![]() ![]() |
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Feb. 23, 2006
CONTACT: Mark Kende, (515) 271-3354, mark.kende@drake.edu;
Daniel P. Finney, (515) 271-2833, daniel.finney@drake.edu
FEDERAL JUDGE, DRAKE LAW ALUMNUS, TO REFLECT UPON PRESIDING OVER HIGH-PROFILE
DEATH PENALTY CASES IN IOWA
Mark W. Bennett, a U.S. District Court judge in the Northern District of Iowa,
will reflect upon his presiding over two high-profile death penalty cases in
Iowa last year in a lecture set for 4 p.m., Wednesday, March 1, at Cartwright
Hall, 2621 Carpenter Ave., on the campus of Drake University. The lecture is
free and open to the public.
Bennett, a 1975 Drake Law School alumnus, was on the bench for a pair of drug
trafficking related murder trials held in Sioux City, Iowa, late in 2005. In
the cases, Dustin Honken and his girlfriend, Angela Johnson, were each sentenced
to death by juries in separate trials for the murders of three adults and two
children.
Bennett imposed the first death sentences issued in Iowa since 1963. Iowa is
one of 12 states that do not have the death penalty but because the case was
tried in federal court, the ultimate penalty was in play.
Bennett was appointed to his federal judgeship in 1994 and became chief judge
in 2000.
After his graduation from Drake, Bennett started his own law firm in Des Moines,
which eventually became Babich, Bennett & Nickerson. Over the course of
more than 16 years, his extensive practice in employment discrimination, constitutional
law and other civil rights litigation took him to numerous state and federal
trial and appellate courts throughout the United States, resulting in more than
50 reported decisions, including arguing before the United State Supreme Court
in 1979.
Prior to his appointment to the federal bench, Bennett served as the first chair
of the Civil Justice Reform Act of 1990 Advisory Group for the U.S. District
Court for the Southern District of Iowa, as a member of the board of governors
of the Association of Trial Lawyers of Iowa and as a fellow in the Iowa Academy
of Trial Lawyers. He was also active as a leader in the Iowa State Bar Association.
Bennett has spoken at more than 210 seminars throughout the United States on
topics such as federal litigation, civil rights, employment law, professionalism
and courtroom technology. He has taught at Drake Law School, the University
of Iowa Law School, and the U.S. Department of Justice National Advocacy Center.
- 30 -