Mark W. Bennett was appointed a United States District Court Judge for the Northern District of Iowa on August 26, 1994. He had previously served, from December 2, 1991, as a United States magistrate judge in a sister district, the Southern District of Iowa. In 1975, upon graduation from the Drake University Law School, Judge Bennett began learning and studying his craft by laboring in the cotton rows of civil rights law as a founding partner in the Des Moines law firm that eventually became Babich, Bennett & Nickerson. During more than 16 years, his extensive practice in employment discrimination, employment law, constitutional law, and other civil rights litigation, on behalf of plaintiffs and defendants, took him to numerous state and federal trial and appellate courts, throughout the United States. This included arguing Evans v. Oscar Mayer Co., 441 U.S. 750 (1979), in the United States Supreme Court. Outside the courtroom Judge Bennett has also applied the experience gained as a practitioner, serving as a member of numerous professional committees, as a frequent seminar speaker, and as a teacher. Prior to his appointment to the federal bench, Judge Bennett was involved in professional organizations and community service, including serving as the first Chair of the Civil Justice Reform Act of 1990 Advisory Group for the United States District Court for the Southern District of Iowa, as a member of the Board of Governors of Trial Lawyers, and as a Master of the Bench of the Blackstone Inn of Court. He is often invited to speak at seminars throughout the country for the bench and bar on topics such as federal litigation, civil rights, employment law, and professionalism. He has also enjoyed teaching law students at the Drake University Law School (employment discrimination, employment law, and trial advocacy) and at the University of Iowa College of Law (trial advocacy). Judge Bennett recently completed a project redesigning case management software for federal district court judges as the project executive sponsor. Although law has been the passion of his professional life, Judge Bennett also enjoys hoeing the rows of his own garden, gourmet cooking, making brass mobiles, and navigating the Internet.