Frederick James Lees, the E.K. Gubin Professor Emeritus of Government Contracts Law, passed away on Friday, July 17, 2020, at the age of 89.
Professor Lees was born in Scranton, Pennsylvania, attended the University of Virginia on a Naval ROTC scholarship, and upon graduation was commissioned as an officer in the US Navy and served in the Korean War. Upon his discharge from active service in the Navy, he became a patent examiner at the US Patent and Trademark Office. While working there, he earned his JD from the American University Washington College of Law.
Professor Lees then spent 24 years practicing patent and contracting law at NASA, throughout its Gemini, Apollo, Skylab, and Space Shuttle programs. Professor Lees later concurrently served as the Chief Administrative Judge of the NASA Board of Contract Appeals and the Chair of the NASA Inventions and Contributions Board and earned an Exceptional Service Medal from the agency.
In 1985, he joined the GW Law faculty. He became a co-director of the Government Procurement Law program in 1993 and was appointed as the E.K. Gubin Professor of Government Contracts Law in 1995.
Professor Lees played an instrumental role in bringing the Public Contract Law Journal to the law school and creating what is now the GW Law– Arnold & Porter Government Contracts Moot Court Competition. He also raised the profile of the Government Procurement Law Program. As part of this effort, he expanded the curriculum, increase enrollment in both degree and continuing education programs, supervised numerous student theses, and participated in in litigation, dispute resolution, and policymaking.
He became a Professor Emeritus at the end of the 2002-03 academic year but remained active in the government contracts field for years after that.
Please consider making a gift in celebration of Judge Lees and all of his contributions across the field of Government Contracts. This endowed scholarship will provide financial assistance to a current student who is interested in pursuing a career in Government Procurement Law.