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Pima County Courthouse is the former main county courthouse building in downtown Tucson, Arizona It is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. It was designed by Roy Place in 1928 in Mission Revival and Spanish Colonial Revival style architecture.
Named after District Court judge James Augustine Walsh in 1985. Evo A. DeConcini U.S. Courthouse: Tucson: 405 West Congress Street D. Ariz. 2000 present Named after Arizona Supreme Court justice Evo Anton DeConcini. United States Court House: Yuma: 315 West 19th Street D. Ariz.? 2014 John M. Roll U.S. Courthouse: Yuma: 98 West 1st Street Yuma ...
Laine Sklar: [60] First female magistrate in Marana, Arizona (c. 2006) [Pima County, Arizona] Margarita Bernal (c. 1979): [61] First Latino American female to serve as a municipal court judge in Tucson, Arizona [Pima County, Arizona] Anna Montoya-Paez: [62] First female elected to the Santa Cruz County Superior Court, Arizona
The United States District Court for the District of Arizona (in case citations, D. Ariz.) is the U.S. district court that covers the state of Arizona. It is under the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. The District was established on June 20, 1910, pending Arizona statehood on February 14, 1912. [1]
Pima County Fair, 2007. Pima County (/ ˈ p iː m ə / PEE-mə) is a county in the south central region of the U.S. state of Arizona.As of the 2020 census, the population was 1,043,433, [1] making it Arizona's second-most populous county.
It would remain Tucson's tallest building until 1977 when the Arizona Bank Plaza was built. In 1987, the building was purchased for $10.5 million (equivalent to $28 million in 2023) by Pima County, and renamed the Pima County Legal Services Building.
The Arizona Court of Appeals is the intermediate appellate court for the state of Arizona. It is divided into two divisions, with a total of twenty-eight judges on the court: nineteen in Division 1, based in Phoenix , and nine in Division 2, based in Tucson .
He was president of the Arizona State Bar in 1988 and 1989. For 27 years, Zlaket practiced law in Tucson for several firms, including with his brother, Eugene, for Zlaket & Zlaket. He was also a judge pro-tem at Pima County Superior Court. [5] Zlaket was widely praised for his struggle to make the court system accessible. [6]