Attorney and lecturer Magnuson served as a private practicing attorney for 18 years in the firm of Levander, Gillen Miller and Magnuson, South Saint Paul, Minnesota, where his endeavors emphasized eminent domain and municipal law. Magnuson served as a lecturer at
William Mitchell College of Law and
Hamline University School of Law from 1982 to 1989. From 1986 to 1991, Magnuson also served as Jurist in Residence at a number of undergraduate college liberal arts campuses in Minnesota. In 2010, Magnuson was a Fulbright Scholar at United International College, Zhuhai, China.
Federal judicial service Magnuson was nominated by President
Ronald Reagan and, upon confirmation, entered judicial service on November 16, 1981. During his judicial career, Magnuson has served on the Judicial Conference of the United States as a Member and Chair of the Bankruptcy Committee, and International Judicial Relations Committee, and a member of the Inter-Circuit Assignment Committee. He also served the
Federal Judicial Center as a Member of the District Judges Education Committee. Magnuson was also a longtime member of the Board of Directors of the Federal Judges Association, where he held numerous executive offices. In addition, Magnuson has traveled to some 50 countries where he has encouraged the development of independent, ethical judiciaries in emerging democracies. This work has primarily been in Eastern Europe, Central Asia, Asia, and Africa. Magnuson served as Chief Judge from 1994 to 2001. In 2002, he assumed senior status where he continues to carry an active case load. In 2009, Magnuson presided over a wrongful death civil suit over the
killing of Fong Lee by a Minneapolis police officer. In the early 2020s, he presided over the federal civil rights cases of the four Minneapolis police officers—
Derek Chauvin, Tou Thao, J. Alexander Kueng, and Thomas Lane—for the
murder of George Floyd. In May 2025 Magnuson granted the
second Trump administration's motion to
dismiss with prejudice a proposed
consent decree developed during the
Biden administration with the aim of reducing racial disparities in the treatment of individuals by the
Minneapolis Police Department. ==References==