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The courthouse for the San Francisco County Superior Court is located at 400 McAllister St, San Francisco, CA 94102. It was opened on December 9, 1997. [18] The building was designed by Lee/Timchula Architects. The local architect was Cavagnero and Associates. The entrance features fabricated metal doors designed by sculptor Albert Paley.
Kimiko Burton (1990): [247] First female Public Defender for San Francisco County, California (2001) Manjari Chawla (2001): [248] First Indian American (female) to serve on the State Bar Court [located in San Francisco] (2018) Vedica Puri (1995): [249] First South Asian American (female) judge in San Francisco County, California (2019)
The Earl Warren Building is the headquarters of the Supreme Court of California in San Francisco The judiciary has a hierarchical structure with the Supreme Court at the apex, courts of appeal as the primary appellate courts , and the superior courts as the primary trial courts .
The San Francisco Police motorcycle traffic division is completely based there as well. In 1994 the Hall was renamed for Thomas J. Cahill, the Chief of the SFPD from 1958 to 1970. Front of the San Francisco Hall Of Justice. The San Francisco Hall of Justice houses Jail #3 and Jail #4 for the San Francisco County Superior Court criminal division.
San Francisco County Superior Court: San Francisco: San Francisco (4) [78] San Joaquin County Superior Court: San Joaquin: Stockton, French Camp (juvenile), Lodi, Manteca [79] San Luis Obispo County Superior Court: San Luis Obispo: San Luis Obispo (3), Grover Beach, Paso Robles [80] San Mateo County Superior Court: San Mateo
Murlene Johnson Randle (born March 31, 1952) is a judge of the San Francisco County Superior Court since 2020. She is the former Director of the Office of Criminal Justice for San Francisco and a Discrimination Attorney.
Mary Carolyn Morgan is a judge of the San Francisco County Superior Court and former judge of the San Francisco Municipal Court. She was the first openly lesbian judge appointed in the United States. [1]
Richard A. Kramer (born Boston, Massachusetts, July 22, 1947) is a judge serving on the San Francisco County Superior Court. He is most known for his 2005 ruling striking down Proposition 22, a California ballot initiative defining marriage as only valid when between a man and a woman.