A U.S. district court / Established 1812

U.S. District Court for the District of Louisiana

Louisiana · A federal trial court, where federal civil and criminal cases are first heard. Appeals go to the Fifth Circuit.

U.S. District Court for the District of Louisiana is a United States district court, a federal trial court where most federal civil and criminal cases are first heard. It lies within the Fifth Circuit, which reviews its decisions on appeal. This page lists every judge to serve on the court, current and former, with who appointed them and whom they succeeded.

5
Judges in history
0
Currently serving
3
Seats over time
0 / 1
Appointed D / R
Current judges

No currently serving judges on record.

Former judges
JudgeAppointed byYears
Edward Coke BillingsGrant (R)1876–1881
Edward Henry Durell(reassignment) (N)1866–1874
Theodore Howard McCaleb(reassignment) (N)1845–1849
John DickMonroe (N)1821–1823
Dominic Augustin HallMadison (N)1812–1820

How a judge gets here. Each judge is nominated by a president and confirmed by the U.S. Senate, then holds a numbered seat, for life, until they take senior status, or until they leave the bench. Open any judge to see who appointed them, how the Senate voted, and whom they succeeded, a chain that runs back to 1812.

Source: FJC Biographical Directory. Data last verified 2026-06-28. Verify against the primary source before relying.