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Sending A Thank You Letter to Law Clerk: How to Mail
Posted: Sat Apr 06, 2013 12:38 am
by Anonymous User
I recently interviewed with a law clerk for a judicial internship. I am sending a thank you letter directly to him. Is this the appropriate envelope address/heading for the letter?
Attn: Law Clerk Name
Judge Name
Court Name
Building Name, Suite
Street
City, State Zip
Should I scrap the Judge's name entirely if the letter is going directly to the clerk? Thanks for the insight.
Re: Sending A Thank You Letter to Law Clerk: How to Mail
Posted: Sat Apr 06, 2013 12:44 am
by A. Nony Mouse
You can scrap the judge's name and the Attn: bit - just use the law clerk's name and the courthouse address.
Re: Sending A Thank You Letter to Law Clerk: How to Mail
Posted: Sat Apr 06, 2013 9:45 am
by Anonymous User
A. Nony Mouse wrote:You can scrap the judge's name and the Attn: bit - just use the law clerk's name and the courthouse address.
Current COA clerk here. If the judge has chambers in a courthouse with a number of other judges, I'm going to suggest the opposite. I'm pretty sure our mail guy sorts the mail by chambers, so having the judge's name on there is helpful. I would do something to the effect of:
Law Clerk Name
Chambers of the Honorable Judge Name
Court Name
Address 1 (or stick the suite number here, if you want to save space and not use an Address 2)
Address 2
City, State, ZIP
The building name isn't entirely necessary, so you can just put down the street address. At the end of the day, though, it doesn't matter -- it'll all get there eventually.
Re: Sending A Thank You Letter to Law Clerk: How to Mail
Posted: Sat Apr 06, 2013 11:58 am
by A. Nony Mouse
Sure, that's not going to hurt. But I get mail addressed to just me, no judge's name, just fine; once you start work you're added to the mail directory and the postal people don't have any problem finding you.
But yeah, adding the chambers won't hurt. But do put "chambers of" as suggested, not just the judge's name, or they might think it's supposed to go to the judge (the judge will then just hand it to the clerk, really, so none of this is that big a deal, but still).