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit, 1987
United States Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit, 2001

Employment

July, 2007 to present
Los Angeles Superior Court
Edelman Children’s Court (Dependency)
Superior Court Referee

January 1996 to June, 2008
Law Offices of Richard M. Lester
Canoga Park, CA 91303
Consumer Law/Civil Rights

April 1995 to December 1995
Hammock & Hedges
Los Angeles, CA 90017
General Partner, Litigation/Criminal Defense

April 1985 to April 1995
Chelski, Hammock & Hedges
Los Angeles, CA 90010
General Partner, Litigation/Criminal Defense

July 1984 to March 1985
Law Offices of Stephen J. Dimeff
San Diego, CA 92101
Associate Attorney, Insurance Defense

Education

University of San Diego, School of Law
J.D., 1980-1983

San Diego State University
B.A., 1977-1980
magna cum laude

What is a Superior Court Referee?

A Superior Court Referee is a "subordinate judicial officer," just as in the case of a Superior Court Commissioner. The initial difference between a Judge, Commissioner and Referee is in the manner in which they each obtain that position. Judges are either appointed by the Governor or they are elected (in a county-wide non-partisan election) to six year terms. Commissioners are elected by the superior court judges of that particular county. After their election as a Commissioner, they basically serve as an "at-will" employee of the Superior Court, as they are not subject to any re-election. Referees are appointed by the Presiding Judge, and they also serve as an "at-will" employee of the Superior Court. Both Commissioners and Referees are elected or appointed by an application and vetting process.

In Los Angeles County, the vast majority (if not all) of the Referees serve in the Juvenile Court. The Informal Juvenile Traffic Court is served exclusively by Referees. The Delinquency and Dependency Courts are served by approximately one-third by Judges, one-third by Commissioners, and one-third by Referees. There are about thirty (30) full-time referees currently serving in the Juvenile Court.

In the Juvenile Court, unlike the other divisions of the Superior Court (e.g., Civil, Criminal, Family Law and Probate), a stipulation between the parties is not required in order for a Referee to hear or decide any case (except in the limited case in the delinquency court when a trial is to be conducted on the merits of the petition). The Welfare & Institutions Code expressly authorizes Referees to hear and decide all cases in the Juvenile Court, subject to a right of rehearing before a juvenile court judge. For all practical purposes, though, this right of rehearing is rarely utilized by the parties, as they also have a right to directly appeal an order or decision of a Referee to the appellate courts.

In short, a Superior Court Referee in the juvenile dependency and delinquency courts essentially exercises the same day-to-day duties as a Judge in those courts. They are assigned a department, they maintain and control that department's calendar and cases, and they make all orders and decisions for the cases assigned to that department. Additionally, there is no distinction in the type or number of cases which are assigned to a particular department - whether that department is served by a Judge, Commissioner or Referee. All of the case assignments are treated in the same manner. Additionally, all subordinate judicial officers are required to wear judicial robes while in session and they are formally addressed as "Your Honor," and are essentially treated in the same manner of courtesy and respect afforded to a Judge. Of course, this does not suggest that Referees have all of the same powers, duties and obligations of a Judge. They do not. As a "subordinate judicial officer," a Referee is "subordinate" to a Judge in several aspects -- primarily in the sense that a certain decisions and orders of a Referee are required to be reviewed and approved by a Judge, and they are always subject to a right of rehearing by a party before a Judge.

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