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Dale Ho
Dale Ho
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Dale Edwin Ho (born 1977)[2] is an American lawyer serving as a United States district judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York. Prior to becoming a judge, he was the director of the American Civil Liberties Union's voting rights project.

Key Information

Early life and education

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Ho was born in 1977 in San Jose, California to immigrants to the United States from the Philippines.[3][2] He received his Bachelor of Arts in political philosophy, summa cum laude, from Princeton University in 1999 with membership in Phi Beta Kappa. He then received his Juris Doctor from Yale Law School in 2005.[2][4]

Career

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Ho served as a law clerk to Judge Barbara S. Jones of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York from 2005 to 2006 and Associate Judge Robert S. Smith of the New York Court of Appeals from 2006 to 2007.[4][5] Through a one-year Fried Frank Civil Rights Fellowship, he worked for the law firm Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson as an NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, Inc. (NAACP LDF) Fellow from 2007 to 2009. He then worked as a staff attorney with the NAACP LDF from 2009 to 2013,[6] where he worked on legislative redistricting projects, including anti-gerrymandering efforts.[7]

In 2013, Ho became Director of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) Voting Rights Project.[4] In 2014, Ho began teaching election law as an Adjunct Assistant Professor of Law at Brooklyn Law School starting in 2013, and a racial justice clinic as an adjunct professor at the New York University School of Law starting in 2014.[8][9][10]

In 2019, Ho was one of five ACLU lawyers featured in the documentary The Fight, produced by actress Kerry Washington, which followed his preparation, oral argument, and reaction in the United States Supreme Court proceedings around Department of Commerce v. New York[11] (see Notable cases, below).

Notable cases

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In 2018, Ho was a lead attorney in Fish v. Kobach, in which the district court ruled that it was illegal to require documentary proof of citizenship in order to register to vote.[12][13] Ho argued the case before the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit, which affirmed the Kansas district court's ruling.[14]

Ho argued twice against the Trump administration in front of the Supreme Court of the United States. In Department of Commerce v. New York (2019), Ho represented a coalition of immigrant advocacy groups who successfully challenged Donald Trump's plan to include a citizenship question on the 2020 United States census questionnaire.[15]

In Trump v. New York (2020), the ACLU unsuccessfully challenged the Trump administration's plan to exclude illegal immigrants from the U.S. congressional apportionment process.[8]

Federal judicial service

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From the start of President Joe Biden's administration, Ho had been considered a potential nominee for a federal judgeship.[16] The public criminal defense and voting rights attorney was a candidate of the Biden administration's program to open up the field to practitioners outside the traditional pool of corporate lawyers and prosecutors.[17] On June 7, 2021, U.S. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer recommended Ho for a federal judgeship to the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York.[18] On September 30, 2021, Biden nominated Ho to serve as a judge of that court,[19] to the seat vacated by Judge Katherine B. Forrest, who resigned on September 11, 2018.[20]

On December 1, 2021, a hearing on his nomination was held before the Senate Judiciary Committee.[21] During his confirmation hearing, Ho apologized for his "overheated rhetoric" on social media, which included past tweets critical of three Republican members of the Senate Judiciary Committee, Marsha Blackburn, Mike Lee, and Tom Cotton.[22] He was questioned by senators over a tweet in which he appeared to refer to himself as a "wild-eyed sort of leftist"; he explained that he was "referring to a caricature of the way other people may have described me, not how I would describe myself."[23] A resurfaced video from 2018 showed Ho calling the U.S. Senate and the Electoral College "undemocratic" and arguing that voting should be made easier and that people with criminal convictions should not lose the right to vote.[24] The conservative Judicial Crisis Network launched a $300,000 television ad campaign against Ho, the group's first TV campaign against a Biden judicial nominee;[25] in response, progressive group Demand Justice launched a six-figure ad campaign in support of Ho.[26]

On January 3, 2022, his nomination was returned to President Biden under Rule XXXI, Paragraph 6 of the United States Senate;[27] he was renominated the same day.[28] On January 20, 2022, the committee failed to report his nomination by an 11–11 vote.[29] On June 14, 2023, the Senate invoked cloture on his nomination by a 50–49 vote.[30] Senator Joe Manchin was the only Democrat to vote against cloture and against confirmation of Ho's nomination, stating Ho was "extreme left" and accusing him of "hateful words" and "partisanship."[31][32] Later that same day, his nomination was confirmed by a 50–49 vote.[33][34][35] Ho was only the second ACLU lawyer to be confirmed directly to the federal bench as an Article III judge, after Ruth Bader Ginsburg.[36] He received his judicial commission on August 18, 2023.[37]

Notable cases as a judge

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On September 25, 2024, he was randomly assigned to the prosecution of New York City Mayor Eric Adams, No. 24-cr-556 (S.D.N.Y.).[38]

Personal life

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See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Dale Edwin Ho (born 1977) is an American jurist serving as a district for the for the Southern District of New York since 2023. Born in , to parents who immigrated from the , Ho earned a bachelor's degree summa cum laude from in 1999 and a J.D. from in 2005. His pre-judicial career centered on civil rights litigation, including roles as Assistant Counsel at the Legal Defense Fund and, from 2013, as Director of the American Civil Liberties Union's Voting Rights Project, where he oversaw nationwide efforts challenging state laws on access and . Nominated by President on January 3, 2023, Ho faced Republican opposition citing his advocacy record, including ACLU cases against voter identification requirements and congressional testimony on reforms; he was confirmed by the on June 14, 2023, in a 50–49 party-line vote, marking him as only the second ACLU attorney to ascend directly to an Article III federal judgeship. Since assuming the bench, Ho has handled significant caseloads in the high-volume Southern District, including elements of the federal corruption prosecution against Mayor .

Early Life and Education

Family Background and Upbringing

Dale Ho was born in 1977 in San Jose, California, to immigrants from the Philippines. He was raised in San Jose, where his family settled after immigrating to the United States. Limited public details exist regarding Ho's dynamics or parental professions, with available biographical accounts focusing primarily on his ethnic heritage and birthplace as shaping his early environment in a diverse suburb known for its tech industry and immigrant communities. Ho has not extensively discussed his upbringing in interviews or professional profiles, which emphasize his subsequent academic path over personal family anecdotes.

Academic Achievements

Dale Ho earned a degree from in 1999, graduating summa cum laude and as a member of . He subsequently obtained a from in 2005.

Roles in Civil Rights Advocacy

Dale Ho served as a fellow at the Legal Defense and Educational Fund (LDF) from 2007 to 2009, followed by his role as assistant counsel from 2009 to 2013, where he focused on voting rights matters. In these positions, Ho contributed to the organization's efforts in civil rights litigation, particularly concerning electoral access and representation. From 2013 until his judicial nomination in 2021, Ho directed the American Civil Liberties Union's (ACLU) Voting Rights Project, overseeing the organization's nationwide voting rights litigation and advocacy initiatives. In this capacity, he supervised legal challenges related to voter protections, including issues of racial and constitutional voting rights, representing the ACLU in federal courts and before . His work emphasized advocating for expanded voter access, often in opposition to state-level restrictions on election administration.

Notable Litigation and Advocacy Efforts

Ho served as a fellow and assistant counsel at the Legal Defense and Educational Fund from 2007 to 2013, where he participated in voting rights advocacy, including filing amicus briefs in federal cases challenging election restrictions. In one such effort, he co-signed a brief in a 2010 case emphasizing equality principles under the Voting Rights Act. He also held a leadership role in multi-party litigation against North Carolina's House Bill 589, a 2013 law imposing strict photo ID requirements, eliminating same-day registration, and reducing , which federal courts struck down in 2016 for disproportionately affecting Black voters in violation of Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. From 2013 onward, Ho directed the ACLU's Voting Rights Project, overseeing litigation in over a dozen states to enforce federal voting protections. Notable cases included Fish v. Kobach (2016–2020), where he argued on behalf of plaintiffs challenging Kansas's documentary proof-of-citizenship requirement for ; the Tenth Circuit affirmed a preliminary in 2016, and a 2018 district court ruling invalidated the law, restoring eligibility for approximately 30,000 registrants across political affiliations by deeming it preempted by the National Voter Registration Act and an undue burden under the Fourteenth Amendment. Ho also represented voters in a 2020 Texas federal lawsuit, securing an that prevented the rejection of ballots cast at the wrong precinct, thereby protecting over 100,000 votes in Harris County amid COVID-19-related disruptions. Ho argued two cases before the U.S. challenging Trump administration policies with implications for electoral apportionment. In Department of Commerce v. New York (2019), he represented respondents opposing the addition of a citizenship question to the 2020 questionnaire, which the Court ruled in 5-4 decision violated administrative procedure due to pretextual rationale, halting its implementation. In Trump v. New York (2020), Ho challenged executive orders excluding undocumented immigrants from the count used for congressional apportionment; the Court dismissed the case 6-3 as premature but noted potential post-. Beyond litigation, Ho engaged in advocacy through congressional testimony on election integrity, state legislative appearances, and scholarly publications analyzing post-Shelby County v. Holder (2013) vote denial claims under Section 2, arguing for a causal standard linking practices to racial disparities in turnout. He served as an adjunct professor at New York University School of Law, teaching voting rights law.

Private Sector Practice

Following his clerkships for Judge Barbara S. Jones of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York (2005–2006) and Associate Judge Robert S. Smith of the (2006–2007), Dale Ho served as a litigation associate at LLP in New York from 2007 to 2009. His tenure at the firm began through a one-year Fried Frank Civil Rights Fellowship sponsored by the Legal Defense and Educational Fund, during which he focused on civil rights-related matters as part of the firm's commitments. At Fried Frank, Ho's practice centered on complex civil litigation, encompassing motions practice, discovery, and trial-stage work in both paid client representations and cases. Among his contributions, he co-authored an brief on behalf of civil rights organizations in Arar v. Ashcroft, a Second Circuit appeal challenging the U.S. government's role in the and alleged of a Syrian-born Canadian citizen detained in New York in 2002. This work aligned with the firm's involvement in high-profile human rights litigation, though specific details of his paid commercial matters remain undisclosed in . Ho's experience was relatively brief, transitioning thereafter to full-time roles in civil rights advocacy.

Nomination and Confirmation

Presidential Nomination

President nominated Dale Ho on September 20, 2021, to serve as a District Judge for the Southern District of New York, filling the vacancy created by the retirement of Judge . At the time, Ho was the director of the American Civil Liberties Union's Voting Rights Project, where he had litigated cases involving election administration and access to the ballot. The nomination aligned with Biden's initiative to appoint federal judges from civil rights and public interest backgrounds, emphasizing diversity in professional experience over traditional private practice paths. Ho's initial advanced to a hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee on December 14, 2021, but stalled without a committee vote amid partisan divisions over his advocacy record, particularly his ACLU work challenging voter ID and election security measures. Critics, including Republican senators, questioned the impartiality of nominees with extensive ties to partisan litigation groups like the ACLU, which had filed numerous lawsuits against Republican-led voting reforms. The lapsed at the end of the 117th Congress in January 2023. Biden renominated Ho on January 3, 2023, to the same position as part of a batch of judicial picks submitted to the at the start of the 118th Congress. This second nomination retained the focus on Ho's expertise in voting rights and , with supporters from organizations such as the praising his qualifications for handling complex constitutional matters in a high-volume district court. The renomination proceeded under Democratic control, facilitating quicker advancement compared to the prior attempt.

Senate Proceedings and Opposition

Dale Ho's confirmation hearing before the United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary occurred on December 1, 2021, as part of a broader session reviewing multiple judicial nominees. During the proceedings, Republican senators, including members of the committee, scrutinized Ho's prior social media activity, highlighting statements from as early as 2013 that criticized Republican senators and conservative policies on issues such as voting rights and immigration. Ho described these as instances of "overheated rhetoric" and expressed regret, while defending his overall advocacy record as consistent with his role at the ACLU's Voting Rights Project, where he had led challenges to state election laws enacted after the 2020 election. Opposition from Republicans centered on assertions that Ho's history demonstrated insufficient impartiality for the federal bench, particularly given his leadership in ACLU litigation opposing Republican-backed measures perceived by critics as enhancing , such as voter ID requirements and restrictions on mail-in voting. The Republican National Lawyers Association described the hearing as revealing Ho's "extreme partisanship," citing his public statements and as of a predisposition against conservative legal positions. Senators questioned whether his commitment to "faithfully and impartially" applying the , as affirmed in his responses to post-hearing questions, would override what they viewed as ideological leanings shaped by years of partisan litigation. Ho maintained that his professional experience equipped him to adjudicate impartially, bound by precedent and the , without regard to personal views. The Judiciary Committee reported Ho's nomination favorably to the full on January 20, 2022, amid partisan divisions, but it subsequently stalled for over 17 months due to Republican holds and absences among Democrats in the narrowly divided chamber. (D-W.Va.), a moderate Democrat, announced his opposition to the nomination, contributing to the delay by joining Republican objections over Ho's past criticisms of institutional norms like the filibuster and his advocacy record. Conservative commentators and groups, including those tracking judicial nominations, framed the resistance as a necessary check against appointing advocates with records suggestive of outcome-driven jurisprudence rather than neutral interpretation. On June 14, 2023, the full confirmed Ho to the for the Southern District of New York by a 50-49 party-line vote, with Kamala breaking no tie as all Republicans voted against and Manchin joined them in opposition; the confirmation marked one of the longest-pending Biden judicial nominations at the time, spanning 633 days from initial announcement.

Judicial Service

Appointment and Initial Tenure

Dale Ho received his judicial commission on August 18, 2023, following his confirmation on June 14, 2023, by a 50-49 vote, filling the vacancy created by the retirement of Katherine B. Forrest in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York. This appointment made Ho one of only two Asian American Pacific Islander men serving on the SDNY bench at the time. Upon assuming office, Ho adapted to the demands of federal judging, overseeing a docket that included civil matters such as disputes and pro se litigation. In early rulings, he emphasized procedural diligence; for example, in a 2024 decision involving , Ho applied the Hague Service Convention where the plaintiff failed to demonstrate reasonable efforts to locate defendants' addresses domestically. Ho also issued practices for managing pro se cases, scheduling initial conferences within four months of filing absent motions to dismiss, reflecting a commitment to efficient resolution while accommodating unrepresented parties. In a 2024 interview, Ho described the transition to the bench as challenging, particularly in mastering processes and rhythms after years in , underscoring the shift from litigator to impartial . His initial tenure focused on building caseload management protocols amid the high-volume SDNY environment, handling routine motions and setting precedents in procedural matters without notable appellate reversals in this period.

Significant Rulings

In Spin Master Ltd. v. D&D Designs LLC et al., decided on June 17, 2024, Ho ruled that the Hague Service Convention governed on foreign defendants, finding that the plaintiff had not exercised reasonable diligence in ascertaining their addresses despite available public information, thereby denying alternative service methods. This decision emphasized strict compliance with international protocols in disputes involving overseas parties. In Esplanade 2018 Partners, LLC v. Mt. Hawley Ins. Co., Ho denied the plaintiff's motion for partial summary judgment on August [date if specified, but from link it's recent], holding that factual disputes precluded judgment on insurance coverage claims related to property damage. The ruling underscored the need for genuine issues of material fact under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56. In the civil forfeiture action United States v. M/Y Amadea, Ho issued an order on July 16, 2025, addressing the government's claims against a luxury yacht seized as alleged proceeds of foreign corruption, resolving preliminary motions on standing and evidentiary matters. This case involved international cooperation under 18 U.S.C. § 981, highlighting Ho's handling of asset recovery in cross-border investigations. Ho's other opinions, such as terminating settled copyright litigation in TufAmerica, Inc. v. Universal Music Publishing, Inc. on September 23, 2025, and dismissing pro se claims in Brown v. Kopp on September 16, 2025, reflect routine case management in a high-volume district. His docket, active since confirmation in June 2023, has focused on civil procedural issues rather than appellate-level constitutional questions.

Eric Adams Corruption Case

In September 2024, Mayor was indicted by a federal on five counts, including , wire fraud, , and soliciting illegal foreign campaign contributions, primarily related to alleged favors from Turkish officials in exchange for assistance with Turkish consular construction approvals. Adams pleaded not guilty, denying all allegations and framing the case as politically motivated retaliation. The case was assigned to U.S. District Judge Dale Ho of the Southern District of New York, who assumed oversight amid ongoing pretrial proceedings. On January 13, 2025, Ho issued an order directing both prosecution and defense to align public statements with rules, following complaints about extrajudicial comments potentially prejudicing ; he declined to rule on specific violations but emphasized compliance to preserve . Proceedings intensified in February 2025 when the U.S. Department of Justice, under the incoming Trump administration, moved on February 14 to dismiss the without prejudice—allowing potential refiling—citing a review of the case's merits and . Ho responded skeptically, ordering prosecutors to appear in on February 18 to justify the abrupt reversal and mandating an "adversarial" process involving input from Adams' defense and external to scrutinize the motion, reflecting concerns over executive influence on judicial proceedings. Hearings in late February and March 2025 revealed tensions, with Ho probing whether the dismissal stemmed from evidentiary weaknesses or political directives, though he avoided immediate rulings to deliberate fully. External counsel, including former advising Adams, argued against without-prejudice dismissal to prevent future manipulation. On April 2, 2025, Ho issued a 78-page opinion granting dismissal but with prejudice, permanently barring refiling of the charges; he reasoned that without-prejudice dismissal risked undermining in the judiciary amid apparent politicization, as the government's shift lacked new and followed executive branch changes. This ruling effectively ended the prosecution, sparing Adams a set for April 2025, while critics of the DOJ's motion viewed Ho's condition as safeguarding against .

Controversies and Criticisms

Critiques of Constitutional Structures

In a 2018 public appearance, Dale Ho characterized the and the U.S. Senate's equal state representation as "anti-democratic" mechanisms that facilitate "minoritarian rule" by prioritizing smaller states over population proportionality. He grouped these with practices like extreme , stating they "entrench in some ways minority rule in this country," and advocated for structural reforms including a to vote to enhance democratic equity. Ho's critique of Senate malapportionment centered on its deviation from one-person-one-vote principles, which he argued distorts legislative power away from larger population centers; for instance, he noted in related commentary that rural-dominated states wield disproportionate influence in the , where they control 185 votes despite representing fewer total residents. These views, expressed during his tenure as director of the ACLU's Voting Rights Project, aligned with progressive advocacy for amending or bypassing such features through mechanisms like the , though Ho did not claim they violated the itself. Opponents during Ho's 2021 confirmation process for the U.S. District Court highlighted these statements as evidence of potential bias against the framers' federalist design, which intentionally balances state sovereignty against pure to prevent urban dominance. In responses to Judiciary Committee questions, Ho acknowledged prior support for abolition—such as in posts—but affirmed he would subordinate personal policy preferences to precedents upholding these structures, including Williams v. Rhodes (393 U.S. 23, 1968) on electoral processes and cases affirming composition under Article I. He emphasized judicial impartiality, distinguishing advocacy-era rhetoric from interpretive duties under the Constitution's text and original public meaning where binding.

Allegations of Ideological Bias

During his December 2021 Senate confirmation hearing, Republican senators alleged that Dale Ho exhibited ideological bias through partisan rhetoric and advocacy, questioning his impartiality as a potential federal judge. Senator Ted Cruz labeled Ho an "extreme partisan," arguing that President Biden sought to cloak a "radical agenda" in judicial robes, and cited Ho's history of "extreme and hyper partisan rhetoric" over the prior 18 months, including social media attacks on Republican senators. Ho had previously described himself in writing as a "wild-eyed sort of leftist" often "accused of sometimes seeing racial discrimination everywhere I look," a self-characterization Republicans invoked to suggest a predisposition toward progressive interpretations of civil rights law. Critics further pointed to Ho's tenure as director of the ACLU's Voting Rights Project from to 2022, where he supervised nationwide litigation challenging and other restrictions, such as a proof-of-citizenship requirement and North Carolina's photo ID mandate, which opponents viewed as ideologically driven efforts to expand access in ways disproportionately benefiting Democratic voters rather than neutral election integrity measures. The Republican National Lawyers Association described the hearing as exposing Ho's "extreme partisanship," particularly his 2020 statement decrying an "anti-democratic virus" spreading in "mainstream " among elected officials, which they argued reflected bias against conservative policy positions on voting. Ho responded by apologizing for the "overheated " in his tweets while defending the underlying substance of his advocacy as non-partisan commitment to constitutional protections, asserting that judges must set aside personal views in applying the law. In February 2025, attorneys in a federal case involving accused Ho of maintaining courtroom policies that encourage selecting lawyers from "underrepresented" groups, interpreting this as granting preferences to minority attorneys and fostering a of racial bias in judicial proceedings. The policy prompted U.S. District Judge to recuse herself from the matter, with critics arguing it undermined public confidence in by implying demographic factors influence case handling, though Ho's office has not publicly detailed the policy's implementation or intent. These allegations echo broader Republican concerns during that Ho's background predisposed him toward outcome-determinative rulings favoring progressive priorities, such as in voting rights and equity initiatives, over strict legal interpretation.

Personal Life

Family and Relationships

Dale Ho was born in 1977 in , to parents who had immigrated from the . Ho has referenced his wife in public remarks, including discussions of personal reactions to political events such as the 2016 U.S. presidential election and the 2017 travel ban. No further public details on his , children, or extended family are available from verified sources.

References

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